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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Pogeu Mahone who wrote (218259)12/8/2025 11:28:55 PM
From: abuelita  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 219441
 
Trawler I think.



To: Pogeu Mahone who wrote (218259)12/9/2025 10:38:36 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 219441
 
re <<That boat is a "dragger">>
One, a new Mercedes-Benz 300SE, was found in May at a Clearwater Bay landing popular with smugglers. Though partially submerged by the tide, the car was dry because it was inside a huge black rubber bag. A rope was tied to the front.
Police eventually announced that they had solved what headline writers quickly dubbed the “Benz-in-a-bag” caper. Smugglers, they said, planned to inflate the bag, tow the car out to sea, then load it on a lighter.


latimes.com

Hong Kong: A Heaven for Smugglers?

Summarise?

By BOB DROGIN

Nov. 27, 1990 12 AM PT
HONG KONG —
Bells clanged and a siren split the morning air as the Sea Glory, a 70-foot-long customs agency launch, suddenly spotted its quarry amid the scores of scows and sampans, hydrofoils and Hovercraft, tramp steamers and cruise liners.

The launch roared to starboard in a shower of spray. In moments, six customs agents packing pistols and flashlights had boarded a huge wooden-hulled Chinese trading boat. For 20 minutes, they pried up floorboards, peered into the bilge, checked papers and grilled crew members.

Finally, launch commander Charles Chan let the ship and its scowling crew go. “It’s empty this time,” he said. “Maybe it was just a decoy.”

It was another frustrating patrol in what has become a deadly game of hide-and-seek in one of the world’s busiest harbors. Officials say Hong Kong’s archipelago of 235 rocks and islands, with 350 miles of mostly deserted coastline, is a modern smuggler’s haven.

“It’s a hell of a place to police,” sighed Barrie Deegan, regional commander of Hong Kong’s 3,000-member marine police force. “We can’t make a dent in the problem.”

Smuggling here is as old as the China trade. Today, the booty ranges from Sony TVs and Mercedes-Benzes to frozen chicken wings and Marlboros. The buyers are mostly newly rich citizens in southern China. And with tens of millions of dollars in profits at stake, the smugglers are increasingly sophisticated.

Each night, for example, police spot 20 to 30 custom-built “cigarette” boats roaring across Hong Kong’s northeast waters at up to 70 knots. Painted gun-metal gray, most have three or four gleaming 300-horsepower engines attached, armor plating to protect the cockpit and steel-reinforced bows for ramming. Police catch only a fleeting glimpse of them because most of their boats can make just 25 knots.

“All we can do is wave goodby as they pass,” said Chan. “There’s no way we can catch them unless they have engine trouble.”

And even then, fate sometimes intervenes. “A couple of times we pursued them until their engines got too hot and burst into flames,” said Ronald Au, chief of investigations for the customs and excise department. “So we got the guys, but the evidence all sank.”

So far, eight smugglers have died this year from collisions with each other, or when their heavily loaded boats overturned at high speeds. A marine constable was killed in June when his inflatable boat was rammed. Four other officers were injured in a similar collision in August. Both times, the smugglers escaped.

As befits this high-tech town, Hong Kong’s black-marketeers increasingly use mobile phones, radios tuned to police frequencies, decoys and lookouts, police say.

Sometimes a dozen or so sail in V formation, splitting up in different directions when police boats approach. Most are empty “dummy ships” that lead police on a bogus chase before allowing themselves to be stopped.

Still, police have had successes. In the last three months, thanks to stiffer laws and increased patrols, they seized 5,650 TVs, 1,513 video recorders and 150,000 cartons of cigarettes from smugglers--nearly 10 times the amount confiscated in the previous six months. A total of 264 people were arrested.

They also seized at least 38 guns being smuggled into Hong Kong from China. Most were Chinese-made 7.62-millimeter automatic pistols, better known as T-54s, standard issue handguns of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army.

All told, prosecutors have filed 174 cases since June. That compares to only 52 cases filed three years ago and 134 cases all last year.

Cars are especially hot. Police say that up to 20% of cars stolen in Hong Kong are smuggled to China, Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore, often on consignment. Last year, 4,401 cars were stolen.

One, a new Mercedes-Benz 300SE, was found in May at a Clearwater Bay landing popular with smugglers. Though partially submerged by the tide, the car was dry because it was inside a huge black rubber bag. A rope was tied to the front.

Police eventually announced that they had solved what headline writers quickly dubbed the “Benz-in-a-bag” caper. Smugglers, they said, planned to inflate the bag, tow the car out to sea, then load it on a lighter.

Corruption and politics inevitably play a role. In a “sting” that went awry last May, for example, Hong Kong marine police captured five armed Chinese soldiers waiting offshore to take possession of five Mercedes-Benzes.

But Chinese patrol boats quickly surrounded the arresting officers, and Chinese soldiers arrested two Hong Kong undercover agents and five seamen. They also confiscated the cars. The men were eventually returned. The cars were not.

Officials say the recent rash of smuggling grew with China’s open-door economic reform policies of the late 1970s. At first, most of the contraband came out, especially antiques, silver coins and herbs. Clothes were sent in.

In recent years, however, as a moneyed class has grown in China, so has the demand for Western luxury goods. Since Beijing tightened import quotas and tariffs last year--including a 100% duty on televisions and 150% duty on VCRs--smugglers found a boom market.

“People are getting richer every day, and they demand these luxury goods,” said Au. “The only question is price.”



To: Pogeu Mahone who wrote (218259)12/16/2025 4:47:19 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 219441
 
Re <<That boat is a "dragger">> ... eternal battle, because the other side, while at times sloppy, but is not altogether dumb


scmp.com

Hong Kong customs seizes HK$256 million of suspected cocaine stashed in ship hull
Underwater robots help detect 417kg of suspected cocaine wrapped in 11 waterproof packages concealed behind grate of sea chest



Edith Lin

Published: 8:29pm, 16 Dec 2025Updated: 3:34am, 17 Dec 2025

Hong Kong customs has, for the first time, uncovered a drug smuggling operation involving an underwater compartment of a large cargo ship, resulting in the seizure of HK$256 million (US$32.9 million) worth of suspected cocaine.

The operation last month, supported by intelligence from mainland China and underwater robots, also disrupted what investigators believed was an attempt to use the vessel as a huge drug storage site.

Customs’ drug investigation bureau head Lau Yuk-lung said on Tuesday that underwater robots and officers discovered 11 packs of suspected cocaine, weighing about 417kg (917lbs), in the vessel’s sea chest – a compartment located 11 metres (36 feet) below sea level.

A sea chest, built into a ship’s hull, is typically used to draw in seawater to cool engines and support other on-board systems.

“Concealing drugs underneath a vessel is extremely rare. The sea chest is located 11 metres below sea level with a very narrow entrance. We do not exclude the possibility that only professional divers can access the location as no ordinary person can get in,” Lau said.

“The syndicate concealed the drugs in the sea chest and thought it was a relatively safe location.”

Lau said the vessel, which is 333 metres long and 48 metres wide, had originated from Brazil and made a stop in Singapore before arriving in Hong Kong on November 4. It had been scheduled to continue its route to Shanghai and Ningbo.

“We do not exclude the possibility that the syndicate planned to use the vessel as a massive drug storage facility and distribute the drugs to different locations. We have successfully cut off the entire batch of drugs,” he said.

Two crew members, aged 45 and 37, were arrested in the operation and later released pending further investigation. Sources said they were Indian nationals.

Customs said further arrests were possible.


Lau Yuk-lung (left) and marine enforcement group head Lo Chin-man present the seized suspected drugs and underwater robots used in the operation. Photo: Edmond So

According to Lau, customs earlier exchanged intelligence with mainland authorities and learned that drug syndicates were using freighters to transport narcotics concealed in hidden compartments rather than among the cargo.

Local officers then analysed information such as vessel structures and freight routes before targeting the ship.

Customs officers initially searched the vessel in Tsing Yi last month but found no drugs. Underwater robots were then deployed and suspicious packages wrapped in waterproof materials were detected behind the grate of one of the ship’s two sea chests.

Lo Chin-man, head of marine enforcement at the ports and maritime command of customs, said divers later conducted a more thorough inspection, despite challenges posed by high tides.

Eleven packs of suspected cocaine, each weighing either 30kg or 45kg, were found in the sea chest which measured 12 cubic metres with a grate around 0.8 metres high and 0.5 metres wide.

The packages had lead blocks attached, which were believed to have been used to offset the water suction force inside the sea chest.

Lo said it was the first time underwater robots had successfully assisted in cracking a case, noting that such machines were effective in resisting strong water currents during operations.

He said the authorities would continue to explore the use of new technology and deploy more robots to enhance officer safety and enforcement efficiency.

Under the law, trafficking in dangerous drugs carries a maximum penalty of a fine of HK$5 million and life imprisonment upon conviction.