The Morning: Where scams come from
Plus, Minneapolis, a Nobel Prize and an emu.
The Morning
January 16, 2026

Good morning. The world’s attention this week has largely been on Iran, on Venezuela, on Minneapolis. And we have news from all three below. I’d like to start this morning, though, with a look at some remarkable reporting from Myanmar.

A man wearing baseball cap holding a rifle stands in front of white five-story buildings whose windows are covered with black cages.
The Shunda Park scam complex in Myanmar. Jes Aznar for The New York Times

Where scams come from

Deep in the densely forested borderlands of war-torn Myanmar, two of our journalists recently visited Shunda Park, an office center that opened for business in 2024 with more than 3,500 workers from nearly 30 nations. Some were there willingly, some had been kidnapped. All were dedicated to the causes of online chicanery and digital scams.

The park was largely abandoned, having been captured and closed by one of the rebel militias that has been fighting the Myanmar military for years. But the militia allowed Hannah Beech, a reporter who covers Asia, and Jes Aznar, a photographer, to document what Hannah called “the inner sanctum of this secretive, highly fortified industry.” They were able to meet some of the scammers as well — some of whom were trying to return to their home countries, and others who were looking for another gig in the grift economy.

What they saw was amazing, just one of Southeast Asia’s compounds of cyberfraud, an enterprise that took at least $10 billion out of the United States alone in 2024.

A large room holds rows of tables with computer screens and debris scattered across the floor.
Jes Aznar for The New York Times

There were huge open-plan work rooms filled with computer monitors, the walls adorned with inspirational, always-be-closing sale slogans: “Keep going,” “Dream chaser,” “Making money matters the most.” Videoconference suites were decorated with (fake) business books and (fake) modern art meant to evoke the boardroom of a successful business concern.

Here were photographs the scammers used to help establish false identities. There were a trio of porta-potty-style boxes that scammers told Hannah were used as punishment chambers, in plain view of the rest of the room. Everywhere were discarded cellphones. “In some buildings, with nearly every step I took,” Hannah wrote, “I crunched on SIM cards, scattered like snow in the tropical heat.”

A Sisyphean loop

Who ran this place? A Chinese transnational crime network — in other words, a gang. The militia doesn’t have the resources to investigate, and no one else has expressed much interest either.

Whoever it was ran the business with brutal efficiency. Hannah spoke with several scammers whose bodies bore scars from beatings or tight shackles. They weren’t paid for their 12-hour shifts. Hannah wrote about that beautifully, tragically: “Life was a Sisyphean loop: sleep, eat, scam, eat, sleep, scam.”

From left, cellphones on the floor and in a green basket, photographs mostly of women smiling and posing for the camera.
Thousands of cellphones and photographs used in the scamming business. Jes Aznar for The New York Times

One told her his job for more than a year was to send “hellos” to social media accounts. If he didn’t receive responses to at least 5 percent of his greetings, he said, he would be punished physically.

The workers came from all over the world: Namibia, Russia, Zimbabwe, Malaysia, France. Some Chinese scammers were paid, Hannah discovered, though often not what they’d been promised.

Under fire

Hannah and Jes traveled to Shunda Park during what was supposed to be a lull in the fighting between the rebel militia, known as the Karen National Liberation Army, and the Myanmar military.

Mark that word, supposed. The thud of mortar rounds and sharp cracks of gunfire provided the soundtrack for their visit. As they worked, shells flew over their heads and landed across the river in neighboring Thailand. The day after they left the compound, a 60-millimeter mortar hit a building where they’d been sheltering, wounding three people, including their guide.

I urge you to read more, and to take in more of Jes’s remarkable photography, here.

Now, let’s see what else is happening in the world.

THE LATEST NEWS

Police in riot gear walk through a cloud of tear gas.
In Minneapolis on Thursday. Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

Minneapolis

  • President Trump threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act, which would let him deploy the military within the U.S., “if the corrupt politicians of Minnesota don’t obey the law.”
  • A couple said ICE agents used tear gas and stun grenades around them and their six children after they inadvertently wound up at a protest.
  • Public opinion has turned against ICE. But some Democrats think that calls to abolish the agency will turn off voters and make change harder.
  • Two Times photographers, David Guttenfelder and Todd Heisler, witnessed agents dragging a woman out of her car. In the video below, they describe the scene. Click to watch.
A short video of two reporters discussing ICE actions in Minneapolis. A map and scenes of protests are also included.
The New York Times

Renee Good Shooting

Iran

Venezuela

More International News

An illuminated orange tent against a dark night, with bare trees and dark buildings. A person is silhouetted in the tent's doorway.
A tent providing electricity and heat in Kyiv, Ukraine. Lynsey Addario for The New York Times

Deportations

Mahmoud Khalil holding a microphone standing in front of Palestinian flags.
Mahmoud Khalil Scott Heins for The New York Times

Other Big Stories

  • Gmail is adding A.I. features that can summarize emails, create to-do lists and streamline writing — but using them requires giving the tool access to your entire inbox.
  • X is restricting the ability of its A.I. chatbot Grok to generate sexualized images of real people after regulators around the world opened investigations.

IN ONE CHART

A chart showing years between presidencies and naming buildings after them.
Note: Does not include presidential libraries. The New York Times

Trump loves having things named after himself. Other presidents do, too. But unlike them, Trump hasn’t had to wait. While it took years or even decades for his predecessors to have their names emblazoned on federal buildings, as the chart above shows, Trump already has two — and he’s still in office. He also has plans for a Trump dollar coin and a class of Trump naval ships.

OPINIONS

The protests in Iran are proving that the government’s use of fear is no longer working, Abbas Milani writes.

Here are columns by David Brooks on our perception of the brain and Michelle Goldberg on the right’s crusade against liberal white women.

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MORNING READS

A short close-up video of an emu.
The New York Times

Free as a bird, for a while: An emu named Tina escaped from a Florida farm recently. A corporal in the local sheriff’s department gave chase. It did not go well.

A reasonable question: A.I. consumes, analyzes and stores vast amounts of information, accelerating scientific research. But could it ever do the research itself?

Your pick: The most-clicked link in The Morning yesterday was about a Supreme Court ruling that allows law enforcement officials to enter a home without a warrant in an emergency.

A jazz singer: Rebecca Kilgore won acclaim for her fresh takes on pop standards of the 1920s, ’30s and ’40s. She died at 76.

TODAY’S NUMBER

146.1 million

— That’s how many subscribers Verizon has in the U.S. Many of them were affected by widespread outages in the company’s wireless network on Wednesday. The company has offered a $20 credit for the inconvenience.

SPORTS

M.L.B.: Kyle Tucker, this offseason’s top free agent, agreed to a four-year, $240 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers.

College basketball: Federal prosecutors charged 26 men, including athletes, with participating in a conspiracy