ລາວໂຮມລາວ ເພື່ອປະຊາທິປະໄຕ

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Heroin and the Golden Triangle
Anonymous

Date:
Heroin and the Golden Triangle
Permalink   
 


Heroin and the Golden Triangle

Here is the golden triangle. This is where the mekong and naam ruak river come together and so do Myanmar, Laos and Thailand. This was also the center of the opium trade for a few centuries up until the 1960s when Opium was outlawed due to US pressure.

The Golden Triangle is one of those regions that has captured popular imagination: think warlords, secret armies, opium mule trains chugging through the jungle, triads, the DEA and CIA, hill tribes, remote villages and above all the chest-high pink and white poppies that are the source of opium and its derivatives, morphine and heroin.

Through the 1960s to 1990s the Golden Triangle referred to a wide swathe of northern Southeast Asia comprising northeast Burma — the Wa and Shan states — northern Laos and northern parts of Thailand, primarily Mae Hong Son, Chiang Rai and the upper districts of Chiang Mai province. It was called “golden” because the wealth of the region was largely derived from black gold, or opium.

Opium Poppy field in the golden triangle area in Myanmar Asia

The region is a remote area of rugged mountains and forests inhabited by Shan, Tai Lu plus Hmong, Akha, Lisu, Yao and myriad hilltribe peoples. Up until recently much of it was highly difficult to access by road, and the governments in Bangkok, Vientiane, and still today Rangoon exercised only very limited control. Political and military power in these parts of Laos and Thailand was in the hands of private armies controlled by warlords and largely financed by the drugs trade — indeed in northeastern Burma that is still largely the case. After the civil war in China fleeing Republican (Kuomintang) army units moving into northern Thailand rivalled the Shan State Army of warlord Khun Sa for dominance, with the powerful Wa State army increasingly a major player as the Kuomintang faded and Khun Sa went into retirement.

In more recent times, under US pressure the Thai government has made major efforts to eradicate opium production in this region, and while only 20 years ago poppy fields were still a common sight in northern Thailand and Laos, they are now very rare in the former and increasingly so in the latter.

Crop substitution programmes have seen coffee; tea and temperate fruit and vegetable crops replace opium poppy in Thailand, and in northern Laos much former jungle land has been given over to new hybrid rubber tree species able to cope with northern climes. At the same time apparently “troublesome” hill-tribe villages were relocated into lowland areas, where they are more easily controlled. In Burma, cultivation has declined considerably with the Shan elements attempting to proffer a more acceptable public face and the Wa Army switching over to simpler, and more profitable, methamphetamine production.

In Thailand, cultivation has been, as we noted, practically eradicated and most mountain villages brought into the national grid with road construction, cultural assimilation and agricultural projects by the Thai government, Royal family and various charities. These days the Golden Triangle is little more than a marketing phrase for tourism.

The Triangle is reduced to the village of Sob Ruak where the borders of Burma, Laos and Thailand meet, and where you can buy a T-shirt in the coach park, visit the two opium museums and have a ****tail in the opium lounge of an upmarket hotel. You can stay at the Golden Triangle Inn and sign up for a Golden Triangle trek or even go and pay 20 baht to get a photo taken in a Doi Pui poppy field.



__________________
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.



Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard