The Opium King of the Heroin Trade: The Golden Triangle in Southeast Asia (1997)
Khun Sa was born to a
Chinese father and a
Shan mother. He adopted the pseudonym Khun Sa, meaning "
Prince Prosperous". In his youth he trained with the Kuomintang, which had fled into the border regions of
Burma from
Yunnan upon its defeat in the
Chinese Civil War, and eventually went to form his own army of a few hundred men. In
1963 he re-formed it into a Ka Kwe Ye local militia loyal to Gen
Ne Win's
Burmese government. Ka Kwe Ye received money, uniforms and weapons in return for fighting the Shan rebels.
When Khun Sa had expanded his army to 800 men, he stopped cooperating with the Burmese government, took control of large area in Shan and Wa states and expanded into opium production. In
1967 he clashed with the Kuomintang remnants in
Shan State, which resulted in his defeat, demoralizing him and his forces. In
1969, the
Rangoon government captured him. He was freed in
1973 when his second-in-command abducted two
Russian doctors and demanded his release. By
1976 he had returned to opium smuggling, and set up a base inside northern
Thailand in the village of
Ban Hin Taek. He renamed his group the Shan
United Army and began ostensibly fighting for Shan autonomy against the Burmese government.
In
October 1981 a 39-man unit of
Thai Rangers and
Burmese guerrillas attempted to assassinate Khun Sa at the insistence of the
US Drug Enforcement Administration.[6] The attempt failed,[7] however in
January 1982 a
Thai Ranger squad from
Pak Thong Chai, together with units from the
Border Patrol Police and the
Royal Thai Army, was used to force Khun Sa to move his headquarters from Ban Hin Taek across the border into
Myanmar.[8]
In
1985, Khun Sa joined forces with the Tai
Revolutionary Council of Moh Heng. Through that alliance he both gained control of the whole Thai-Burma border area from
Mae Hong Son to
Mae Sai and became one of the principal figures in opium smuggling in the
Golden Triangle.
Over the two decades of his unrivalled dominance of the
Shan state, from
1974 to
1994, the share of
New York street heroin coming from the Golden Triangle—the northern parts of Myanmar, Thailand and
Laos—rose from 5% to 80%. It was 90% pure, "the best in the business", according to the
Drug Enforcement Administration. And Khun Sa, the
DEA thought, had most of that trade.[9]
A
Panthay Chinese Muslim from Burma, Ma Zhengwen, assisted Khun Sa in selling his heroin in north Thailand.[10]
In
1988, Khun Sa was interviewed by
Australian journalist
Stephen Rice, who had crossed the border from Thailand into Burma illegally. Khun Sa offered to sell his entire heroin crop to the
Australian Government for A$ 50m a year for the next eight years, a move that would have virtually stopped the heroin trade into both
Australia and the
United States overnight.
The Australian Government rejected the offer, with
Senator Gareth Evans declaring: “The Australian Government is simply not in the business of paying criminals to refrain from criminal activity.”[11]
In
1989, Khun Sa was charged by a New York court for trying to import 1,
000 tons of heroin. By then he had proposed
USA to buy his entire opium production or he would sell it on the international narcotics market.
It is claimed that Khun Sa surrendered to Burmese officials in
January 1996, reportedly because he did not want to face drug smuggling charges in the USA.
The US DEA had promised $2 million reward for his arrest. Khun Sa left the
Shan States for Rangoon, but he was never arrested by the government. Burmese officials refused to extradite him, and he lived the rest of his life in the Rangoon area with significant investments in
Yangon,
Mandalay and
Taunggyi.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khun_Sa