A former drug kingpin and business
tycoon known as the original Opium Warlord has died in his home in
Myanmar's main city, a source close to the family said Sunday.
Lo Hsing Han died Saturday in Yangon, the source, who spoke on
condition of anonymity because he did not have authorisation to speak to
the media, said, citing a relative of the former drug kingpin. Lo Hsing
Han was believed to be in his mid-70s. The cause of death was not
immediately known.
Lo Hsing Han's involvement in the drug trade began more than four decades ago.
In exchange for heading a local militia set up by then-dictator Ne
Win in the 1960s to help fight local communists in the region of Kokang,
Lo Hsing Han was given permission to engage in the trafficking of opium
and heroin, said Bertil Lintner, author of "The Golden Triangle Opium
Trade: An Overview."
With one of the best-armed militias in Myanmar, he quickly became one of the region's most powerful drug kingpins.
Thai police arrested Lo Hsing Han in northern Thailand in 1973. He
was handed over to the Myanmar government and sentenced to death -
commuted later to life in prison - for treason.
He was released in 1980 as part of a general amnesty, Mr Lintner said.
In 1992, Lo Hsing Han and his son Stephen Law founded the
conglomerate Asia World, allegedly as a front for their ongoing dealings
in the drug trade, the author said.
They quickly became two of Myanmar's biggest business tycoons,
helping prop up the military junta, winning contracts to run ports,
build highways and oversee airports.
The US Department of Treasury, dubbing Lo Hsing Han the "Godfather of Heroin," put him on the financial sanctions list in 2008.
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