Vietnam Hanoi Travel – 베트남하노이여행

Vietnam Hanoi Travel – 베트남하노이여행

Vietnam Hanoi Travel

The world is noisy every day with the news that celebrities from actor Lee Sun-kyun to singer GD are involved in drugs.

It’s hard to know when ‘drugs’ became common in Korea. The Korea Customs Service said it detected

493 kilograms of drugs during the border import stage between January and September this year.

More than half (286 kg) of the drugs attempted to be smuggled came from Thailand, the United States, and Laos.

The Golden Triangle, which borders Thailand, Myanmar, and Laos, is now known to produce 25% of the world’s drugs.

However, Vietnam (35kg) was listed as the next country. Although it accounts for only 7% of the total weight detected this year

it is said that “a new drug route is being formed from the Golden Triangle to Vietnam.

Vietnam Hanoi Travel

Vietnam Hanoi Travel

” Vietnam, by the way, has no tolerance for drug crimes. If you smuggle or manufacture drugs

you can be put to death. Recently, those who committed drug crimes were sentenced to heavy punishment.

◇ Koreans are punished without exception 스마트스토어상위노출

On the 27th, a court in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, sentenced six people to death for distributing 5.6 kilograms of heroin.

Their personal information was also disclosed in the Vietnamese media

and two of the six people sentenced to death were brothers and two were married couples. It’s just that the house is broken up.

Former South Korean police officer caught for drug trafficking and escorted to public security. /VN Express Capture
Strict punishment is no exception for foreigners. In August, prosecutors demanded the death penaltåy after Kim (63)

a former Korean police officer, and Kang (30), an accomplice, were caught carrying drugs. According to Vietnamese media

Kim, a former police officer, moved to Vietnam after serving six times in prison for violating immigration laws from 2000 to 2016.

In 2020, Vietnamese police caught him trying to smuggle 39.5 kilograms of drugs into Korean export granite.

“I thought it was Viagra,” he said, but Vietnamese prosecutors relentlessly demanded a “death sentence.”