Golden Triangle (Southeast Asia) Explained

Golden Triangle
Image Name:Golden Triangle Mekong at Doi Pu Khao 06.jpg
Image Caption:Confluence of Ruak River and Mekong Rivers, view from in Ban Sop Ruak
Map:Golden Triangle VOA.jpg
Continent:Southeast Asia
Region:Myanmar, Thailand, Laos

The Golden Triangle is a large, mountainous region of approximately [1] in northeastern Myanmar, northwestern Thailand and northern Laos, centered on the confluence of the Ruak and Mekong rivers.[2] [3] The name "Golden Triangle" was coined by Marshall Green, a U.S. State Department official, in 1971 in a press conference on the opium trade.[4] [5] Today, the Thai side of the river confluence, Sop Ruak, has become a tourist attraction, with the House of Opium Museum, a Hall of Opium, and a Golden Triangle Park, and no opium cultivation.[6] The Golden Triangle has been one of the largest opium-producing areas of the world since the 1950s. Most of the world's heroin came from the Golden Triangle until the early 21st century when opium production in Afghanistan increased.[7] Myanmar was the world's second-largest source of opium after Afghanistan up to 2022, producing some 25% of the world's opium, forming part of the Golden Triangle. While opium poppy cultivation in Myanmar had declined year-on-year since 2015, cultivation area increased by 33% totalling alongside an 88% increase in yield potential to in 2022 according to latest data from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) Myanmar Opium Survey 2022.[8] The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime has also warned that opium production in Myanmar may rise again if the economic crunch brought on by COVID-19 and the country's 2021 Myanmar coup d'état persists, with significant public health and security consequences for much of Asia.[9]

In 2023, Myanmar became the world’s largest producer of opium after an estimated of the drug was produced, according to a United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime report,[10] while a crackdown by the Taliban reduced opium production by approximately 95% to in Afghanistan for the same year.[11]

Geography

The following districts make up the approximate geographical area of the Golden Triangle:[12] [13]

MyanmarThailand Laos
Bokèo
Luang Prabang
Oudomxay
Phongsaly
Houaphan
Xiangkhoang

Origin

In the late 1940s, as the Chinese Communist Party gained power, it ordered ten million addicts into compulsory treatment, had dealers executed, and opium-producing regions planted with new crops. Consequently, opium production shifted south of the Chinese border into the Golden Triangle region.[14] Small-scale opium production in Myanmar dated back to the Konbaung dynasty in 1750, chiefly for the consumption of foreigners.[15]

The Chinese troops of the Kuomintang in Burma (KMT) were in effect the forebears of the private narcotic armies operating in the Golden Triangle. In 1949, thousands of the defeated Kuomintang troops crossed over the border from Yunnan Province into Burma, a nation with a weak government, and the Kuomintang seized control of the border regions of Burma. Almost all of the KMT opium was sent south to Thailand.[16] The KMT-controlled territories made up Burma's major opium-producing region, and the shift in KMT policy allowed them to expand their control over the region's opium trade. Furthermore, Communist China's eradication of illicit opium cultivation in Yunnan by the early 1950s effectively handed the opium monopoly to the KMT army in the Shan State. The main consumers of the drug were the local ethnic Chinese and those across the border in Yunnan and the rest of Southeast Asia. They coerced the local villagers for recruits, food and money, and exacted a heavy tax on the opium farmers. That forced the farmers to increase their production to make ends meet. One American missionary to the Lahu people of Kengtung State testified that the KMT tortured the Lahu for failing to comply with their regulations.

Annual production increased 20 times, from 30 tons at the time of Burmese independence to in the mid-1950s.[17]

History of heroin production

Myanmar is the world's largest producer of illicit opium, and has been a significant cog in the transnational drug trade since World War II. According to the UNODC it was estimated that in 2005 opium was cultivated in an area of in Myanmar.[18] Opium and heroin base produced in northeastern Myanmar are transported by horse and donkey caravans to refineries along the Thailand–Burma border for conversion to heroin and heroin base. Most of the finished products are shipped across the border into various towns in North Thailand and down to Bangkok for further distribution to international markets.

The surrender of drug lord Khun Sa's Mong Tai Army in January 1996 was hailed by Yangon as a major counter-narcotics success. Lack of government will and ability to take on major narcotrafficking groups and lack of serious commitment against money laundering continues to hinder the overall anti-drug effort. Most of the tribespeople growing the opium poppy in Myanmar and in the Thai highlands are living below the poverty line.

In 1996, the United States Embassy in Rangoon released a "Country Commercial Guide", which states "Exports of opiates alone appear to be worth about as much as all legal exports." It goes on to say that investments in infrastructure and hotels are coming from major opiate-growing and opiate-exporting organizations and from those with close ties to these organizations.[19]

A four-year investigation concluded that Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE) was "the main channel for laundering the revenues of heroin produced and exported under the control of the Myanmar Army." In a business deal signed with the French oil giant Total S.A. in 1992, and later joined by Unocal, MOGE received a payment of $15 million. "Despite the fact that MOGE has no assets besides the limited installments of its foreign partners and makes no profit, and that the Myanmar state never had the capacity to allocate any currency credit to MOGE, the Singapore bank accounts of this company have seen the transfer of hundreds of millions of US dollars," reports François Casanier. According to a confidential MOGE file reviewed by the investigators, funds exceeding $60 million and originating from Myanmar's most renowned drug lord, Khun Sa, were channeled through the company. "Drug money is irrigating every economic activity in Myanmar, and big foreign partners are also seen by the State Law and Order Restoration Council as big shields for money laundering."[19] Banks in Rangoon offered money laundering for a 40% commission.[20] A United Nations report also cites corruption, poverty and a lack of government control as typical causes for impoverished farmers to engage in drug production.[21]

Heroin processing in Southeast Asia

In 1992, the United States Department of Justice released a report detailing the typical process in which raw opium extracted from poppy plants is converted to morphine and then to heroin:[22]

In the same year, the U.S. Department of Justice published a separate report with estimated prices for Southeast Asian heroin at various stages from point of production to final street sale: [22]

Product Location Purity Estimated Price
100% $120 to $200 per kilogram
Morphine Base 100% $1,000 per kilogram
Heroin Base 100% $3,520 to $4,400 per kilogram
Heroin Chang Mai 90% to 70% $4,000 to $4,900 per kilogram
Heroin 90% to 70% $6,000 to $11,000 per kilogram
Heroin U.S.A (wholesale) 90% to 70% $90,000 to $240,000 per kilogram
Heroin U.S.A (mid level) 80% to 30% $100,000 to $600,000 per kilogram
Heroin U.S.A (street level) 60% to 20% $100,000 to $1,000,000 per kilogram

Historical drug trafficking

1970s

After hearing about African American soldiers serving in the Vietnam War becoming addicted to heroin while on R&R in Thailand, American drug lord Frank Lucas travelled to Bangkok in the early 1970s in an attempt to set up a new trafficking route with his associate Ike Atkinson. After Lucas visited the Golden Triangle region and made an initial purchase of 132 kilograms of uncut heroin (98–100% pure) from remnants of Chiang Kai-shek defeated Kuomintang army (for a price of $4,200 per kilogram compared to the $50,000 each that the New York Mafia charged), Atkinson used his contacts within the US military to smuggle the narcotics via US Air Force planes back to the eastern United States. It was then collected, cut to 10% purity, repackaged and distributed on the streets of Harlem by dealers controlled by Lucas for a vast profit. This smuggling route operated up until the arrest of Frank Lucas by the Drug Enforcement Administration in January 1975.[24] [25] [26]

In 1972, traditional European supply routes for American-consumed heroin were disrupted after Turkey banned the growing of opium poppies, which led to an increase in production in South East Asia.[27] With an existing Triad organized crime infrastructure to service a large local population of addicts (consisting of an estimated 150,000 regular users[28]), combined with its busy international Port of Hong Kong and Kai Tak Airport, Hong Kong soon became an important transit point for Southeast Asian heroin,[29] as well as convenient money laundering center to reinvest the profits of international sales.[30] [31] Crime groups also used the city state as a location to process opium into refined heroin, with a syndicate controlled by Ma Sik-chun estimated by the authorities to have imported over 700 tonnes of opium into Hong Kong between 1968 and 1974.[32]

In the mid 1970s, a organized crime gang headed by Roland Tan and composed mainly of Singaporean Chinese traffickers known as the Ah Kong took control of the European heroin trade by smuggling heroin using couriers via airplane from Thailand and Malaysia to their headquarters in Amsterdam, where it was then distributed to other major cities in western Europe.[33] [34] So successful were the gang that they muscled in on and ultimately took over the European territory of the 14K and Wo Shing Wo groups of triads.[35]

Heroin from Southeast Asia was originally brought to the United States by couriers, typically Thai and U.S. nationals, travelling on commercial airlines. Despite its strict drug laws, Singapore was often used as a transit point, [36] as traffickers believed foreign law enforcement agencies would be less stringent in checking passengers on arrival if their flight departed from Singapore.[37] California and Hawaii were the primary U.S. entry points for Golden Triangle heroin, but small percentages of the drug were also trafficked into New York City and Washington, D.C. While Southeast Asian groups had success in trafficking heroin to the United States, they initially had difficulty arranging street level distribution. However, with the incarceration of Asian traffickers in American prisons during the 1970s, contacts between Asian and American prisoners developed. These contacts have allowed Southeast Asian traffickers access to gangs and organizations distributing heroin at the retail level.[38]

1980s

In the 1980s, after traditional American Mafia groups were substantially weakened by a series of Mafia Commission Trials, ethnic Chinese traffickers gradually took over the dominant role in the heroin supply on the East Coast of the United States. A Drug Enforcement Administration study identified the source of the heroin sold on the streets of New York: from 1982 to 1987, the percentage of Southeast Asian heroin rose from 3 percent to more than 40 percent of the market supply.[39] As demand grew, Asian criminal organizations began trafficking large shipments of high purity heroin hidden amongst legitimate seaborne cargo to the United States of America. Notable incidents included:

1990s

Although Nigeria had traditionally been used by foreign organized crime groups as a transit point for narcotics and as a source of drug mules,[46] by the early 1990s West African criminal organizations had emerged as major traffickers themselves of Southeast Asian heroin,[47] [48] with 660 West Africans being arrested in the United States for heroin trafficking in the year 1991. The issue became so widespread that in 1992 the Nigerian government enacted a law that required its citizens to first obtain an official Clearance Certificate to prove they have no previous convictions for any drug-related offences issued by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency before they could apply for a Thailand travel visa.[49] [50] Instead of attempting to smuggle a single large shipment, Nigerian traffickers would typically recruit many low level non-Nigerian couriers to transport a couple of kilograms of heroin at a time via regular airline routes from transshipment points in Asia, such as Singapore,[51] [52] to western Europe or the eastern United States. Once the heroin arrived at its final destination, it was transported to cutting and packaging mills where it was diluted and packaged for retail or street-level sale, with the profits then transferred to Lagos or Hong Kong for the purposes of money laundering.[22] In October 1996, U.S. law enforcement officials arrested members of a Chicago based Nigerian trafficking group that smuggled heroin from Thailand via couriers for distribution to cities across the American Midwest, that was believed to have supplied over with an estimated retail price of $100 million a year to various street gangs in the region.[53]

Present day drug trafficking

Poppy cultivation in the country decreased more than 80 percent from 1998 to 2006 following an eradication campaign in the Golden Triangle. Officials with the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime have confirmed that opium poppy farming has decreased since 2014, as synthetic drug production has expanded. The Golden Triangle is now one of the world's leading areas for the production of synthetic drugs and particularly methamphetamine as production has scaled up of Yaba tablets and crystalline methamphetamine, including for export to Australia, New Zealand, and across East and Southeast Asia.[54] With respect to the accelerating synthetic drug production in the region, and specifically in Shan State, Myanmar, Sam Gor, also known as "The Company", is understood to be one of the main international crime syndicates responsible for this shift.[55] Made up of members of five different triads and understood to be headed by Tse Chi Lop, a Canadian gangster born in Guangzhou, China, the Cantonese Chinese syndicate is primarily involved in drug trafficking, potentially earning up to $8 billion per year.[56] Sam Gor is alleged to control 40% of the Asia-Pacific methamphetamine market, while also trafficking heroin and ketamine. The organization is active in a variety of countries in addition to Myanmar, including Thailand, Lao PDR, New Zealand, Australia, Japan, China and Taiwan.[57]

The Chinese Muslim Panthay are the same ethnic group as the Muslims among the Chinese Chin Haw.[58] A Panthay from Burma, Ma Zhengwen, assisted the Han Chinese drug lord Khun Sa in selling his heroin in north Thailand.[59] The Panthay monopolized opium trafficking in Burma.[59] They also created secret drug routes to reach the international market with contacts to smuggle drugs from Burma via south China.[59]

In 2023, Myanmar overtook Afghanistan as the world’s biggest producer of opium, after a ban on poppy cultivation by the Taliban reduced opium production by approximately 95%. A United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime report[60] estimated that 1,080 metric tonnes of opium was produced in Myanmar, up from 790 metric tonnes the previous year and that countries' highest total since 2001, while opium production in Afghanistan was vastly reduced to an estimated 330 tonnes for the same twelve month time period.[61] Due to the implementation of more efficient farming practices (such as the use of irrigation systems and fertilizers), yields in Myanmar have increased to approximately 23 kilogrammes per hectare of poppy field and farmers are now paid an average of US$355 per kilogram of raw opium (an increase of 27%), the report added.[62] [63]

Methamphetamine production and trafficking

"The Golden Triangle, and specifically Shan State of Myanmar, is believed to be the largest methamphetamine producing area in the world (modest sized geographic area with highly concentrated production)." The growing signs of an intensification of methamphetamine manufacturing activity within and around the Golden Triangle, and a corresponding decrease in the number of production facilities dismantled in other parts of the region, suggests that methamphetamine manufacture in East and Southeast Asia is now consolidated into the lower Mekong region.[64] Countries in East and Southeast Asia have collectively witnessed sustained increases in seizures of methamphetamine over the last decade, totalling over 171 tons and a record of over 1 billion methamphetamine tablets in 2021 according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, more than any other part of the world.[65] In April and May 2020, Myanmar authorities reported Asia's largest ever drug operation in Shan State totalling what was believed to be 193 million methamphetamine tablets, hundreds of kilogrammes of crystal methamphetamine as well as some heroin, and over 162,000 litres and 35.5 tons of drug precursors as well as sophisticated production equipment and several staging and storage facilities.[66]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lintner . Bertil . November 28, 2022 . Guide to Investigating Organized Crime in the Golden Triangle . 2023-12-31 . Global Investigative Journalism Network . en-US.
  2. Sen . S. . Heroin Trafficking in the Golden Triangle . Police Journal . 1991 . 64 . 3 . 241 . 10.1177/0032258X9106400310 . 149244027 . 19 June 2023.
  3. Web site: Golden Triangle . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20190731154559/https://www.tourismthailand.org/Attraction/Golden-Triangle--4418 . 31 July 2019 . 4 April 2018 . Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT).
  4. Book: Chouvy, Pierre-Arnaud . Opium: Uncovering the Politics of the Poppy . 2010 . Harvard University Press . 2010 . 978-0-674-05134-8 . xii, 23 . en.
  5. Book: Staff Report on Drug Abuse in the Military . 1971 . U.S. Government Printing Office . Washington, DC . iii . en.
  6. News: Fuller . Thomas . 2007-09-11 . The drug-running is gone, but the tourists still flock . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-12-31 . 0362-4331.
  7. News: Afghanistan again tops list of illegal drug producers . 2013 . Washington Times . 1 December 2019 . 6 January 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170106175658/http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/mar/12/afghanistan-again-tops-list-illegal-drug-producers/ . dead .
  8. Myanmar Opium Survey 2021: Cultivation, Production and Implications . 2022 . United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
  9. News: Voa News . Myanmar's Economic Meltdown Likely to Push Opium Output Up, Says UN . 2021. 15 October 2021.
  10. 2023 . United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime . Southeast Asia Opium Survey 2023 .
  11. News: 2023 . Myanmar becomes world's biggest producer of opium, overtaking Afghanistan . The Guardian .
  12. Web site: Transnational Organized Crime in Southeast Asia: Evolution, Growth and Impact . UNODC . 18 December 2020 . June 2019.
  13. Web site: Southeast Asia Opium Survey 2015 – Lao PDR & Myanmar . UNODC . November 2015.
  14. Web site: Alfred W. McCoy . Opium History, 1858 to 1940 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070404134938/http://www.a1b2c3.com/drugs/opi010.htm . 4 April 2007 . 4 May 2007.
  15. Book: James, H. . 94– . Security and Sustainable Development in Myanmar/Burma . 9781134253937 . 2012 . Routledge.
  16. Book: McCoy, A. W. . The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade . Lawrence Hill Books . 1991 . 9781556521263 . First . Brooklyn, N.Y. . 173 . Alfred W. McCoy .
  17. Book: Lintner, B. . 1992 . War on Drugs: Studies in the failure of US narcotic policy . Heroin and Highland Insurgency in the Golden Triangle . Boulder, Colorado . Westview . 288.
  18. News: 2005 . Facts and figures showing the reduction of opium cultivation and production were not gathered by the government of Myanmar, but UNODC in cooperation with local police forces and anti-drug squads. Information Committee of State Peace and Development Council holds Press Conference No 7/2005 . Embassy of the Union of Myanmar in South Africa . 28 February 2010 . 14 March 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120314210303/http://myanemb-sa.net/news/press%20release/23-10-05(1).htm . dead .
  19. Bernstein . D. . Kean, L. . 1996 . People of the Opiate: Myanmar's dictatorship of drugs . . 263 . 20 . 11–15 . 1 June 2004 . 2008-07-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040601155140/http://nick.assumption.edu/WebVAX/Nation/Bernstein16Dec96.html.
  20. Book: Cockburn, A. . Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs and the Press . Clair, J. St. . Verso . 1998 . 1-85984-139-2 . London . 230 . Alexander Cockburn . Jeffrey St. Clair . registration.
  21. (February 2020). "Myanmar Opium Survey: cultivation, production and implications". UNODC.
  22. 1992 . Worldwide Heroin Situation 1991 . U.S. Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement Administration . Office of Intelligence and Heroin Investigations Section . Washington, D.C. .
  23. News: 2023. AFP seizes 336 kilograms of heroin in largest ever Queensland detection. Australian Federal Police press release.
  24. Web site: 2000 . The Return of Superfly . live. . March 16, 2023. May 25, 2006. https://web.archive.org/web/20060525040715/http://www.newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/news/people/features/3649/.
  25. News: 2008 . Is 'American Gangster' really all that 'true'? . CNN . February 24, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080303045644/http://edition.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/01/22/film.american.gangster.ap/index.html. March 3, 2008 . dead.
  26. Web site: Jacobson . M. . A Conversation Between Frank Lucas and Nicky Barnes – Money 2007 – New York Magazine . New York. 2007 . July 2, 2011.
  27. News: The heroin smugglers will have to go East . The Straits Times . 15 July 1971.
  28. News: Hong Kong now key centre in opium traffic . New Nation. 17 August 1972.
  29. News: New blitz on drugs. New Nation . 1976.
  30. News: Hong Kong underworld moving to America. Singapore Monitor. 1985.
  31. News: Hongkong the centre of S-E Asia drug traffic . The Strait Times. 1983.
  32. Web site: ACAN in the 21st Century – A Continuing Challenge . Narcotics Division, Security Bureau . 2020-05-18.
  33. News: How CNB helped to crack world drug ring . The Straits Times . 1982.
  34. News: The Bureau’s Fight for a #DrugFreeSG. Central Narcotics Bureau – 50th anniversary Commemorative Book.
  35. News: World drug ring cracked . The Straits Times . 1978.
  36. News: Anti-drug bureau scores successes . The Straits Times . 1986 .
  37. News: 1989. Drug couriers try to cash in on tough laws . The Straits Times.
  38. Web site: 1986 . Chapter III Part 1: Drug Trafficking and Organized Crime . Schaffer Library of Drug Policy .
  39. News: The New York Times . 1987 . Chinese now dominate New York heroin trade.
  40. News: The World. The Los Angeles Times . 1988.
  41. News: 1989 . Asian Drug Ring Crushed in N.Y. Record Cache of 838 Pounds of Heroin Is Seized . The Los Angeles Times .
  42. News: 1989 . Hongkong police seize $820m worth of heroin . The Straight Time s.
  43. News: UPI . Hong Kong police make huge heroin bust . 1989 .
  44. News: Largest Heroin Bust in U.S. Is Reported, Drugs About 1,200 pounds are seized at Hayward warehouse. Four suspects are arrested.. The Los Angeles Times . 1991.
  45. News: Heroin from major U.S. drug bust shipped through Taiwan . UPI . 1991 .
  46. News: West Africa Becomes Route for Heroin Trade . The New York Times . 1987 .
  47. News: Nigerian Connection Floods U.S. Airports With Asian Heroin . The New York Times . 1992 .
  48. News: Out of Africa: The drug trail . The Strait Times . 1991 .
  49. News: 1992. Nigeria takes steps to halt drug smuggling by citizens . The Straits Times.
  50. News: Visa application for Nigerian nationals. Royal Thai Embassy . London .
  51. News: 1991 . Foiled: Nigerian's plan to use S'pore as base to recruit drug couriers . The Straits Times.
  52. News: 1989. Drug couriers try to cash in on tough laws . The Straits Times.
  53. News: Major drug network broken, officials say . The Washington Post. 1996 .
  54. 2019 . Transnational Organized Crime in Southeast Asia: Evolution, Growth and Challenges . UNODC . 13 July 2020 . 22 January 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210122015018/https://www.unodc.org/documents/southeastasiaandpacific/Publications/2019/SEA_TOCTA_2019_web.pdf . dead .
  55. News: 2019 . The Man Accused of Running the Biggest Drug Trafficking Syndicate in Asia's History has Been Revealed: Here's What Needs To Happen Next . CNN .
  56. News: Smith . N. . 2019 . Drugs investigators close in on Asian 'El Chapo' at centre of vast meth ring . The Telegraph. London .
  57. News: 2018 . Douglas, J. . Parts of Asia are slipping into the hands of organized crime . CNN.
  58. Book: Forbes, A. . amp . Henley, D. . 2011 . Traders of the Golden Triangle . Chiang Mai . Cognoscenti Books .
  59. Book: Lintner, B. . Burma in Revolt: Opium and Insurgency Since 1948 . Silkworm Books . 1999 . 974-7100-78-9 . Chiang Mai . 306 . registration.
  60. 2023 . Southeast Asia Opium Survey 2023 . UNODC .
  61. News: 2023 . Myanmar becomes world's biggest producer of opium, overtaking Afghanistan . The Guardian .
  62. News: 2023 . Myanmar is now world's largest source of opium, UN says . Reuters .
  63. 2023 . Civil-War-Torn Myanmar Surpasses Afghanistan as World's Top Opium Producer . Time .
  64. Web site: Parts of Asia are slipping into the hands of organized crime. Jeremy. Douglas. CNN. 15 November 2018 .
  65. Web site: May 2022 . Synthetic Drugs in East and Southeast Asia: Latest Developments and Challenges 2022.
  66. News: Huge fentanyl haul seized in Asia's biggest-ever drugs bust. Reuters . 18 May 2020. www.reuters.com.