Eight
druglords from Burma charged in absentia in US
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AFP Photo
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Eight druglords in Burma have been charged in
absentia in a US court with operating one of the world's largest
heroin producing and trafficking groups in Southeast Asia's
notorious Golden Triangle area.
The eight members of the United Wa State Army
(UWSA), a 16,000-strong group which styles itself as an
independence movement fighting for an ethnic Wa state, were
charged with the cultivation of opium in Eastern Burma and the
manufacture and distribution of heroin and methamphetamine to
the United States and throughout the world.
Led by "drug kingpin" Wei Hsueh Kang, who has
a two million dollar bounty on his head, the gang was also
accused of laundering narcotics proceeds through seemingly
legitimate businesses, according to an indictment unsealed in
Federal Court in Brooklyn, New York.
The UWSA is one of the largest heroin
producing and trafficking organizations in the world and was
responsible for the production of more than 180 tonnes of opium
in 2004, the US Department of Justice said in a statement.
Monday's indictment followed a long-term
initiative, codenamed "Operation Warlord" and led by the US Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA) with cooperation from the Royal
Thai Police, officials said.
It was part of joint efforts by DEA and other
law enforcement agencies to combat heroin trafficking in
Southeast Asia.
The UWSA controls large segments of Eastern
Burma in the heart of the infamous Golden Triangle of heroin
production straddling Burma, Laos and Thailand.
Since 1985, the eight defendants had imported
more than a tonne of heroin, with a retail value of one billion
dollars, into the United States alone, and vast amounts
throughout the world, DEA records showed.
More recently, they began production of
methamphetamine for export to the United States and elsewhere.
About 12,000 methamphetamine tablets, labeled
with the UWSA logo, have been seized by the DEA at mail
facilities located within the United States.
The indictment alleged that the defendants
controlled all decision making on the drug trade in their
territory, including taxing of narcotics shipments and drug
refineries, and the collection of lucrative narcotics proceeds.
In return, they provided security for heroin
and methamphetamine laboratories, as well as for drug caravans
smuggling the drugs from Eastern Burma to Thailand, China, and
Laos where independent brokers smuggle shipments to global
distribution groups in Asia, US and Europe.
Aside from Wei Hsueh Kang, a special advisor
to UWSAs Central Committee, the others facing heroin and
methamphetamine trafficking charges in the United States were:
Wei Hsueh Lung, the group's "trade and finance minister" and
several military commanders including Wei Hsueh Ying, Pao Yu
Hsiang, Pao Yu Hua, and Pao Yu Liang.
Also charged were Pao Yu Yi, a political
commissar and Pao Hua Chiang, a "trade and finance officer.
The Weis are brothers, as are the Pao's, with
the exception of Pao Hua Chiang.
In addition to the charges filed against him
Monday, Wei Hsueh Kang also faces charges stemming from an
indictment filed in 1993 in New York for conspiring to
distribute and import heroin into the United States.
If convicted, the eight each face a mandatory
minimum of 10 years in jail and a maximum of life imprisonment,
and a four million dollar fine. |