The months-long operation, code-named 825P, began in July after investigators detected suspicious activity involving two Hanoi residents. Around the same time, border guards identified a separate Laos-to-Vietnam smuggling ring run by two organisers from Nghe An and Phu Tho provinces. Subsequent probes found out that the networks were connected.

Police described the ring as highly sophisticated and tightly organised. The alleged mastermind, identified only as “Long”, is a fugitive hiding overseas. Operatives worked in isolated cells, communicating solely via encrypted apps like Telegram and Signal under pseudonyms and never meeting in person. Drugs were cached in remote drop points, with couriers receiving only GPS coordinates and photos.

One key suspect, 43-year-old Chu Anh Tuan from Phu Tho, was recruited by Long during a trip abroad and paid 3 million VND (115 USD) per kg to receive and distribute shipments inside Vietnam. In May, Tuan allegedly took delivery of 300 kg at a local stadium, temporarily stashed the drugs at a relative’s house, repackaged them, and relocated the cache near a cemetery. Couriers then collected batches of 2-24 kg each, and the entire 300 kg were moved undetected within two months.

In August, another operative, Tran Duc Thanh, agreed to smuggle 930kg from Laos to Hanoi for 250,000 USD. He hired a container truck that crossed the border carrying 49 sacks of narcotics. The load was delivered to Tuan on August 17 and again hidden at his relative’s residence. Over the following month, more than 200kg were distributed nationwide, including to southern Vietnam.

At 9:30 pm on November 21, police simultaneously raided sites in Phu Tho, arresting Tuan and several accomplices and seizing 706 kg of synthetic drugs, a vacuum-sealing equipment and documents. Coordinated raids in other provinces netted 11 more suspects and an additional 70 kg.

Police later identified Long as Tran Van Quyet, a 40-year-old Ho Chi Minh City resident already wanted on two prior drug-trafficking warrants. Quyet is believed to be hiding near the Golden Triangle and continues to orchestrate large shipments with foreign partners.

C04 described the bust as a major victory and a demonstration of close coordination between police and border defence forces. On October 6, Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh sent a commendation letter praising the units involved./.VNA