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Thailand,
Laos and Burma have been known as the "Golden Triangle" because of their
historically prominent role in the drug
trade. For centuries, these countries have produced the opium
that has attracted traders from Europe and elsewhere. Economics,
religion, and politics combine to make this area not only
important but also (to the western mind) exotic.
- 7th-8th
Century-Arab traders bring opium (a medicine) from the
Middle East to China.
- Ca.
1000-Thai and Lao peoples migrate from China's Yangtzekiang
River Valley to what is now Burma (Shan States), Thailand,
Laos, etc.
- 17th
Century-Smoking spreads to China from Spain's colony in
the Philippines
(having originated in Spanish South America). The Dutch in
Formosa smoke mixed opium and tobacco to combat malaria; opium
smoking spreads to mainland China.
- 17th-18th
Century-Britain colonizes India,
expands trade in silver for Chinese tea.
- 1720-China
outlaw opium smoking.
- 1800-China
outlaws cultivating and importing opium; edicts ignored by
Western merchants. Ching dynasty is too weak to enforce
edicts.
- 19th
Century-British India's opium trade expands with China,
reversing silver surplus from China to India.
- 1839-1842-First
Opium War. British merchants refuse to stop opium shipments;
China bans all trade with British, who bombard South Chinese
ports and defeat China. China cedes Hong Kong.
- 1852-After
twice banning opium (1811 & 1839), Thailand establishes
royal opium franchise. Opium taxes soon provide
40%-50% of government revenues.
- 1856-1858-Second
Opium War. Anglo-French forces defeat China; British gain
Kowloon Peninsula. China is forced to legalize opium
imports.
- Mid-late
18th Century-France colonizes Vietnam, Cambodia,
and Lao (French Indochina). Conquest financed by drug monopoly
(Regie de l'Opium) after 1869.
- 1885-Britain
completes conquest of Burma.
- 1898-Britain
obtains a 90 year lease on New Territories (mostly Hong Kong),
expired in 1997.
- 1906-American
Medical Association approves heroin for general use.
- 1910-Britain
Opium Act tightly controls opium production and trade;
Opium Rules added, 1938.
- 1925-Geneva
Convention internationally restricts production and sale
of heroin.
- 1939-Siam,
the only independent nation in Southeast Asia, changes name
to Thailand ("Land of the Free").
- 1947-Panglong
Agreement grants independence to united Burmans and Shan
States.
- 1949-After
China's civil war (1927-1949), the Kuomintang flee
to Formosa and S.E. Asian hills. Drug
trade surges, now involving Western government intelligence
agencies (e.g. CIA).
- 1954-Viet
Minh guerrillas defeat French forces, ending French
Indochina.
- 1962-Coup
in Burma under Ne Win. Shan States re-emerge in rebellion,
financed by opium.
- 1975-Pro-western
regimes fall in Cambodia, South Vietnam, and Laos (Vietnam
War). Turmoil and ideological conflict are
accompanied by continued corruption, poverty, opportunism,
and economic reliance on drugs.
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