// Global Analysis Archive
Vietnamese authorities report arrests tied to an alleged scheme involving the issuance and sale of purported digital assets via the ONUS platform, alongside accusations of property appropriation and money laundering. The case highlights systemic risks in a high-adoption market operating within a regulatory grey area for crypto speculation.
Pakistan is accelerating from a crypto ban to rapid adoption, building new regulatory bodies and courting major global platforms while positioning digital assets as a tool for inclusion, remittances, and investment. The source suggests the shift is also embedded in Pakistan’s evolving external alignments—particularly with the United States and Gulf partners—creating significant compliance, energy, and policy-stability risks.
The Diplomat reports that Kyrgyzstan processed an estimated $20.5–$32 billion in licensed crypto turnover in 2025, largely driven by high-volume USDT conversions used for cross-border settlement rather than investment. The country’s enabling legal framework has accelerated growth, but uneven oversight and expanding P2P channels create transparency and concentration risks as Kyrgyzstan links Russia-related payment frictions with regional trade, including China-facing supply chains.
Vietnamese authorities report arrests tied to an alleged scheme involving the issuance and sale of purported digital assets via the ONUS platform, alongside accusations of property appropriation and money laundering. The case highlights systemic risks in a high-adoption market operating within a regulatory grey area for crypto speculation.
Pakistan is accelerating from a crypto ban to rapid adoption, building new regulatory bodies and courting major global platforms while positioning digital assets as a tool for inclusion, remittances, and investment. The source suggests the shift is also embedded in Pakistan’s evolving external alignments—particularly with the United States and Gulf partners—creating significant compliance, energy, and policy-stability risks.
The Diplomat reports that Kyrgyzstan processed an estimated $20.5–$32 billion in licensed crypto turnover in 2025, largely driven by high-volume USDT conversions used for cross-border settlement rather than investment. The country’s enabling legal framework has accelerated growth, but uneven oversight and expanding P2P channels create transparency and concentration risks as Kyrgyzstan links Russia-related payment frictions with regional trade, including China-facing supply chains.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-3151 | Vietnam Targets Large-Scale Digital-Asset Scheme Linked to ONUS Platform | Vietnam | 2026-03-27 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-1670 | Pakistan’s Crypto Pivot: Financial Modernization or Geopolitical Signaling? | Pakistan | 2025-12-07 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-3610 | Kyrgyzstan’s Stablecoin Boom: The Rise of a Central Asian Crypto Corridor | Kyrgyzstan | 2025-10-19 | 0 | ACCESS » |