Toronto Star

Police raid China’s top meth village in crackdown

Noxious waste contaminat­ed water and soil to the point where crops unable to grow

- JULIE MAKINEN LOS ANGELES TIMES

BEIJING— Call it “Breaking Bad: China Edition.”

More than 3,000 police officers equipped with helicopter­s and motorboats and accompanie­d by dogs descended on a southern Chinese village notorious for making crystal meth, seizing three tonnes of the drug and 23 tonnes of raw materials and arresting 182 people.

The massive raid targeted Boshe village in Guangdong province, a difficult-to-reach hamlet of 14,000 people near the city of Lufeng.

Pictures of last Sunday’s raid published on Chinese news websites showed dozens of police vehicles massed in the village of traditiona­lstyle, single-storey tile-roofed homes separated by narrow alleyways, many passable only by bicycle or on foot.

Provincial anti-drug official Qiu Wei told the state-run Xinhua News Agency that more than one-fifth of the village’s 2,000 households were connected to the drug trade and that the town had been providing a third of the crystal meth made in China during the last three years.

Police said they seized nine guns, ammunition, a homemade bomb and knives. Three officers were reportedly injured in the operation, including two who were shot and one who was struck by a car.

Use and production of crystal meth has been rising rapidly in China. A study published in November by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime said of the more than two million drug users who have come into contact with Chinese authoritie­s, 29 per cent were using amphetamin­e-type drugs, up from just 9 per cent in 2008.

More than one-fifth of the village’s 2,000 households were connected to the drug trade

Meth, in both crystal and pill form, is the second most popular illicit drug in China, behind only heroin, the report said, and in 2012, 40 per cent of the total drug arrests — nearly 50,000 out of 121,000 cases — were related to meth.

Once known for its lychee fruit, Boshe village is an insular — some would say backward — place where all the residents are said to share a single surname, Cai.

In recent months, some inhabitant­s had taken to online forums, complainin­g that the extensive meth-making operations — a process that generates significan­t amounts of noxious waste — had contaminat­ed the water and soil, rendering it impossible to grow crops. Piles of waste reportedly littered the town, and residents openly stored the raw ingredient­s beside their homes.

Other locals said the significan­t amount of electricit­y needed for the meth-making laboratori­es had led to frequent power outages in the village, driving many residents to buy generators.

Earlier attempts by authoritie­s to stamp out drug activity in Boshe reportedly were thwarted by an extensive network of lookouts in the village’s narrow streets, as well as even human barricades of women, children and the elderly.

In an online forum, nearby residents complained about lawlessnes­s in Boshe.

“So many people in Boshe cook meth, make counterfei­t money, sell heroin and weapons. There are too many corrupt officials there, how come the policemen haven’t arrested them?” wrote one commenter. “The reason why Boshe is so rich is because all the money comes from illegal businesses! Only very few people are in the legal business. 80% of them are involved in meth and 100% of them have weapons!”

Said another: “All the power cuts in Boshe are due to cooking meth or making counterfei­t money! The local officials are all corrupt. They don’t deal with the problems. They take red envelopes (bribes) from the meth cooks.”

Media reports identified Cai Lianghuo, 42, as the mastermind of the meth operation. He was arrested in November. His cousin and local party chief Cai Dongjia, who was arrested in this week’s raid, was accused of trying to help free Cai Lianghuo from custody.

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