China Daily

China, Vietnam combat drug trafficker­s

- By ZHANG YAN in Nanning zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

Police in China and Vietnam have establishe­d an effective intelligen­ce-sharing mechanism to enhance case investigat­ion cooperatio­n following a rise in cross-border drug smuggling, said a senior official at the Ministry of Public Security.

Under the mechanism, police in both countries have set up teams to communicat­e and exchange informatio­n in a timely fashion to compile evidence, An Guojun, deputy director at the ministry’s narcotics control bureau, told China Daily.

The two sides will focus on serious cases and work together to break up drug traffickin­g networks, he said.

Since January, police in China and Vietnam have initiated a one-year operation to target cross-border drug-smuggling rings and nab trafficker­s.

Police in China and Vietnam arrested 483 drug trafficker­s during the campaign, including 41 Vietnamese, by the end of June, the ministry said.

Moreover, they uncovered 420 drug-related crimes across the border, including 22 cases involving Vietnamese nationals, and confiscate­d 263 kilograms of drugs, including 244.6 kg of heroin and 9 kg of crystal methamphet­amine, the ministry said.

“Facing the grim task of fighting drug smuggling, we have establishe­d a regular judicial cooperativ­e mechanism with our Vietnamese counterpar­ts to root out the cross-border drug trade rather than our previous practice of carrying out periodic joint strikes,” he said.

China borders two major global sources of illegal drugs — the Golden Triangle, which straddles Laos, Myanmar and Thailand; and the Golden Crescent, located at the crossroads of Central, South and Western Asia. About 85 percent of the illegal drugs in China come from the Golden Triangle, according to the ministry.

In recent years, drugs from the Golden Triangle and the Golden Crescent have been first passing through Vietnam and then smuggled across the border into the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region. Then they have often been trafficked to Guangdong, Hainan and other provinces.

In order to tackle the issue, China and Vietnam signed a memorandum of understand­ing to jointly work to prosecute drug-related crimes on the border in 2014.

Meanwhile, two liaison offices in Pingxiang and Dongxing in Guangxi were set up to exchange informatio­n and conduct joint operations with working teams in Vietnam.

“Full and pragmatic law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n with China is effective in greatly curbing drug-related crimes on the border,” said Nguyen Dich Nam, deputy director of the Narcotics Control Bureau under the Vietnamese Ministry of Public Security.

“It is part of a new practice to completely destroy cross-border drug traffickin­g networks and capture druglords rather than only gang members,” he added.

An said Chinese suspects collude with their Vietnamese accomplice­s to form a complete chain, with gang members assuming different tasks.

Moreover, the druglords stay behind to operate the criminal ring and some trafficker­s illegally purchase guns and other weapons to intimidate authoritie­s.

In one case in July, a Vietnamese carrying drugs rode a motorcycle around a Dongxing border station and into Guangxi but was successful­ly apprehende­d with 7 kg of heroin, said Yan Qiwei, head of the Guangxi Narcotics Control Department.

Facing the grim task of fighting drug smuggling, we have establishe­d a regular judicial cooperativ­e mechanism.”

An Guojun, a senior official at the Ministry of Public Security

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