Shanghai Daily

Mega bust of Mexican meth made by Hong Kong Customs

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HONG Kong Customs announced its largest seizure of methamphet­amine in a decade yesterday, 110 kilograms of ice worth some HK$77 million (US$10 million) that originated in Mexico.

The seizure points toward the growing presence of meth in Asia made by Mexican cartels, a region where the local “Golden Triangle” gangs traditiona­lly dominate production.

Customs officials said the contraband was discovered in an air cargo shipment that originated in Mexico and came via Alaska.

Following a tip-off from overseas law enforcemen­t, they X-rayed the shipment which was listed as being filled with cheap plastic sequins from Mexico, something officers said made little sense because such beads could easily be bought locally.

Inside they found 120 plastic lunch boxes filled with high grade methamphet­amine and packets of fabric softener used to mask the smell.

“This is the largest meth traffickin­g case Hong Kong Customs has detected in the past 10 years,” Commander Philip Chan, from the Customs department’s drug bureau, told reporters.

Chan said some of the ice may have been intended for local consumptio­n but the majority was likely headed to further destinatio­ns overseas.

Most of Asia’s meth comes from “Golden Triangle” border areas between Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and southwest

China which are now pumping unpreceden­ted quantities of synthetic drugs into global markets.

A study by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says that Southeast Asia’s crime groups are netting more than US$60 billion a year.

One of the most successful regional cartels is “Sam Gor,” a crime syndicate officials say is led by Chinese-born Canadian citizen named Tse Chi Lop.

But drugs from Mexico, which traditiona­lly catered to the North American market, are increasing­ly showing up in the region.

“Mexico has become a popular manufactur­ing place because of its geographic­al advantage,” Chan said.

(AFP)

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