New and Old Scams Await Travellers to the Far East


The Star Ferry in Hong Kong is a favorite location of unsavory characters who take advantage of rush hour commuters crossing Fragrant Harbour.

SINGAPORE—The tired traveller flies into flower-filled Changi Airport and instantly feels at ease. Everything is neat, clean, functional, and aesthetic. Rules are adhered to in Singapore. The streets are as safe to walk as the tap water is to drink. So what kind of thief can operate in such a city state? The traveller collects his luggage and changes a little money at the airport booth, then jumps in a taxi to the hotel. "Fifteen dollars," the driver might say as he pulls up to Raffles or the Regent or the Mandarin; and in most cases, the visitor will pay and that will be that. A surprising number of American tourists, though, whose first sense of Singapore is not exotic and foreign at all, but rather resembles the modern city in which they live, happily pay in U.S. dollars. What taxi driver will refuse an instant bonus of thirty percent? That tourist has been self-ripped, and the driver is hardly to blame. More devious, though, is the driver or shop clerk who slips a Malaysian bill into the stack of Singapore bills he gives you as change. The pink Malaysian bill looks remarkably similar to the pink Singapore ten-dollar note. So similar, in fact, that the passing of it could be just an accident. But at ten ringgits, the Malaysian note is worth only half the value of the Singapore one. The visitor to Bangkok stands on a street corner comparing his map to bewildering street signs. A well- dressed local approaches, eager to help and give a good impression of his city. He's very friendly and in a
matter of minutes has won the visitor's confidence. "By the way," he suddenly remembers, "did you know that today is the last day of Bangkok's annual jewelry promotion? A few government-selected shops are allowed to sell duty free! Come, let me take you. Hurry!" The tourist he befriends will certainly get a deal, but it will be one wholly to the shop's advantage, with a healthy commission for its sophisticated tout. This scam, in endless variations, is nearly impossible for the police to stop, as the shops do nothing illegal.
That Hong Kong is an electronics shoppers' paradise is one of the most common misconceptions about the Far East. But the unsavvy shopper may get much less than he bargained for. The "bait and switch" is an age old technique some camera shops have used, but now merchants have learned new ways to extract dollars from overseas visitors. Goods may be sold with limited warranties or note at all, lacking invisible features like time and date stamp or remote control, or without accessories that are routinely included with the item elsewhere. These fly-by-night shops are regularly closed down by police, but they somehow manage to reopen under new names just blocks away.
1995 research in parts of the Far East reconfirms the practice of the old standard ploys intended to separate the traveller from his money and valuables. Most common now is the razor slitting of handbags carried on the shoulder.
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Bag slit on a Hong Kong escalator, while carried in this position.

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