Tag Archives: Laos

Fighting drug gangs in the notorious Golden Triangle

A Thai police gunboat prowls the waters of the Mekong River searching for the drug gangs that haunt this territory deep in the Golden Triangle, an age-old smuggling route — with a new scourge.

At one time this frontier region, where the remote edges of Thailand, Myanmar and Laos meet, was awash with heroin, flooding over the border from the then world’s biggest opium producer Myanmar.

Times have changed and now the drug of choice is methamphetamine often in the form of “yaba” — Thai for “crazy medicine” — bound for the streets and clubs of Asia.

“It is very difficult to prevent drug trafficking into Thailand,” said general Manop Senakun, commander of police in Chiang Saen, the Thai town at the gateway to the Golden Triangle.

It is estimated that at least 1.4 billion yaba tablets — with an estimated street value of $8.5 billion — are being produced each year in the region.

The drug is mostly made in isolated mobile laboratories hidden in the forests of Shan State in Myanmar, which is still the second largest global source of opium after Afghanistan.

Police “tried every way” to stem the flow of narcotics, Manop said. But it was the notorious slaying of 13 Chinese sailors on the Mekong in 2011 that caused regional authorities to launch a concerted crackdown on trafficking.

China, from where the river snakes, has added its weight to the anti-trafficking efforts.

An operation dubbed “Mekong Safe” — led by Beijing with the involvement of its Golden Triangle neighbours — between late April and late June led to the arrest of 2,534 suspects and the seizure of almost 10 tons of drugs, according to Thai authorities.

China executed Myanmar drug lord Naw Kham for the sailor killings. The two boats involved, found with some 900,000 methamphetamine tablets on board and riddled with bullet holes, have been left to rust in Chiang Saen port.

“The frequent occurrence of drug-related crimes on the Mekong River has been effectively contained,” said the Chinese Embassy in Myanmar in June.

A dedicated Thai unit of 30 policemen, with three boats, now patrols a 17-kilometre (11 mile) stretch of the river border.

But far from being deterred, as the crackdown starts to take effect on the river heavily-armed traffickers are finding alternative routes, with some choosing to trek with their valuable contraband through the jungle from Myanmar.

“(Traffickers) walk in a caravan with 20 to 30 people,” Manop told AFP. “They would have a lot of weapons with them.”

Clashes with the army or the police are common. In one incident in 2012, eight suspected traffickers were killed by security forces and Manop predicts things will only get “more violent”.

Pierre-Arnaud Chouvy, a geographer at France’s CNRS national research centre, said he was “not convinced by the efficacy” of the river crackdown.

“We have a few cases of very high-profile seizures, but no real evaluation of how effective these patrols have been,” Chouvy said, adding that networks tend to be small in scale and “flexible”, so hard to track.

Corruption within the very forces meant to catch the …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bear Brain Surgery: First-Ever Cranial Procedure Performed On Asiatic Black Bear (PHOTOS)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

ChamPa, an Asiatic black bear, has just made history. The 3-year-old is the first bear to ever undergo brain surgery.

According to a statement released by wildlife-protection organization Free the Bears, ChamPa was rescued as a cub and cared for at a bear sanctuary in Laos. However, veterinarians later discovered that she suffered from a buildup of fluid in the brain called hydrocephalus, which affects both animals and humans.

As euthanization was not an option due Laos‘ Buddhist tradition and wildlife protection laws, there was only one other choice — try a surgery that has never been performed on a bear.

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From: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/13/bear-brain-surgery-first-procedure-champa_n_3071968.html

A Qi Grows in Times Square

By Tanya Steel On a block that was long known purely for its infamous adult film theaters, a glamorous restaurant has sprouted. White leather banquettes, white marble floors, lucite chairs and ornate chandeliers encased in lucite boxes comprise the stylish interior of a new Thai restaurant that is partly owned by the renowned and talented Pichet Ong. Qi Bangkok Eatery showcases the best of Ong’s native city, a place that fuses the cuisines of its border countries–Malaysia, Cambodia, Laos, and Burma. Ong, who made his name as a pastry chef of unique talents, created a menu of inventive twists on classic Thai dishes: Lemongrass Chicken Wings, Five Spice Stewed Beef with Chinese Broccoli, Panang Duck Curry with String Beans and Keffir, Grilled Chiang Mai Pork Sausage with Crispy Pork Skin. Not content with the usual sliced mango with sticky rice or fried bananas, Ong pumps up the volume on the desserts, such as a Passionfruit Cheesecake with a Sesame Crust, Caramelized Bread Pudding with Five Spice Creme Anglaise, and a Tamarind Parfait with an Oreo “Soil.” The block’s former denizens would think they were in another world–and they’d be right. (675 Eighth Avenue, New York City; 212-247-8992; qirestaurant.com/timesquare)

From: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/epicurious/epiblog/~3/_LqYrJEjHYI/a-qi-grows-in-times-square.html

5 Vietnamese wood gatherers killed near Laos

Police say a gang beat and killed five Vietnamese villagers who were collecting valuable scented wood near the border with Laos.

Officer Nguyen Trong Tai said Thursday that the gang had been demanding a ransom of $700 for each man before they were killed.

The men were seized on Saturday in a remote corner of Quang Binh province. Their bodies were recovered on Tuesday.

The men were gathering agar wood, which is used to make incense, soap and luxury perfumes.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Hong Kong Invites Fraud To Solve Nonexistent Problem

By Robert Olsen, Forbes Staff

If history has any bearing, then Wong Man Suen‘s plan to develop a special economic zone in Laos seems destined to fail. Two years ago, the authorities closed down his project, called Boten City, when a slew of unsavory reports emerged from Chinese tourists who had been lured across the border to test their luck in its casino. Boten’s punters were apparently being subjected to abuse and kidnappings by various casino operators if they failed to pay off their gambling debts. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Rights group seeks ASEAN's help on Lao activist

An international human rights group is urging Southeast Asian nations to pressure Laos to provide information about a social activist who has not been seen since he was apparently detained more than two months ago by state security forces.

Human Rights Watch said Wednesday that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations should intervene with Lao authorities, who deny knowledge of Sombath Somphone‘s fate even though he was last seen in police custody.

The case has put a rare spotlight on politics in the landlocked nation, which remains one of the most politically repressive nations in Asia, even as it is making a transition from Communism to a more open market economy.

Sombath’s wife, Singaporean native Ng Shui Meng, has been campaigning for her husband’s freedom in Laos and on the Internet.

“The Lao government’s long silence about Sombath Somphone‘s whereabouts increase our concerns for his safety,” Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement. “The authorities seem more focused on deflecting international criticism than genuinely investigating Sombath’s disappearance.”

The New York-based group said it sent a letter to the human rights commission of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, pointing out that it has the right to obtain information from member states on human rights protection.

Sombath disappeared on Dec. 15 after he was stopped at a police checkpoint in Vientiane. A few days later, the Lao Foreign Ministry said he may have “been kidnapped perhaps because of a personal conflict or a conflict in business.” It said “authorities concerned are currently and seriously investigating.” Accounts from Sombath’s wife and supporters, however, suggest that any investigation has been slipshod at best.

The latest U.S. State Department human rights report, for 2011, described Laos as an authoritarian state under one-party Communist rule, and that arbitrary arrests and detentions persist despite laws prohibiting them.

Laos‘ government is intolerant of dissent, but associates say Sombath’s work was neither directly political nor confrontational. Educated in the U.S., he won one of Asia‘s top civil awards in 2005 for his work reducing poverty and promoting education at a training center he founded. He had returned to his homeland after the 1975 Communist takeover to apply his University of Hawaii learning in education and agriculture.

In January, then-U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Calif. scholar compiles Mien-English dictionary

A Northern California missionary and linguist has compiled a comprehensive dictionary for the Mien language, a fast-fading idiom spoken by thousands of refugees from Laos.

The Sacramento Bee reports (http://bit.ly/151FY9N ) Herbert Purnell spent 26 years compiling the Mien-English dictionary that sells for $32. The 855-page tome contains more than 5,600 words, 28,000 phrases and 2,100 cultural notes.

The Mien community turned out over the weekend in Sacramento to buy the dictionary and have Purnell sign it.

Several Mien scholars praised it as an important step toward preserving a language and culture they say are rapidly disappearing in the United States, as their children adopt English and Western ways.

Thousands of Mien settled in California after fleeing Laos following their participation in a CIA-backed battle against communists during the Vietnam War.

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Information from: The Sacramento Bee, http://www.sacbee.com

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News