Kidnapping, captivity cases involving Koreans abroad surge 2000% in 4 years: Data

Foreign Ministry data shows kidnapping and forced confinement cases involving Koreans overseas jumped from 31 in 2021 to 624 in 2025 amid expanding transnational crime networks.

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Suspects involved in Cambodian scam networks who were forcibly repratiated to Korea arrive at Dongnae Police Station in Busan on Jan. 23.

The number of kidnapping and captivity cases involving Korean nationals overseas surged twentyfold over the past four years due largely to a rise in transnational criminal operations, data showed Monday.

According to the data submitted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to Rep. Kim Joon-hwan of the ruling Democratic Party, the number of kidnapping and captivity cases recorded the sharpest increase, jumping over 2000 percent from 31 cases in 2021 to 624 cases in 2025.

The rise appears to be linked to transnational criminal operations uncovered in recent years in Cambodia and other countries, where organized crime groups have been accused of luring Koreans and other foreign nationals into online scam operations.

In total, the number of incidents involving Koreans abroad came to 19,359 last year, tripling from 6,498 cases in 2021.

The number rose steadily to 11,323 in 2022, 15,769 in 2023 and 17,283 in 2024.

Serious crimes involving Korean nationals abroad were also reported in 2025, including 24 homicide cases, 108 robberies and 114 cases of sexual assault.

By region, Europe recorded the largest number of incidents, or 20,716 cases, over the 2021 to 2025 period. Theft accounted for 7,111 cases in the region, exceeding the 5,932 loss-related incidents reported during the cited period, the data showed.


Yonhap