Druglord behind yesterday’s attack on Chinese boat
Naw Kham, who has been on the run on drug charges since 10 January 2006, is reportedly the mastermind of yesterday’s surprise attack on a Chinese maritime police boat on the Mekong, according to reports from the border.
The five-minute assault by 2 unidentified boats on Jang Guojong 007 at a
location between Laos’ Muang Kham village, Ton Pheung district, Bokeo province
and Burma’s Wanpong village, Tachilek district at 11:30 left 3 officers
wounded. The three are currently under treatment at Chiangrai’s Sri Burin
Hospital.
This is the latest in a series of mysterious shootings on cargo boats on the Mekong since the year began, according to Thai and local
sources.
Out of five armed groups that are active in the area: Shan State Army (SSA)
South, United Wa State Army (UWSA), Burma Army, Naw Kham and Ja Eu militia,
local sources believe it was the handiwork of Naw Kham. “He has been demanding
taxes from the boats that are using the river,” said a well informed source in
Tachilek. “And he is the only one who has homes in all the three countries in
the region.


The Chinese maritime police boat attacked by unknown gunmen yesterday, 25
February 2008
His residences are said to be in the following locations,
according to a source:
- Pahsa Hsarmpu, Mongphong Tract, Tachilek district on the Burmese side
- An Arkha-Lahu village between Mounghi Noi and Muonghi Luang, north of Ban Mom, Bokeo province on the location side
- A village near the mouth of the Kok river in Chiangsean district, Chiangrai province on the Thai side
The SSA South’s Kengtung Force
Commander Lt-Col Gawnzeun, who said his units are on hot pursuit drive against
Naw Kham, believes the ex-militia chief of Hawngleuk is being protected by the
Burma Army. “Junta units in the area that have never hesitated to jump on our
troops are doing nothing against him,” he said. “He had also been very close to
Col Myint Han, the area operations commander, before the crackdown in 2006. It
was widely suspected that the raid on his house in Tachilek in 2006 was tipped
off in time by some local commander, so he could make his escape.”
The said raid by Burmese authorities repeatedly netted 150 assorted weapons, 2
compressors and millions of speed pills.
Naw Kham, 48, a former supply officer to Col Hsulai, a lieutenant of Khun Sa in
the Mong Tai Army (MTA), surrendered with his boss in 1996 and had been living
in Tachilek as Hawngleuk militia leader until 2006. He is one of the new faces
in the drug trade, according to Hand in Glove: The Burma Army and the Drug
Trade in Shan State, a report published in the same year by SHAN.

