Neha Patil (Editor)

Mekong River massacre

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Date
  
5 October 2011

Attack type
  
Massacre

Suspected perpetrator
  
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Deaths
  
13 Chinese crew members

Suspected perpetrators
  
Naw Kham, 9 Thai soldiers

Location
  
Chiang Saen District, Thailand

The Mekong River massacre occurred in the morning of 5 October 2011, when two Chinese cargo ships were attacked on a stretch of the Mekong River in the Golden Triangle region on the borders of Burma and Thailand. All 13 crew members on the two ships were killed and dumped in the river. It is the deadliest attack on Chinese nationals abroad in modern times. In response China temporarily suspended shipping on the Mekong, and reached an agreement with Myanmar (Burma), Thailand, and Laos to jointly patrol the river. The event was also the impetus for the Naypyidaw Declaration and other anti-drug cooperation efforts in the region.

Contents

Mekong River massacre Review Mekong river murder tragedy CCTV News CNTV English

"On Oct 28, 23 days after the massacre, Thailand "arrested" the nine Pha Muang Task Force soldiers, who have since disappeared from the justice system", according to the Bangkok Post in 2016.

Mekong River massacre Mekong massacre trial begins in China Telegraph

Mekong river massacre


Background

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The Mekong is a major waterway of Southeast Asia. It originates in China, where it is called the Lancang River, and flows through Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam, where it empties into the South China Sea. It is a major trading route between China's southwestern Yunnan Province and the countries of Southeast Asia. However, after leaving China the river flows through the Golden Triangle area where the borders of Myanmar, Thailand, and Laos meet. The region has long been plagued by lawlessness and is notorious for drug smuggling. An owner of one of the hijacked ships stated that almost every Chinese boat in the area had been robbed by river gangs.

Incident

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According to the crew of a different boat who witnessed the attack, about eight gunmen stormed the Chinese cargo ships Hua Ping and Yu Xing 8 in the morning of 5 October 2011. The hijacking reportedly occurred in Burmese waters. Later during the day Thai river police in the northernmost Chiang Rai Province recovered the ships after a gunfight, and found about 900,000 amphetamine pills worth more than US$3 million. The bodies of the Chinese crew members were later retrieved from the river. They had been shot or stabbed, and some had been bound or blindfolded.

Investigation

According to the police chief of Chiang Rai Province, drug gangs demand protection money from boats on the Mekong and sometimes hijack them to transport illegal goods. The police suspected from the beginning that the mastermind of the massacre was Naw Kham (also spelled Nor Kham), an ethnic Shan Burmese national in his forties, who is an alleged drug lord and pirate in the Golden Triangle. He is believed to be a former aide of the notorious drug kingpin Khun Sa, and leader of a gang with more than 100 members who had been involved in drug trafficking, kidnapping, murder, and piracy along the Mekong for years.

However, further investigations also implicated nine Thai soldiers belonging to an elite anti-narcotics army unit. They are (as of 2012) under investigation by Thailand.

After a long manhunt involving Chinese and Thai authorities, in late April 2012 Lao security forces captured Naw Kham in Bokeo Province and extradited him to China in May. Naw Kham has since admitted to Chinese authorities that he was responsible for the massacre, while Burma plans to extradite to China Naw Kham's aide who is believed to possess key information about the attack.

Criminal justice

On 6 November 2012 China's Intermediate People's Court of Kunming, Yunnan sentenced Naw Kham and three of his subordinates to death: one from Thailand, one from Laos and one that "Chinese state media referred to as stateless". Two others, Zha Bo and Zha Tuobo, were given a death sentence with reprieve and eight years in prison, respectively. The six defendants were fined a total of 6,000,000 Yuan ($960,000). Approximately 300 spectators were present at the verdict, including relatives of the victims, media, and diplomats from Laos and Thailand. The death sentences were carried out on March 1, 2013.

Reactions

The massacre sparked outrage among the Chinese public; China temporarily suspended all Chinese shipping on the Mekong. In December 2011 China, Burma, Laos, and Thailand began joint patrols on the Mekong after a security agreement was reached among the four countries, with more than 200 Chinese border police from Yunnan Province taking part. It is the first such joint deployment in Southeast Asia, and is seen as an expansion of China's growing role in regional security.

Further attacks

On 4 January 2012, a Burmese patrol boat and four Chinese cargo ships were attacked on the Mekong in Burma. Several grenades were fired, possibly from M79 grenade launchers, but all missed the boats.

Movie

The movie Operation Mekong was released in 2016.

References

Mekong River massacre Wikipedia