Wa: No exportation to Thailand
A reliable source close to the United Wa State Army (UWSA) says the group has stopped export of drugs into Thailand.
18 November 2008
“Thai buyers themselves have taken responsibility to smuggle
them into the kingdom,” said a Thai businessman working along the Thai-Burma
border. “The Wa have new bigger markets now, like Hong Kong, Taiwan, Australia
and US.”
The popularity of the Wa’s Tiger-2 and Vigo speed pills have
now gone beyond the borders of Thailand, according to him. “Of course, they
still depend on Thailand for raw materials.”
Apart from caffeine, the
group has recently purchased 10 tons of pseudoephedrine, the main ingredient for
the making of methamphetamines, known as yaba (crazy medicine). “The
group doesn’t need to raid the drug stores for cold-relief pills anymore,” he
said.
The refineries were facing shortage of ephedrine for some months
forcing the group to look for drugs used for relief of cold and cough which
contain the synthetic pseudoephedrine. “Out of one cold pill, you can get two
yaba pills,” an informed truck driver had told SHAN.
On 1
October, Thai News daily reported seizure of 512,000 cold relief pills in
Maesai.
Besides the UWSA, other pro-junta militias are also involved in
the drug trade. “The Wa are not responsible for what the other groups are
doing,” said the Thai entrepreneur.
On 13 November, the US Treasury
Department announced freezing of assets of 26 individuals and 17 companies tied
to Wa commander Wei Hsueh Kang aka Wei Xuegang and the UWSA.
The Wa
declared itself opium free in 2005. But reports of the group manufacturing
heroin and yaba have continued to this day.


