🔗 Share this article Chinese Courts Punishes Notorious Myanmar Scam Syndicate Members to Capital Punishment The Patriarch, Leader of the Bai Family, Among the Burmese Warlords Transferred to China in Recent Times A Chinese judicial body has sentenced a group of leading members of a notorious Myanmar mafia to execution as Chinese authorities persists in its campaign on fraudulent activities in Southeast Asian region. Altogether, twenty-one clan members and associates were convicted of scams, homicide, assault and other crimes, stated a state media report released on the court portal. This clan is one of a few of organized crime groups that became dominant in the 2000s and changed the poor isolated region of the town into a profitable hub of casinos and red-light districts. Over the past few years they pivoted to scams in which numerous of trafficked people, several of them from China, are caught, abused and compelled to defraud victims in illegal activities estimated at billions of dollars. Specifics of the Sentencing Mafia boss Bai Suocheng and his heir Bai Yingcang were among the several men sentenced to death by the court in Shenzhen. Yang Liqiang, A third figure and Chen Guangyi were the other three punished. Two individuals of the Bai family mafia were received suspended death sentences. Five were condemned to life in prison, while nine others were given prison sentences varying from three to 20 years. The clan, who commanded their own militia, created forty-one bases to host their digital scam activities and casinos, authorities said. Magnitude of Illegal Operations These unlawful activities entailed over 29bn Chinese yuan ($4.1bn; £3.1bn). They also caused the fatalities of six from China nationals, the self-inflicted death of one and several assaults, reports stated. The severe penalties handed down by the judicial body are a component of the Chinese effort to eradicate the extensive fraud operations in the region - and send a stern warning to additional unlawful groups. Background of the Clans Such clans gained influence in the early 2000s with the support of a prominent figure - who currently heads Myanmar's junta. The leader had wanted to prop up associates in the town after replacing its previous leader. Within the groups, the this family were "the top", the son earlier informed official sources. During that period, we was the dominant in both the political and military spheres," he stated in a documentary about the clan, aired on national media in the summer. Within that film, a employee at their their scam centres described the harm he had experienced at the location: in addition to being assaulted, he had his nails yanked out with pliers and two of his digits severed with a tool. Further Accusations The son is among those who were condemned to execution in the latest ruling. The individual has also been independently found guilty of planning to traffic and make 11 tonnes of illegal drugs, reports stated. End of the Groups The families' fall happened in 2023 as political winds shifted. For years Beijing has pressed the Myanmar junta to rein in scam schemes in the area. Last year, the Chinese police issued legal actions for the key members of such groups. The patriarch, the clan's patriarch, was included in the figures who were transferred to China from the country in recent months. "Why is the authorities putting such extensive work to pursue the groups?" a expert stated in the summer report. The purpose is to caution individuals, regardless of your identity, your location, when you carry out these serious offenses against the Chinese people, you will be held accountable."