Pubdate: Sat, 08 Apr 2000 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ AS AUSTRALIAN POLICE TRY TO STEM THE TRADE The Australian Government has begun cooperating with Burma's military rulers to challenge drug lords who are dumping cheap heroin on Australia's east coast, despite claims that elements of the military regime are themselves linked to major traffickers. The sensitive policy gamble is aimed at encouraging the Burmese Government to tackle, or at least inform on, the shadowy heads of drug empires based in the opium growing region of Burma's far north. Despite a recent drop in opium production in Burma, due to poor climatic conditions, the price of heroin has continued to fall worldwide and purity has increased, probably because Mexican and Colombian producers have flooded the big US market. As part of Canberra's new policy, the Australian military has stepped up its contribution to wider intelligence gathering initiatives that include the stationing of a Federal Police agent in Burma for the first time. One immediate goal is to gather tip-offs on large-scale heroin shipments from Burma to Sydney, Melbourne and the Gold Coast. The same region is also generating a massive trafficking business of speed-like methamphetamine into Thailand, further enhancing the power of the heroin drug lords. In the longer term, there are concerns that these drug producers will also target Australia with new generations of synthetic drugs. Critics who still believe Burma will only respond to concerted international pressure and sanctions are cynical about the potential for genuine collaboration with the country's military. The United States, and more recently, upper echelons of the Thai military, have accused Burma of tacitly allowing the development of mini "narco-states". The Burmese junta has brokered various autonomy deals with ethnic minority groups in the so-called "Golden Triangle" opium producing region, ending decades of sporadic guerrilla warfare with Rangoon. The Australian Government, which has launched a diplomatic initiative aimed at promoting human rights dialogue with Burma, is less willing to attack the regime's policies. Having resisted pressure to boycott an Interpol conference in Burma last year on trafficking, the Australian Government is now pressing ahead with engagement. The Foreign Minister, Mr Alexander Downer, told The Age yesterday that: "With Burma being the source of 80 to 90 per cent of the heroin entering Australia, the Australian Government believes it is important to support domestic and international anti-narcotics efforts there. We need to work with the Burmese authorities on this. "There are suggestions of some links between public officials and the drug trade, but it is also true that the Burmese Government has taken positive steps in drug-crop eradication." The Federal Police officer stationed in Rangoon in January was based in the Thai sector of the Golden Triangle in the early 1990s. Despite his local knowledge of the region, however, the obstacles he faces are formidable. For a start, it was the powerful head of Burma's military intelligence apparatus, General Khin Nyunt, who struck autonomy deals with various ethnic groups and leaders of the former communist party. In return for helping drive drug kingpin Khun Sa from his outposts along the Burma-Thai border, a mixed bag of ethnic Wa and Chinese drug traffickers were allowed to occupy his former territory. Khun Sa's family remains in the trafficking business on a diminished scale. Arguably the most powerful drug trafficker in Burma today is Wei Shia-kang, according to Thailand-based Golden Triangle expert Bertil Lintner. Wei has been able to hold on to part of Khun Sa's territory since entering an alliance with Rangoon, which Mr Lintner says was clearly brokered by General Khin Nyunt. Wei, along with several brothers, has shadowy connections to Taiwanese and US intelligence agencies going back to the 1950s. They left China's southern Yunnan Province after the communist takeover and entered the opium trade. There are well-documented accounts of how Wei established listening posts to spy on China for the American Central Intelligence Agency, gaining useful protection for his drug smuggling operations. Other groups over the decades were given cart blanche by administrations in Rangoon to engage in trafficking provided they opposed anti-government insurgencies. According to well-placed sources, 400kilograms of heroin that were seized in the Port Macquarie area of New South Wales last October, the biggest bust in Australia's history, came from three laboratories near the Thai border under Wei's control. The Australian Justice Minister, Senator Amanda Vanstone, said she could not comment on "operational matters" when asked if Wei is now considered the leading target for the Federal Police agents. However, the fact that Senator Vanstone made a little publicised visit late last month to the northern Thai town of Mae Sai, located right on the Burmese border, reflects frustration at the continuing flow of cut-price heroin to Australia. Senator Vanstone was able to look across the narrow Sai River to the Burmese town of Tachilek where traffickers such as Wei Shia-kang have major business interests acquired with drug profits. On the Thai side, ethnic Chinese groups broker and finance big drug deals. Senator Vanstone cites collaboration projects with Thailand and Burma, particularly efforts to build mechanisms to tackle the laundering of drugs profits. But, she deflects questions about the likelihood that the Burmese military would ever risk renewed hostilities by challenging the drug business in areas where autonomy arrangements protect men such as Wei. "It is not Hollywood brawn and firepower that is needed but cooperation and that includes the sharing of intelligence," Senator Vanstone told The Age this week. "There is a need to build your relations with other people so you can pick up a phone and say: `What do you know about such and such?"' The Federal Police agent is in Rangoon on a six-month trial. Burma's military regime will weigh up whether to accept his presence on a permanent basis. Australian authorities will need to consider the cost-effectiveness of information gleaned and the scope to secure Burmese action in response to information supplied. Hopes rest partly on the potential to develop relationships with individuals in Burma's anti-narcotics administration that lead to shared information. A central problem is that major trafficking organisations now have big investments in Burma's mainstream economy, from transport to hotels and pig farming, which help insulate them from thorough investigation. The scale of methamphetamine production in Burma is staggering. Thai authorities estimate that more than 600 million tablets of the drug, which is taken orally or smoked, will be smuggled into Thailand this year. The international and operations director of the Australian Federal Police, Mr Andy Hughes, says: "I don't think we can afford to be complacent ... that the existing networks used to import heroin will not be used to import methamphetamphines." He said that a drug seizure was made in Perth several weeks ago, but added that a central strategy was to target organisations rather than specific substances. "We are about targeting criminal groups rather than the commodity," he said. "It is really about the big players." Thailand has had some success using new high-technology devices to search motor vehicles for drugs. What tends to happen though is that once detection measures are toughened on one part of the border, more remote locations are chosen and larger bribes are paid. A tougher attitude to drug smuggling by authorities in southern China has, according to Thai anti-narcotics agents, led to an increased flow of heroin through Thailand in recent months. There is also evidence of a substantial increase in heroin being moved through Laos and Cambodia. The senior Australian Federal Police agent stationed in Bangkok returned to base earlier this week from a visit to Laos as Thai sources confirmed that there have been several significant interceptions. Vietnam and southern Burmese sea ports remain major transit points to Australia and new smuggling routes through Bangladesh and India are also being used. There are still questions about the extent to which lower-quality heroin from the so-called Golden Crescent, notably Afghanistan, is being repacked and marketed as coming from Burma. Only a small proportion of smuggled heroin will be intercepted before it reaches Australia. One argument in the past has been that large busts in Australia at least affect demand by raising the price. But even with some large seizures in the last year, and the fall in opium poppy production in Burma due to weather factors, the price has fallen dramatically and purity is up. Estimates of the amount of heroin now coming into Australian annually from Burma vary from about 1.5tonnes to two or three times that amount. The huge profits available from supplying methamphetamines underwrite heroin deals. This includes an ability to buy political connections and bribe officials along smuggling routes. Much of the cash flowing to the operators of remote jungle drug laboratories is being reinvested at home in Burma and used to maintain their regional influence. Australian law enforcers are attempting to deal with the internecine links between these autonomous zones and the military regime in Rangoon. The ultimate test of the strategy will be whether the likes of Wei Shia-kang are put behind bars. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg