Pubdate: Tue, 07 Mar 2006 Source: Australian, The (Australia) Copyright: 2006sThe Australian Contact: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/files/aus-letters.htm Website: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/35 Author: Carmel Egan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) VITAL EVIDENCE KEPT FROM JURY ON PONG SU DRUG RUN North Korea's Links To A Heroin Run Were Not Presented In Court, Writes Carmel Egan ONE of the great unsolved mysteries of the Pong Su drug trafficking saga is why the smugglers chose to take their 150kg shipment of pure heroin ashore at the worst possible time -- in treacherous seas and gale-force winds off the rocky southwest Victorian coast. Federal agents admit that had the traffickers aboard the Pong Su, a cargo freighter owned by the communist government of North Korea, chosen a calmer night, the 2003 drug run might not have gone so wrong. "The spot they picked on a calm day would probably have been OK," said AFP agent Damien Appleby. But it was April 15. And for loyal North Korean citizens, that is a day that must be marked appropriately -- to honour the birthday of late president and "Great Leader" Kim Il-sung. While four men pleaded guilty to their role in the heroin mission, the captain of the ship and its political officer were among the crew members who walked free from court this week. But the jury who found them not guilty were never allowed to fully consider the ship's links to the North Korean Government, with long connections to international drug trafficking. On that night in 2003, Agent Appleby received a call from the Korean interpreter eavesdropping on two suspected heroin traffickers about to rendezvous with the drug ship. "They are talking about it being tonight .. it can't be cancelled." "You could see the huge surf. I turned to the driver, Steve Meagher, and said 'They're going to be killed'," Appleby said. The following morning, just as predicted, Agent Meagher found the body of one of the drug traffickers entangled in brown kelp. The Pong Su was circling offshore nearby and the dead man's partner, Ta Song Wong, was hiding in bushes as police sealed off the beach. His capture the next day gave police mobile telephone numbers, SIM cards and a global positioning device that linked Wong and his shore-based accomplices to an international drug syndicate in South East Asia -- and proved, police believed, the complicity of the North Korean Government. The breakthrough in the case was a tip-off that came eight days earlier. They were told to look out for a man named Kiam Fah Teng. Teng had arrived in Australia on March 27 from Beijing with another member of the shore-party, Yau Kim Lam. Teng was the logistics officer sent by the drug ring to hire vehicles, organise accommodation and smooth the way for the man who would distribute the drugs in Sydney and Melbourne. Lam was the communications man. Teng eventually met up with the third member of the shore party, Wee Quay Tan. Tan was an experienced international drug runner with a conviction for trafficking heroin in Europe. Teng, Tan, Lam and Wong would all eventually plead guilty to aiding and abetting the importation of a commercial quantity of heroin. Teng received a 22-year sentence, Lam got 23 years. Wong and Tan are yet to be sentenced. But the story of how the AFP busted the Pong Su was suppressed until a verdict was handed down in the seven-month trial of the ship's captain, Man Sun Song, political officer Dong Song Choi, first mate Man Jin Ri and chief engineer Ju Chon Ri. On Sunday the Supreme Court jury found all four innocent. For the AFP, the failure to convict the senior officers was a significant blow. Vital evidence exploring the North Korean Government's history of international drug smuggling was not allowed to be presented to the jury, including testimony from two North Korean defectors. And the jury heard nothing about a direct radio communication between the ship and North Korea. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman