Arrest in Thailand of second drug kingpin tightens dragnet on huge syndicate netscape.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from netscape.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Inside details of the Australian Federal Police effort to arrest a Chinese-Canadian drug lord allegedly responsible for 70 per cent of Australia s meth supply and much of Asia s narcotics has been revealed.
Drug kingpin Tse Chi Lop, 57, currently faces extradition tcouro Australia after being apprehended in Amsterdam s Schiphol Airport by Dutch police when the AFP requested an arrest through Interpol on January 22.
One of the world s biggest alleged drug traffickers and Asia s most wanted man was being pursued by 20 agencies around the world in an operation led by police in Australia - a country he has apparently never been to.
Inside details of the Australian Federal Police effort to arrest the Chinese-Canadian drug lord Tse Chi Lop (pictured), who is reportedly responsible for 70 per cent of Australia s meth supply and much of Asia s narcotics, has been revealed
Ice lord
Tse Chi Lop’s drug-trafficking syndicate has spread across the world
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MONG THE strangest by-products of the Cultural Revolution was the creation of one of the world’s most lethal organised-crime syndicates. When Mao Zedong at last turned against the Red Guards, he sent many of them to be re-educated in Guangdong, the province abutting Hong Kong. Either to avoid prison or after their release, many escaped to the British enclave, as Hong Kong was then, where some banded together as the Dai Huen Jai the Big Circle Boys. Since then the group has expanded operations to other parts of Asia as well as to Europe and North America.