China Daily

Colleagues laud drug squad leader who never rests on his laurels

- By YANG ZEKUN

“I refuse to believe that I can’t solve this case,” is what drug squad officer Yang Liyong often tells his colleagues.

The 52-year-old, who is head of the anti-drug brigade at the Baiyun district branch of the Guangzhou Public Security Bureau in Guangdong province, joined the police in 1994.

As a major transporta­tion hub, Baiyun has a large floating population and is home to aviation, land and water traffic. Large and medium-sized enterprise­s and logistics businesses in the area account for 65 percent of the city’s transporta­tion load, making the district one of the biggest freight distributi­on centers in the province, which can aid the spread of illegal drugs.

In December 2015, due to its prominent problems of drug transit and distributi­on, Baiyun was included in a list of key rectificat­ion areas by the China National Narcotic Control Committee.

Four months later, Yang was appointed head of the district’s anti-drug brigade.

Since then, he has led officers in more than 3,000 cases, dealt with more than 25,000 drug-related suspects and seized more than 2,000 kilograms of narcotics.

Anti-drug work is full of hardships and dangers, and although the team takes sufficient precaution­s, suspects sometimes carry weapons, meaning each operation is full of uncertaint­y, Yang said.

“There is no time for fear when confrontin­g suspects. What we have to do is ensure our safety and detain suspects as quickly as possible,” he said

In June 2017, the district’s officers discovered a batch of drugs at a logistics warehouse. The drugs were hidden inside the packaging of polishing machines that were about to be exported to Indonesia.

After careful investigat­ion and deployment, and with the help of the Indonesian drug control authoritie­s, the 250 kg of methamphet­amine were sent to Indonesia as per the original plan. Local police detained the suspects as they were taking receipt of the drugs.

In that case, police in the provinces of Guangdong and Shaanxi also detained seven suspects, seizing 5 kg of methamphet­amine and about 1 million yuan ($147,800) in cash.

In March last year, the anti-drug brigade unearthed a drug dealer who was working with counterpar­ts from Vietnam, and whose delivery channels covered Guangdong’s Pearl River Delta region.

An investigat­ion showed that the suspect was an army veteran who was equipped with guns and grenades, and had threatened to kill himself and anyone who tried to catch him.

The informatio­n didn’t deter Yang, who led a team to capture the suspect on March 18. The moment the man left his house, Yang overpowere­d him, confiscati­ng two loaded guns.

The officers later captured seven pistols, five standard military grenades, about 200 bullets and six swords, as well as a consignmen­t of drugs.

“If we recall generation­s of antidrug police officers, they fought battles of wits and courage against drug trafficker­s. There have been difficulti­es, twists and turns, bloodshed and sacrifice, but the fight against drugs has not stopped for one moment,” Yang said.

“To be an anti-drug officer, you need to have a dream, which is very simple — to create a world without drugs.”

He believes that the fight will not end until all the narcotics have disappeare­d. He refuses to rest on his current achievemen­ts, but continues to adapt to new situations and implement anti-drug measures based on local conditions.

Yang has led his team to continuall­y improve the quality of intelligen­ce and work with the local situation to establish an informatio­n team to collect, analyze and assess various clues. The informatio­n is sent to police stations so they can carry out precision strikes. The district’s experience­s are also being promoted across the province.

He has also made great efforts to train profession­al logistics management personnel, organized a series of rectificat­ions in the industry and developed a control system for receiving and posting the sector’s activities to block the channels of drug transit and distributi­on.

Meanwhile, he has combined the work of cracking down on drug-related crime with the control and support of users, employing education to promote the anti-drug message among teenagers.

 ?? ?? Yang Liyong (center) talks with colleagues.
Yang Liyong (center) talks with colleagues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong