China Executes 11 Members Of Myanmar ‘Mafia’ Family

China has indeed executed 11 members of the Ming family, a notorious mafia clan that ran large-scale scam centers and gambling operations in Myanmar’s Laukkaing town, along China’s north-eastern border.

 The executed individuals were convicted of crimes including homicide, illegal detention, fraud, and operating gambling dens. Their scam operations generated over 10 billion yuan ($1.4 billion) between 2015 and 2023 and resulted in the deaths of 14 Chinese citizens.

The Ming family members were sentenced in September for various crimes including homicide, illegal detention, fraud and operating gambling dens by a court in China’s Zhejiang province.

The sentences were handed down by a court in China’s Zhejiang province in September.

China

The executions followed a dramatic collapse of the Ming family’s criminal empire in 2023, after ethnic militias seized Laukkaing, a key border town in northern Myanmar.

The militias had taken control of the area during an escalation in fighting with Myanmar’s army, a campaign that Beijing was reported to have tacitly supported after growing frustration with the military’s failure to shut down scam operations targeting Chinese citizens.

China

Laukkaing had been transformed by the Ming family and other clans from a poor border town into a lucrative hub of casinos, red-light districts and online scam centres. Their activities generated more than 10bn yuan ($1.4bn; £1bn) between 2015 and 2023, according to China’s highest court.

When the ethnic alliance overran the town, Ming family members and associates were detained and handed over to Chinese authorities. The court later said the group’s crimes led to the deaths of 14 Chinese citizens and injuries to many others. Appeals were rejected in November

The eleven executions mark the first time China has carried out death sentences against Myanmar-based scam bosses, but officials have made clear the crackdown is far from over

Five members of the Bai family were sentenced to death in November, while trials involving defendants from the Wei and Liu families remain ongoing.

More than 20 other members of the Ming family received prison sentences ranging from five years to life. Ming Xuechang, the family patriarch, died in 2023 while attempting to evade detention, according to Myanmar’s military.

The Ming family’s trial was held behind closed doors, though more than 160 people, including victims’ families, were allowed to attend sentencing proceedings. Confessions from those arrested were later broadcast in state media documentaries, underscoring Beijing’s determination to dismantle scam networks.

READ ALSO: China’s Former Sports Administration Chief Handed Suspended Death Sentence For Accepting $33.4 Million In Bribes

China’s intervention came amid estimates by the United Nations that hundreds of thousands of people have been trafficked to work in scam centres across South East Asia, many of them Chinese nationals.

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