Director:Unknown
Performer:Details
50-minute documentary——In Cambodia, there is a lot of people who have been working in the "pork-killing" industry。 In South-East Asia, hundreds of “pork-killing” fraud groups are mainly located in the Philippines, Cambodia, Thailand, Laos and Myanmar。 These groups have confined “staff” to closed parks where online fraud is carried out. The sources of “employees” fall into two categories——On the one hand, fraud syndicates attract undisclosed job seekers by advertising “excellently well-paid” jobs online and then drive them directly to the park at the border; on the other hand, fraud syndicates carry out kidnappings directly on the street and force ordinary people into the Bureau。 These so-called “employees” work more than 12 hours a day and are often beaten and confined in the park (many of them in the documentary were physically beaten). If the “employee” touches the company's red line, he/she is beaten severely for half a month; he/she breaks his/her leg and arm。 In this documentary, the story of an American “pork-killer” cheater who gradually took the bait and lost millions of dollars, was also interviewed by a pig-killer director who spent millions of yuan here. He was beaten and eventually escaped because of contradictions with superiors in the distribution of benefits. In addition, the story of an “employee” in a trapped park who had successfully escaped by climbing a window was documented。 Such flagrant crimes are not currently punishable by law. In the film, in Cambodia ' s royal park, crimes were committed, but no one was arrested or charged. The estates of the park owners were spread across all sectors of Cambodia and even were awarded a lord by the King of Cambodia, who was in close contact with senior Cambodian officials. Journalists tried to call the police but received no response from the police。