
Myanmar burns confiscated drugs worth around $300 million
Smoke and flame rise from burning illegal narcotics during a destruction ceremony to mark International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, on the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar,, June 26, 2025. (AP Photo)
YANGON--Nearly $300 million worth of confiscated illegal drugs were destroyed in Myanmar's major cities on Thursday to mark the annual International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, officials said.
The drug burnings came nearly a month after U.N. experts warned of unprecedented levels of methamphetamine production and trafficking from Southeast Asia's Golden Triangle region and Myanmar's eastern Shan State in particular.
The country has long been a major source of illegal drugs destined for East and Southeast Asia, despite repeated efforts to crack down. The U.N. agency labeled it in 2023 as the world's largest opium producer.
In the country's biggest city, Yangon, a massive pile of drugs worth more than $117 million went up in a spectacular blaze.
The destroyed drugs included opium, heroin, methamphetamine, marijuana, ketamine and the stimulant known as ice, or crystal meth, Yangon Police Brig. Gen. Sein Lwin said in a speech at a drug-burning ceremony.
Similar events also occurred in the country's second-largest city of Mandalay, and in Taunggyi, the capital of eastern Myanmar's Shan state, all areas close to where the drugs are produced.
A police official from the capital Naypyitaw told the Associated Press that the substances burnt in three locations were worth 297.95 million US dollars. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the information has not yet been publicly announced.
Myanmar has a long history of drug production linked to political and economic insecurity caused by decades of armed conflict.
Eastern Myanmar is part of the infamous Golden Triangle, where the borders of Myanmar, Laos and Thailand meet. The production of opium and heroin historically flourished there, largely because of the lawlessness in border areas where Myanmar's central government has been able to exercise only minimum control over various ethnic minority militias, some of them partners in the drug trade.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime said in a report in May that the political crisis across the country after the military takeover in 2021 – that has led to what is now a civil war – has turbocharged growth of the methamphetamine trades.
That has caused the flow of drugs to surge 'across not only East and Southeast Asia, but also increasingly into South Asia, in particular Northeast India,' the report said.
Drugs are increasingly trafficked from Myanmar to Cambodia, mostly through Laos, as well as through maritime routes 'linking Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines, with Sabah in Malaysia serving as a key transit hub.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Japan Today
15 hours ago
- Japan Today
Prosecutor says Combs thought he was above the law as he led a racketeering conspiracy
FILE - Sean Combs arrives at the Pre-Grammy Gala And Salute To Industry Icons at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Jan. 25, 2020, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Mark Von Holden/Invision/AP, File) By MICHAEL R. SISAK and LARRY NEUMEISTER Sean 'Diddy' Combs thought his 'fame, wealth and power' put him above the law as he led a criminal enterprise for two decades, using 'power, violence and fear' to carry out brutal crimes, a prosecutor told a jury at the music mogul's sex trafficking trial during closing arguments Thursday. 'Over the last several weeks, you've learned a lot about Sean Combs,' Assistant U.S. Attorney Christy Slavik began. 'He's the leader of a criminal enterprise. He doesn't take no for an answer. And now you know about many crimes he committed with members of his enterprise.' She said charges of sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy were supported by proof that over two decades, Combs kidnapped one of his employees, committed arson by trying to blow up a car, engaged in forced labor, bribed a security officer and carried out the 'brutal crimes at the heart of this case.' Combs 'again and again forced, threatened and manipulated' former girlfriend Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura and an ex-girlfriend who testified under the pseudonym 'Jane' into 'having sex with escorts for his own entertainment,' Slavik said, speaking from a lectern positioned between jurors and the tables where prosecutors and defense lawyers sat. 'The defendant used power, violence and fear to get what he wanted,' she said. 'He thought that his fame, wealth and power put him above the law.' Slavik said Combs 'counted on silence and shame' to enable and prolong his abuse. He used a 'small army' of employees — an inner circle that included personal assistants and bodyguards — to harm women and cover it up, she said. The theory of racketeering law is that 'when someone commits crime as part of a group, they're more powerful and dangerous,' Slavik said. 'The defendant was a powerful man, but he became more powerful and dangerous because of his inner circle, his businesses — the enterprise.' Combs and his inner circle 'committed hundreds of racketeering acts,' she said. As Slavik spoke, jurors saw photos of key figures in Combs' orbit, as well as excerpts from related testimony in the trial transcript and slides to categorize evidence. One slide listed crimes prosecutors allege as part of the racketeering conspiracy, including drug distribution, kidnapping, arson and witness tampering. Another slide listed drugs such as cocaine, meth, ketamine, Oxycodone and MDMA, that Combs' aides said they procured for him, or that federal agents said they found last year in raids of Combs' homes. Combs sat with his head down, his chair pushed back a few feet from the defense table, as Slavik spoke. He was wearing a light-colored sweater over a white button-down shirt and khakis. Since his arrest at a Manhattan hotel last September, prosecutors have said Combs coerced and abused women for years as he used his 'power and prestige' as a music star to enlist a network of associates and employees to help him while he silenced victims through blackmail and violence. They've said the Bad Boy Records founder induced female victims into drugged-up, elaborately produced sexual performances with male sex workers in events dubbed 'Freak-Offs.' Defense lawyers have argued that Combs was involved in domestic violence but committed no federal crimes. They built their case for acquittal through lengthy cross-examinations of most of the government's 34 witnesses. Some witnesses testified only in response to subpoenas and made it clear to the jury that they didn't want to be there. Combs' lawyers contend there was no racketeering conspiracy because none of his employees agreed to be part of any conspiracy. But in her closing, Slavik said employees repeatedly agreed to commit crimes for Combs, such as delivering him drugs; accompanying him to kidnap his personal assistant, Capricorn Clark; and locking his girlfriend in a hotel room after he stomped on her face. Before Slavik began her closing, Judge Arun Subramanian told the jury they would hear a closing argument from a defense lawyer on Friday and a rebuttal by a prosecutor before he instructs them on the law and allows them to begin deliberating as early as late afternoon. © Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.


Japan Today
15 hours ago
- Japan Today
29 pupils taking high school exams killed in Central Africa crush
Twenty-nine students taking their high school exams in the Central African Republic died in a stampede sparked by an exploding power transformer, the health ministry told AFP Thursday. Just over 5,300 pupils were sitting the second day of the baccalaureat exams at the time of the explosion early Wednesday afternoon in Bangui, the capital of the deeply poor nation. In the ensuing panic, supervisors and students tried to flee, some jumping from the first floor of the school. The injured were transported by ambulance, on the back of pickup trucks or by motorbike taxi, AFP journalists saw. Michael Jordy Yerima, 20, survived the stampede by jumping from a first-floor window but fractured his foot. "Around me, there were other injured students, and some died on the spot," he said. President Faustin Archange Touadera, who was attending a summit of the Gavi vaccine alliance in Brussels, announced three days of national mourning. "I would like to express my solidarity and compassion to the parents of the deceased candidates, to the educational staff, to the students," Touadera said in a video published on his party's Facebook page. According to a document circulating on social media and authenticated by the health ministry, 29 deaths were registered by hospitals in the city. "The hospital was overwhelmed by people to the point of obstructing caregivers and ambulances," a health ministry source said. U.N. peacekeepers, police and other security were seen around the Barthelemy Boganda high school and hospitals. Education Minister Aurelien-Simplice Kongbelet-Zingas said in a statement Wednesday that "measures will be taken quickly to shed light on the circumstances of this incident". The minister added that a further statement would follow regarding a date for the students to resume their exams program. On Thursday, authorities banned a gathering of candle-bearing students who had sought to pay tribute to their dead classmates. Several people also gathered to protest against national energy company Enerca, an AFP reporter said. Colette Hiporo, mother of two injured high school students aged 17 and 19, complained that "raising children in these conditions, with misery, tears and without resources, is already a real struggle. "Officials are underpaid and we can't live well. What happened is very serious." Yerima, the student who jumped from a window, told AFP that after "the explosion which shook the building, the supervisors, who were supposed to control us, were the first to start fleeing". The Republican Bloc for the Defense of the Constitution (BRDC), a coalition of opposition parties, condemned "the irresponsibility of the authorities in place, who have failed in their duty to ensure the safety of students and school infrastructure". The CAR is among the poorest countries in the world and, since independence from France in 1960, has endured a succession of coups, authoritarian rulers and civil wars. The latest civil war started more than a decade ago. The government has secured the main cities and violence has subsided in recent years. But fighting occasionally erupts in remote regions between rebels and the national army, which is backed by Wagner mercenaries and Rwandan troops. Municipal, legislative and presidential elections are scheduled for August and December this year but U.N. experts have urged institutional reform of the electoral authority before the polls and for "transparent internal governance" as tensions between the government and the opposition intensify. © 2025 AFP


The Mainichi
a day ago
- The Mainichi
Vietnam ends death penalty for 8 crimes, may spare real estate tycoon
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) -- Vietnam has lifted the death penalty for eight crimes in legal reforms that may spare the life of a real estate tycoon imprisoned in the country's largest financial fraud case. The legal reforms in Vietnam ended the death penalty for eight crimes, including trying to overthrow the government, damaging state infrastructure, making and selling fake medicine, starting wars, spying, drug trafficking, embezzlement, and taking bribes. Vietnamese lawmakers passed the reforms on Wednesday, according to state media. Truong My Lan, sentenced to death for her involvement in Vietnam's largest financial fraud case, will be eligible to have her sentence reduced after the reforms, her lawyer said Thursday. The 67-year-old chair of the real estate company Van Thinh Phat who was facing execution for her involvement in fraud amounting to $12.5 billion -- nearly 3% of the country's 2022 GDP -- will now be "eligible for the exemption for the death penalty" according to the new rules, her lawyer Phan Minh Hoang told The Associated Press. "We are still waiting for the official instructions of implementing the law amendment for next steps in her case," Hoang said. The new rules also say that anyone already sentenced to death for these crimes but not yet executed by July 1 will have their sentence changed to life in prison after a final decision by Vietnam's highest court. After the legal changes, the maximum punishment for Lan's crimes will be life imprisonment without parole. Hoang said that they were continuing to work on repaying the damages to get her sentence further reduced. The law change will likely impact other ongoing trials such as the one that started earlier this week involving the real estate and infrastructure development company Phuc Son Group, whose chairman Nguyen Van Hau is accused of paying over $5 million in bribes to win contracts for major infrastructure projects across three provinces. Following the change, Vietnam now has the death penalty for 10 crimes like murder, sexual abuse of children, treason and terrorism.