Pubdate: Mon, 7 Jan 2002 Source: Denver Rocky Mountain News (CO) Copyright: 2002, Denver Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.rockymountainnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/371 VIETNAM BEGINS TRIAL OF 17 PEOPLE ON HEROIN SMUGGLING CHARGES A court in central Vietnam began a trial Monday of 17 people charged with smuggling and selling heroin from neighboring Laos, the chief judge said. The trial in the central province of Ha Tinh attracted several hundred people who followed the proceedings over loudspeakers outside of the courtroom, said Nguyen Tri Tue, chief judge of the Ha Tinh provincial People's Court. The defendants told police they smuggled a total of 15.4 pounds of heroin from neighboring Laos on 11 occasions between March 1998 until they were arrested last February, he said. The ring sold the heroin in Ha Tinh and Nghe An provinces, Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, he said. Tue said the trial is expected to last four days. Last March, a court in Ha Tinh convicted 23 people on drug trafficking charges. Seven were sentenced to death and nine to life imprisonment in the country's second-largest illegal drug case in terms of amount of drugs trafficked. On Thursday, 23 people are scheduled to face trial on drug trafficking charges in Nghe An province, a local People's Court official said. Nghe An and Ha Tinh have become notorious for drug smuggling from Laos following a massive government crackdown in 1995 on drug trafficking from Laos in the northern province of Lai Chau. Virtually all of the heroin smuggled into Vietnam comes from the drug-producing "Golden Triangle" of Laos, Thailand and Myanmar. In the country's largest drug case, 22 people were convicted in June 2000 in the northern province of Nam Dinh of trafficking 570 pounds of heroin and 636 pounds of opium. Half were sentenced to the firing squad. Vietnam toughened its penalties on drug crimes in 1997, with the death penalty in place for possession, trading or trafficking of more than 3.5 ounces of heroin or 11 pounds of opium. However, drug trafficking has shown no sign of decline. Last year, 55 drug traffickers were sentenced to death, according to government figures. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh