Hun To
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hun To | |
|---|---|
ហ៊ុន តូ | |
| Occupation | Businessman |
| Known for | Director of Huione Pay |
| Parent | Hun San (father) |
| Relatives | Hun Sen (uncle);[1] Hun Manet (cousin)[2] |
Hun To (Khmer: ហ៊ុន តូ) is a Cambodian businessman. He is a cousin of Prime Minister Hun Manet and a nephew of former prime minister Hun Sen.[2][1] He has been identified as one of the directors of Huione Pay, a payment services provider within Huione Group.[2]
In Australia, he has pursued defamation actions concerning media coverage of alleged criminal activity and online scam networks, which he has denied.[3][4][5] Australian media have also linked him to a criminal-intelligence investigation into heroin trafficking and alleged money laundering targeting Australia, which he denied.[6][1]
Huione Group and related services
Hun To has been identified as one of three directors of Huione Pay, a Phnom Penh-based firm offering currency exchange, payments and remittance services; the company said his directorship did not include day-to-day oversight of operations.[2]
Cryptocurrency worth more than US$150,000 was sent between June 2023 and February 2024 to a Huione Pay wallet from a wallet that two blockchain analysts said was used to deposit funds stolen in hacks attributed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to North Korea's Lazarus Group.[2] The Reuters investigation said it found no evidence that Hun To or the ruling family had any knowledge of the transactions, and cited statements from the National Bank of Cambodia that payment firms were not allowed to deal or trade cryptocurrencies and digital assets.[2]
In 2024, Elliptic described Huione Guarantee as a large Chinese-language online marketplace operating across thousands of channels on Telegram and using an escrow-style model; it reported that the service was widely used by online scammers and that payments were commonly denominated in the USDT stablecoin.[7] ABC News said Elliptic found listings on Huione Guarantee for money laundering services and “detention equipment”, alongside other services associated with scam operations.[8]
In May 2025, the U.S. Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network issued a finding identifying Huione Group as a “primary money laundering concern” and proposed measures intended to restrict its access to the U.S. financial system, citing risks linked to cyber heists and “pig butchering” scams.[9] In 2025, Telegram said it had blocked Huione Guarantee and another large Chinese-language marketplace; Elliptic estimated the two services had handled more than US$35 billion in transactions since 2021.[10]
Thailand's cybercrime police have publicly said they traced financial flows from online gambling and call-centre scams to Huione Group and were examining a potential connection to a nephew of Hun Sen; the police commissioner declined to comment when asked whether the company was owned by Hun To.[11]
Scam compounds, corporate registrations and politically connected networks
An Al Jazeera investigation into scam-compound abuses in Cambodia stated that corporate registrations listed Hun To as a director of multiple Heng He companies connected to the compound it examined.[12]
A 2025 report by Humanity Research Consultancy on Cambodia's trafficking-linked cybercrime economy identified Hun To as a director of Huione Group and said companies under the Heng He Group listed him as a director; the report also discussed politically connected investment networks including Prince Group Holdings.[13]