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SINGAPORE/ASIA: A regional police operation has led to 326 arrests across Asia, including 11 men in Singapore, in a coordinated effort targeting online child abuse networks. The four-week crackdown signals how widespread and organised these crimes have become and how much they rely on digital platforms.
The operation ran from March 23 to April 17 and involved law enforcement agencies from seven places, including Singapore, Malaysia, Japan, and South Korea. Officers raided 382 locations and seized hundreds of devices linked to the offences, Channel NewsAsia (CNA) reports (April 28).
In Singapore, the 11 men arrested are aged between 22 and 44. Another 16 individuals are assisting with investigations.
Early findings suggest most of the suspects accessed or stored illegal materials through messaging apps and peer-to-peer platforms. In one case, two men allegedly made cross-border payments through a Telegram channel to obtain such content. The lead came from Malaysian police.
In another case, a man arrested in March had materials linked to two victims exploited overseas. Authorities traced the case through a non-governmental organisation and worked with foreign agencies to identify and arrest the offender.
Across the seven regions, authorities investigated 445 people in total. Most were men, aged 12 to 72. Officers seized:
116 computers
340 mobile phones
25 tablets
140 storage devices
16 routers
The scale of the operation points to a recurring crime trend as these offences often rely on the same tools: encrypted messaging apps, online payment channels and cloud storage.
The Singapore Police Force said close cooperation with tech firms, financial institutions and non-profits was vital to tracking these criminal networks.
This case demonstrates how easily such crimes cross borders. A seller in one country can reach buyers in another within seconds. Payments move just as fast.
The speed at which these crimes are executed makes enforcement harder. Therefore, no single country can handle it alone. The success of this operation came from shared intelligence and coordinated raids.
It also raises a serious concern when these platforms are part of everyday life because the same tools used for work and socialising can also be misused in abusive ways.
Singapore law treats these offences seriously. Those convicted of producing such materials can face up to 10 years in jail, along with fines or caning. Possession or access can result in up to 5 years’ jail time.
Though there is no quick fix to completely prevent these heartless crimes, the direction is well-defined: stronger cross-border coordination works.
As faster data sharing also helps, platforms need tighter monitoring where abuse is detected. And when the digital crime space moves fast, enforcement has to move faster.
This article (Regional child abuse crackdown nets 326 arrests, 11 held in Singapore across cross-border probe) first appeared on The Independent Singapore News.