China has executed four members of the Bai family mafia, one of the notorious dynasties that ran scam centres in Myanmar, state media report. They were among 21 of the family's members and associates who were convicted of fraud, homicide, injury and other crimes by a court in Guangdong province.
Last November the court sentenced five of them to death including the clan's patriarch Bai Suocheng, who died of illness after his conviction, state media reported. Last week, China executed 11 members of the Ming family mafia as part of its crackdown on scam operations in South East Asia that have entrapped thousands of Chinese victims.
For years, the Bais, Mings and several other families dominated Myanmar's border town of Laukkaing, where they ran casinos, red-light districts and cyberscam operations. Among the clans, the Bais were 'number one', Bai Suocheng's son previously told state media after he was detained.
The Bais, who controlled their own militia, established 41 compounds to house cyberscam activities and casinos. Within these compounds was a culture of violence, where beatings and torture were routine. The Bai family's criminal activities led to the deaths of six Chinese citizens, the suicide of one person and multiple injuries, the court said.
The Bais rose to power in Laukkaing in the early 2000s after the town's then warlord was ousted in a military operation. However, their empires crashed in 2023, when Beijing became frustrated by the Myanmar military's inaction on scam operations and tacitly backed an offensive by ethnic insurgents in the area, marking a turning point in Myanmar's civil war.
That led to the capture of the scam mafias and their members were handed to Beijing, where they became subjects of state documentaries emphasizing the authorities' resolve to eradicate the scam networks. With these recent executions, Beijing appears to be sending a message of deterrence to would-be scammers. Hundreds of thousands of people have been trafficked to run online scams in Myanmar and elsewhere in Southeast Asia, with estimates suggesting that many of the scammers and their victims are primarily Chinese.
Last November the court sentenced five of them to death including the clan's patriarch Bai Suocheng, who died of illness after his conviction, state media reported. Last week, China executed 11 members of the Ming family mafia as part of its crackdown on scam operations in South East Asia that have entrapped thousands of Chinese victims.
For years, the Bais, Mings and several other families dominated Myanmar's border town of Laukkaing, where they ran casinos, red-light districts and cyberscam operations. Among the clans, the Bais were 'number one', Bai Suocheng's son previously told state media after he was detained.
The Bais, who controlled their own militia, established 41 compounds to house cyberscam activities and casinos. Within these compounds was a culture of violence, where beatings and torture were routine. The Bai family's criminal activities led to the deaths of six Chinese citizens, the suicide of one person and multiple injuries, the court said.
The Bais rose to power in Laukkaing in the early 2000s after the town's then warlord was ousted in a military operation. However, their empires crashed in 2023, when Beijing became frustrated by the Myanmar military's inaction on scam operations and tacitly backed an offensive by ethnic insurgents in the area, marking a turning point in Myanmar's civil war.
That led to the capture of the scam mafias and their members were handed to Beijing, where they became subjects of state documentaries emphasizing the authorities' resolve to eradicate the scam networks. With these recent executions, Beijing appears to be sending a message of deterrence to would-be scammers. Hundreds of thousands of people have been trafficked to run online scams in Myanmar and elsewhere in Southeast Asia, with estimates suggesting that many of the scammers and their victims are primarily Chinese.


















