INTERPOL's 'Operation Ramz' Nets Over 200 Cybercrime Suspects in MENA Region
**INTERPOL**'s 'Operation Ramz' has led to the arrest of over 200 individuals across the Middle East and North Africa for cybercrime activities. The operation also resulted in the seizure of 53 servers used for phishing, malware distribution, and online fraud, impacting thousands of victims.
More than 200 individuals were arrested for cybercrime activities during **INTERPOL**'s Operation Ramz, which focused on the Middle East and North Africa.
Law enforcement also identified another 382 suspects across 13 countries (Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Tunisia, and the UAE).
# Operation Ramz: Dismantling Cybercrime Infrastructure
In addition to the arrests, authorities seized 53 servers used for phishing, malware, and online fraud that affected at least 3,867 confirmed victims, as determined from nearly 8,000 intelligence packages retrieved from the equipment.
βThe operation focused on neutralizing phishing and malware threats, as well as tackling cyber scams that inflict severe cost to the region,β reads the **INTERPOL** announcement.

*Seized devices in Jordan. Source: INTERPOL*
**INTERPOL** collaborated with several private cybersecurity firms to track the malicious infrastructure, including **Kaspersky**, **Group-IB**, **The Shadowserver Foundation**, **Team Cymru**, and **TrendAI**.
# Key Highlights of Operation Ramz
Some highlights of βOperation Ramzβ include:
* securing compromised devices unknowingly used to spread malware in Qatar
* dismantling an investment scam operation in Jordan, where 15 trafficked workers from Asia were forced to run fraud schemes; two organizers were arrested
* disabling a vulnerable malware-infected server containing sensitive data in Oman
* shutting down a phishing-as-a-service platform in Algeria and arresting one suspect
* seizing devices and banking data linked to phishing operations in Morocco, with multiple suspects under judicial investigation
This is the third major cybercrime crackdown operation **INTERPOL** has concluded this year.
In March, the authorities announced βOperation Synergia III,β which resulted in sinkholing 45,000 malicious IP addresses, the seizure of 212 devices and servers, and the arrest of 94 individuals across 72 countries, for participating in phishing, hacking, fraud, and malware distribution.
Earlier, in February, **INTERPOL** announced the arrest of 651 suspects across 16 African countries, as part of βOperation Red Card 2.0,β targeting investment fraud, mobile money scams, and fake loan apps linked to more than $45 million in losses.