The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Nearly US$38 mln crystal meth seized

Some 788kg of ‘ice’, nine million tablets found in abandoned pick-up truck near Laotian border

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BANGKOK: Thai authoritie­s have seized a massive methamphet­amine haul worth almost US$$38 million near the Laotian border, officials said Tuesday, highlighti­ng the kingdom’s role as a pipeline for drugs flooding through Southeast Asia.

Early Tuesday authoritie­s found some 788 kilogramme­s of crystal meth – a high-purity form of the stimulant – in an abandoned pick-up truck in northern Chiang Rai province, the heart of the notorious ‘Golden Triangle’ drug producing zone.

More than nine million meth tablets were also found in fertiliser bags inside the vehicle, some 100 metres away from the Mekong river that divides Thailand and Laos.

“Both type of drugs were found in the abandoned pickup truck... in Wiang Kaen district in Chiang Rai province,” a military official told AFP, requesting anonymity.

He said the drug smugglers had already fled the scene while authoritie­s have detained three Thai men suspected of preparing to move the cache to the next destinatio­n.

The Golden Triangle – a remote region where northern Thailand, Myanmar and Laos meet – is a base for cartels who churn out huge quantities of opium and meth that are smuggled through porous borders to countries across Asia.

Commonly known as ‘ice’, crystal meth is a stronger form of the drug that sells for around 6080 a gramme in Thailand.

The drug is often smuggled south into Thailand, then on to Malaysia or even Australia – the world’s largest per capita consumer of crystal meth – where the price surges.

Ice’s lower-grade and cheaper cousin, the caffeine-laced meth pills known as ‘yaba’, is also massively popular across Asia.

Drug officers said the pickup truck seizure was one of the biggest in recent memory, with the wholesale price of the crystal meth valued at up to US$37.8 million in Thailand.

It came less than a week after authoritie­s confiscate­d 700 kilogramme­s of crystal meth in a truck travelling down Thailand’s southern tip, which leads to Malaysia.

The drugs were found on March 28 among fruit packed into a six-wheel vehicle in Chumpon province.

“The drugs were being transporte­d via Thailand to Malaysia and destined for third countries,” said Soonthorn Chalermkia­t from the Narcotics Suppressio­n Bureau.

Two Thai and two Malaysian traffickin­g suspects have been arrested, he added. - AFP

 ??  ?? Thai police show one of its largest crystal methamphet­amine busts during a news conference in Bangkok. — Reuters photo
Thai police show one of its largest crystal methamphet­amine busts during a news conference in Bangkok. — Reuters photo

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