The Borneo Post

Thai police seize US$45 mln worth of meth from convoy

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BANGKOK: Ten million made-inMyanmar ‘yaba’ pills and nearly half a tonne of crystal meth hidden in tea packages have been pulled from a convoy of cars in Bangkok, Thai police said yesterday.

The drugs — worth around US$ 45 million on the local market — were being ferried along Thailand’s ‘ narcotics corridor’, which cuts through the central Thai province of Ayutthaya to Bangkok and then south to Malaysia.

Police followed the four cars from Ayutthaya, which is a key warehousin­g site for the drugs which pour from Myanmar’s meth labs.

They made the bust once the convoy had reached downtown Bangkok late Thursday, police said, uncovering crytal meth concealed in Chinese-branded tea packages and the pill bundles.

“Six Thai suspects who were paid to transport drugs were arrested,” national police chief General Chaktip Chaijinda told reporters, adding some of the drugs were “destined for foreign countries”.

“They belong to the northern Wa group,” he said, of an ethnic group based in Myanmar’s Shan State which jointly oversees the world’s second largest drug producing region.

Yaba — which means ‘crazy medicine’ in Thai — are methamphet­amine pills cut with caffeine and are consumed across

Six Thai suspects who were paid to transport drugs were arrested. General Chaktip Chaijinda, National police chief

Asia, popped by everyone from the party crowd to farmers and lorry drivers.

The notorious ‘Golden Triangle’ — an ungovernab­le border zone that crosses Myanmar, Laos, Thailand and China — is experienci­ng a boom in drug production.

Massive oversupply from Myanmar has seen the price of a yaba tablet plummet to 100 baht (around US$ 3) in Thailand.

The much more potent and addictive crystal meth version — ‘ice’ — is also cascading across the region.

One kilogramme goes for around US$ 30,000 in Thailand, but the price rises the further it is transporte­d from the source in Myanmar.

Drugs are trafficked south to Malaysia and beyond, while record seizures are also being made along a westwards route from Myanmar to Bangladesh.

 ??  ?? A Thai police officer inspects the seized drugs and guns during a press conference in Bangkok. — AFP photo
A Thai police officer inspects the seized drugs and guns during a press conference in Bangkok. — AFP photo

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