Monthly Archive for October, 2007

End of the road for drug lord Khun Sa - Scotsman October 30 2007

LORD OF THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE DIES IN RANGOON

From Andrew Drummond,
Bangkok
Once dubbed the ‘Prince of Death’ and accused of being the world’s most prolific heroin trafficker, Khun Sa, also known as Chan Chi-Fu, was cremated yesterday in Rangoon, Burma, aged 74.

Khun Sa dies in Rangoon 3Khun Sa preferred to be known as ‘Prince of Prosperity’ or ‘Lord of the Golden Triangle’ after the area encompassing parts of Burma, Laos and Thailand, which once produced most of the world’s heroin.

Since 1996 however he has enjoyed the patronage of the Burmese military government after striking a deal with the country’s generals.
Before that he lorded over the Shan States of Burma with his Mong Tai Army and supervised the heroin mule trains heading south over the Thai border with their heroin destined for Europe and New York.
He claimed his army was an independence army fighting for the freedom of the Shan States, which the British promised at the Panglong Agreement in 1947.
He however forgot about the cause and after cutting his deal went to live in Rangoon where he ran bus and property companies. Most of his soldiers are fighting on under the name Shan State Army.

In retirement under the patronage of the military junta he joined Lo Sing Han, another veteran opium trafficker who became a wealthy Rangoon businessmen who owns among other thing the city’s ‘Traders Hotel’ where journalists were holed up during the recent troubles.
But while the military junta publicly burns heroin every year for international observers, the Burmese army is reportedly active in claiming the revenues from the heroin and also from a massive production of met-amphetamines which crosses the border from Thailand. Khun Sa’s eldest son is believed to have taken over part of the trade.

The politics of heroin in the Golden Triangle was the source of great mirth for Khun Sa, who frequently infuriated the United States Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and poked fun at both the Thai and Burmese governments.
I lived in his camp while making the television documentary ‘Lord of the Golden Triangle’ (Observer/Granada TV). 
I arrived in the middle of the night by mule and heard the commotion in his camp long before I saw it. 

Khun Sa had organised a disco dance for his troops and the jungle was alive to Manfred Mann’s number ‘Do Wah Diddy Diddy’.
He had frequent visits from Thai military and Thai border police all wanting a slice of the cake, while making public statements across the border that he was ‘The world’s most wanted man’ and they were hunting him down.
He told meat the time: “Today’s friend could be tomorrow’s enemy. Today’s enemy could be tomorrow’s friend. When the DEA gives the Thais money they come and attack me.  When I give them money they go away again,” he said bursting into laughter and almost falling back over his chair.
The camp itself at Homong, across from the Thai town of Mae Hong Son was a veritable metropolis, with bars, cinemas, brothels, satellite television. Khun Sa even claimed to have Sam missiles. He regarded himself as a benevolent despot but was both a giver and a taker.
On one of his trips around town he stopped at a house where the family had a 17-yr-old daughter.   He asked me to wait outside with his guards, armed with M16, after entering a room alone with the girl, emerging after an hour.

Khun Sa dies in Rangoon 4
He had an army of 10,000. He claimed he only taxed the heroin which was transported out of his area and had no hand in its production. Nevertheless he threw lavish parties for the farmers and village elders.
Every year Khun Sa would make an offer to the United States. “If you buy the heroin I can stop the trade and make farmers cultivate something else.”
Every year his offer was turned down. Glennon Cooper, the DEA chief in Bangkok said: “Khun Sa is a ruthless criminal who is probably the largest heroin trafficker in the world. He plays all sides against the middle.”
Of the allegations that Khun Sa was in cohoots with Thai military Cooper said: “We not about to voluntarily embarrass our hosts.”
Khun Sa’s father was a former soldier with the Kuomintang Army which was stranded in north Burma at the end of the Second World War.  His married a Shan Princess and became an local administrator.  One of Khun Sa’s prize possessions was medal bearing the head of King George VI in recognition of his father’s services to the Empire.

Khun Sa dies in Rangoon
Up until the time of his death Khun Sa faced a charge in New York with importing 1,000 tons of heroin into the city.

 He was cremated yesterday at Yay Way cemetery on the outskirts of Rangoon.
Andrew Drummond investigated Khun Sa and the politics of heroin for ‘Lord of the Golden Triangle’ and Observer/Granada Television production for the ITV network

* Scotsman story here

*LORD OF THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE

British ‘paedophile’ had 100 times more pictures than ‘Mr.Swirly’

British pensioner paedophile arrested in Thailand with more than 20,000 obscene images
Last updated at 16:03pm on 23rd October 2007

Mawson
 

A British pensioner has been arrested on paedophile charges in Thailand after police said he had been found in possession of 100 times more pictures than infamous paedophile Canadian Christopher Neil, whose swirly disguised face was unmasked by police, put on the web.

74-yr-old Alan Charles Mawson, from Barrow-in-Furness was seized after police raided his retirement flat in the Diana Estate in the sex resort of Pattaya, 100 miles east of Bangkok.

Mawson was charged with having sex with a boy under the age of 15, and also possessing pornographic images. Six digital cameras were also seized.
 

Alan Mawson is arrested by Thai police in posession of more than 20,000 obscene images

Images of Mawson’s flat showed the walls were covered in images of naked youths, but many were clearly over the age of 18 and looking like bar workers.

He had 104 photograph albums each containing over 200 pictures.

But Tourist Police General Chuchart Sawanakom said that police were taken the case very seriously.

“On October 4th between 2 and 3p.m. Mr. Mawson had sex with a minor in his apartment. He can go to jail for a number of years”.

Last week Canadian Christopher Neil was arrested in Thailand after a worldwide hunt.

He was nicknamed ‘Mr.Swirly’ after German police managed to’unswirl’ one of 200 obscene pictures of him engaged in sexual acts with boys which he allegedly put on the internet.

Daily Mail story here

Seized how ’swirly’ paedophile worked with boys all his life - Daily Express October 20 07

SEIZED: HOW ‘SWIRLY’ PAEDOPHILE WORKED WITH BOYS ALL HIS LIFE 

EXPOSED: Neil, 32, once worked as a chaplain

Vico6 

 Saturday October 20,2007
By Andrew Drummond in Bangkok and Cyril Dixon in London 
THE world’s most wanted paedophile was paraded in public yesterday after a global manhunt traced him to a remote bolthole in Thailand.

Christopher Neil, 32, was flown to Bangkok and put in front of the cameras by police after a tip-off led to his arrest.

Neil ,nicknamed Vico, became the focus of an international search after images of him abusing children were posted on the internet with his face digitally disguised into a swirl pattern. Yesterday, as Thai police warned he faces up to 20 years in jail, details of Neilís sinister double life emerged, including his work with children as a teacher and chaplain.

Family and friends described Neil as an ordinary Canadian from a respectable family who had trained as a priest.    

He was said to be a ìregular guyî who had once worked as a military chaplain offering comfort and advice to recruits as young as 12.

Neil was identified after Interpol specialists managed to unswirl his image.

He was arrested in Nakorn Ratchassima province, 150 miles north-east of Bangkok, where he had fled to stay with a Thai friend.

During the investigation, police collected up to 200 photographs of Neil abusing young Vietnamese and Cambodian boys as young as six. Police say he will be charged within 48 hours with abusing three victims, aged nine, 13, and 14, at an apartment in the city.

Wearing a white shirt and dark sunglasses and with a foot injury visible, Neil was placed at a table at Bangkok police headquarters where he stared impassively ahead while photographers took his picture.

Police Lieutenant-General Ponsapat Pongcharoen said: “We received several tips and also found victims of his abuse. We went to pick him up this morning.”

“He has already been identified by one of the victims, not only from his face but from a mark on his body. I cannot tell you where that mark is.”

“We have a message. We take the abuse of our children very seriously. It is against our culture and against our religion. We will not tolerate foreigners coming to Thailand to abuse our children.”

Yesterday, residents in Neil’s home town of Maple Ridge, near Vancouver, were in a state of shock.

His younger brother Matthew, 30, said: “Our range of emotions has gone from anger to shock to devastation. My mother is completely devastated.

“He came back to stay with us this year from April to August. We’d often go for a few beers and watch the hockey game. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary.”

Teacher Amy Bowler, who grew up with Neil in Maple Ridge, said she contacted Interpol after seeing his image in press reports. “It was certainly unthinkable that he would be a predator of any kind,” she said. “But the resemblance was so striking that I contacted Interpol if only, I thought, to rule him out. None of us wanted to believe it was true.”

Neil had begun training to be a priest in the 1990s at the Seminary of Christ the King in Mission, a few miles from Maple Ridge.

Rector the Rev. Nicholas Ruh said yesterday Neil left because he ‘lacked the necessary personal qualifications’.

However, he was allowed to work as a chaplain at military cadet training camps in Nova Scotia for several summers where he gave spiritual guidance to youths aged between 12 and 18.

Although Neil has spent most of his working life in Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia, he also held a volunteer instructor’s post at St Patrick’s Elementary School, Maple Ridge, six years ago.

Most recently, he taught at a private school run by the Adventist Church in Bangkok and offered web advice to Canadian teachers on how to avoid police scrutiny when applying for jobs in south-east Asia.

Daily Express story here

Paedophile suspect ‘boasts’ of evading police - Times October 2007

Andrew Drummond, in Bangkok , October 17 2007

vico3 1 

A suspected paedophile on the run from Interpol apparently boasted about getting a job in a Vietnam school without police checks and advised fellow teachers how to delete pornography on their computers.

Christopher Neil, 32, from British Columbia, Canada, is being hunted after allegedly posting some 200 pictures on the web which appear to show him abusing young boys in Vietnam. His facial features were deliberately distorted in a swirl, but they were uncovered by German technical experts.

Today, as his family begged for him to give himself up, Mr Neil appeared to have left his mark on the internet in two websites.

In a discussion forum for English teachers in the Far East called Dave’s ESL cafe, a writer thought to be Mr Neil boasted about being able to evade the authorities in Vietnam to get a teaching job, and also advised colleagues how to delete pornography from their computers.

In addition, in a MySpace.com site accompanied by a photograph of Mr Neil, a writer identifying himself as Chris, aged 32 from Thailand, wrote about how he was being forced to run away “as fast as I can”. It is believed that Mr Neil has held teaching jobs in Vietnam, Thailand and South Korea over the last few years.

Posting in Dave’s ESL Cafe, a user called ‘Peter Jackson’ - a name which police believe that Mr Neil used when writing on the site - wrote: “Police checks are NOT needed to get a visa. Public schools will want one but you should be able to stall them. Often they want teachers SO quickly that they will ‘wait’ for some things.

“I never gave a police check for my last public school job. I was in Vietnam at the time and getting one wasn’t easy. I delayed and never heard about it again.”

In a different posting, the user described programmes that would be needed in order to delete pornography. “If you’re worried about any ‘content’ there are several ways to encrypt your drive,” he wrote. “If you want to get rid of old files so no one will see, then simply deleting them will not work.”

A trail of evidence also seems to have been left on a MySpace profile, in which he appears to fret that the police web was closing.

“I’ve got to get out of myself. Free this slave, endure this trial no more. I’m running as fast as I can. My only hope is to let this go. Be alone. Escape this entrapment. The circle’s getting smaller. The tunnel narrower,” the user wrote, in one of a number of poems filed on the site. The forum says it belongs to Chris, aged 32, whose profile said: ‘Loving Asia…will I ever go home again??!’

Today, as Interpol stepped up their hunt, his family urged him to give himself up. “Chris turn yourself in. Get back into Canada,” Matthew Neil, his younger brother, told reporters in Maple Ridge, British Columbia.

His brother said that the family was devastated and shocked by the allegations. “You know, you get anger too as well because, you know, one person can bring the whole family into a situation that’s very uncomfortable for everybody,” he said.

The suspected paedophile worked as a supervisor at the Greenwood Air Cadet Summer Training Centre in Nova Scotia from 1998 to 2000.

However, most recently he had taught at Kwangju Foreign School in South Korea in the town of Yongin. His details have been removed from the school’s website.

The hunt for Mr Neil was given a boost last Thursday when an image identified as his was captured on a camera at an immigration desk at Bangkok International Airport.

However, he has not been seen since and Mike Moran, the Interpol officer sent to Bangkok to co-ordinate the search, made a fresh appeal for new witnesses. “We will catch him. Maybe not today or tomorrow but soon. Its only a matter of time,” he said.

No records have been found of Mr Neil leaving Thailand, so police assume that he may still be in the country However, Thailand’s land borders with Laos and Cambodia are porous and he could reach Vietnam without his arrival being detected for days.

The Times story here

Thai guides ignored official warning not to go into caves - Times Oct 16 2006

From Times

October 16, 2007
Thai guides ‘ignored official warning not to go into the caves’

 Helena Carroll 3

 Helena Carroll, the sole survivor, rescued from the cave in Khao Sok National Park

Andrew Drummond in Bangkok
The two tour guides who led six foreign tourists to their deaths in a cave in southern Thailand at the weekend had been warned not to enter the caves by park officials, it was claimed today.

The two Thai men were specifically told about the dangers of flash flooding during the monsoon season, now at its peak in Thailand, but ignored their advice.

The warning was given by the Tourist Authority of Thailand (TAT) South Region 5, which covers Khao Sok national park, where Helena Carroll, 21, from Solihull, was the only survivor of the disaster in Tham Nam Thalu cave.

Because it had not been raining immediately before the group entered the cave, the report concluded that the guides ignored the warning from park officers.

The park was hit by a torrential downpour while the tourists were inside, causing a flash flood to sweep everyone but Ms Carroll away.

The TAT forwarded a copy of its investigation into the tragedy to the British, German and Swiss embassies in Bangkok today.

The victims were a Swiss family, Benno Fischer, 49, and Stalder Fischer, 48, and their daughters Ambarea, 17, and Sarah, 15; a German boy Eddie Gaempe, 10, and John Cullan, 24, Helena’s fiancee.

The two guides killed were named as Kitisak Pratoom, 30, and Sahachai Boonkong, 25.

Meanwhile, Banyat Jansena, the Thai deputy Interior Minister, ordered the closure of Khao Sok and five other national parks in Surat Thani, saying they were at risk from flash floods.

The parks were: Kaeng Krung, Tairomyen, Klong Panom, Angthong Marine Park and Pangan Marine Park. The last two are particular popular with scuba divers.

Today Ms Carroll was being looked after by British Embassy officials. A spokesman said the Embassy had dispatched a Vice-Consul to the scene as soon as they heard the news.

After being rescued she said: “One minute I was in what I thought was the most beautiful place in the world. The next thing there is death all around me.”

“We had got halfway through the cave and I heard this sudden roar. I looked behind and saw this rush of water coming towards us,” she said.

“John and I started climbing. The first thing we saw was the tour guide and 10-year-old German boy being dragged away, then the Swiss couple and their two lovely girls.

“As we climbed I lost my grip and slipped down but John grabbed me and pulled me up. We kept climbing higher and found a ledge. We were all alone in the dark. We could not see anything as all the torches had gone.

“John said, ‘If we stay here we are going to die’. But I said we should stay. At least we were safe where we were.

“But he decided that he would get into the current and flow with it. He thought the current would take him out, then he could bring help to rescue me.

“He slipped into the water and that’s the last I ever saw of him. He let go and he was just gone. I was alone in the dark. All I could see was insects that light up like fireflies and hear the rumbling of the water. I sat there shivering all night. I had no idea what the time was.

“Then all of a sudden I saw a bright light. It was the light of a torch and so I started shouting ‘Help. Help. I’m over here’.

“When I got out I was told that many people had died. They had been found at midnight, eight hours before I was rescued.”

Police close in on internet paedophile - The Times October 16 2007

From The Times

October 16, 2007

Police close in on the internet paedophile

 Vico1
A prolific paedophile at the centre of an international manhunt is believed to be an English language teacher living in Thailand, police said yesterday.

Last week Interpol made an unprecedented global appeal to catch the man, codenamed Vico, who is shown sexually abusing children in about 200 images on the web.

The man had digitally altered images of himself to disguise his identity, but police managed to unscramble them. Interpol then released pictures of him and he fled to Thailand last week, three days after the images were published.

Yesterday Interpol said that the suspect, photographed abusing children in Vietnam and Cambodia, had been identified by five sources from three continents as a man teaching English at a school in South Korea.
 
Interpol released a picture of the man, believed to be a Canadian, who flew into Suvarnabhumi airport in Bangkok from Seoul on Thursday. It shows a man in his 30s with receding hair and wearing glasses.

Thai police sources said last night that he had since travelled to Vietnam and the hunt had switched there. Schools in Thailand have closed for a month. Ronald Noble, Interpol’s Secretary-General, said in a statement: “Thailand is at the centre of an international manhunt, and authorities in the country, in cooperation with Interpol and police around the world, are hunting him down.” He praised the remarkable response to the appeal and added: “We must once again enlist the public’s support, this time to pinpoint Vico’s current location.”

The man’s name, nationality, date of birth, passport number and current and previous places of work have also been established.

Police specialists are reviewing the information and although Interpol would not comment on details of the investigation, it said that all leads would be directed to Interpol’s National Central Bureau or police experts specialising in crimes against children.

Interpol made the appeal after its initial investigation across 186 countries failed to identify the man. Photographs of him abusing young boys were altered to create a swirling effect that disguised his face. But specialists from the German federal police agency, the Bundeskriminalamt, worked with the Trafficking in Human Beings Unit of Interpol to unscramble the pictures. After Interpol released a series of identifiable images of the man it received 350 messages from the public. National police forces from Interpol’s member countries also were given leads.

Kristin Kvigne, assistant director of Interpol’s trafficking in human beings unit, which is managing the case, said: “The public’s response has been very positive, and we have also had encouraging feedback from local and national law enforcement officers.”

The case is part of Interpol’s aim to collect every image of child abuse that exists on the internet. The organisation hopes to examine each image, enabling an expert to analyse pictures of abuse as soon as they arrive in police hands. The database has helped to identify more than 600 victims from 31 countries.

Daily Telegraph story here

He let go of my hand and he was gone - The Times October 15 2007

From The Times

October 15, 2007

‘He let my hand go and he was gone’

Andrew Drummond in Bangkok

Helena Carroll
A British woman who was the sole survivor of a flash flood in Thailand that killed eight people described last night how she saw her fiancé being washed to his death after he saved her life.

Helena Carroll, 21, from Solihull, was exploring caves in Khao Sok National Park 400 miles south of Bangkok with a group of tourists when heavy rainfall caused water to surge through the complex.

She said that John Cullen, 24, had pulled her to safety and then tried to go for help. He and five other tourists were killed, including a Swiss couple with two young daughters and a ten-year-old German boy. The two Thai guides who accompanied the party also drowned.

Miss Carroll, who was trapped for 16 hours before being rescued, said that the party had taken a two-hour boat trip to the Tham Nam Thalu cave complex, which they expected to take an hour to explore.

She said: “When we got in, it was amazing. We saw lots of bats and spiders in our torchlight but then, when I guess we had got halfway through the cave, I heard this sudden roar. I looked behind and saw this rush of water coming towards us. John and I started climbing. The first thing we saw was the tour guide and a ten-year-old German boy being dragged away, then the Swiss couple and their two lovely girls.

“As we climbed I lost my grip and slipped down, but John grabbed me and pulled me up. We kept climbing higher and found a ledge. We were all alone in the dark. We could not see anything as all the torches had gone.”

She said that Mr Cullen had decided to try to seek help, but was overcome by the waters. “John said, ‘If we stay here we are going to die’. But I said we should stay. At least we were safe where we were. But he decided that he would get into the current and flow with it. He thought the current would take him out, then he could bring help to rescue me.

“He slipped into the water and that’s the last I saw of him. He let go and he was just gone. I was alone in the dark. All I could see was insects that light up like fireflies, and hear the rumbling of the water. I sat there shivering all night. I had no idea what the time was.

“Then all of a sudden I saw a bright light. It was the light of a torch and so I started shouting, ‘Help, help — I’m over here.’ When I got out I was told that many people had died.”

The couple, both from the Midlands town, were a month into a year-long trip around the world. They had saved money for a deposit on a house but decided instead to spend it on a “dream holiday”.

They had travelled to the Khao Sok National Park, where tigers still roam what is described as the oldest rainforest in the world. It is also home to hornbills and rare plants.

It is not the first time that a tourist has been killed at the caves: a German woman drowned five years ago.

Thai police named the dead as Benno Fischer, 49, and Stalder Fischer, 48, both Swiss, and their daughters Ambarea, 17, and Sarah, 15. The German child was Eddie Gaempe. His mother did not take the trip because she was feeling unwell.

Thirayudh Mungapaisn, the deputy park chief, said: “We have issued warnings to tourists and put up signs about the dangers of visiting the cave during the rainy season.”

Last night the bereaved families began arranging for those who had died to be repatriated.

Miss Carroll, who works for the industrial training company Empower, said: “They took me to a place which was being used in a mortuary. I saw John’s body in a box next to one of the beautiful little Swiss girls. It was awful. John is a big man. He is 14 stone and everybody was remarking how big he was.

Helena Carroll and John

“I can’t believe my John is gone. One minute I was in what I thought was the most beautiful place in the world. The next thing, there is death all around me.”

Mr Cullen worked for his family’s insulation business but harboured hopes of becoming a full-time golf coach. His mother, Val, was understood to be away on holiday and last night did not yet know of her son’s death. Mr Cullen’s father, also John, died 18 months ago.

An inquiry into the incident began last night, with reports that national park officials had warned the guides not to continue the tour because of heavy downpours. Chalermsak Wanichsombat, the director-general of Thailand’s national park department, travelled to the southern province to lead the official investigation.

Speaking outside the family home, Miss Carroll’s father, John, said that his daughter was heartbroken. Mr Carroll said: “Helena had known John since they were at school together and they had been going out for almost four years. John was a smashing lad, clever, with good business acumen, and he looked after my daughter so well.”

Fatal attraction

— Thailand is the most deadly destination for British holidaymakers, according to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office

— It said that the figures, for April 2005 to March 2006 and released in British Behaviour Abroad, showed that “although Brits are getting more adventurous with their travels, they are not doing enough preparation before they go”

— Spain, which attracts 14 million Britons a year, tops almost every category for holidaymakers in peril. But when the figures are adjusted to show the proportion of visitors affected, Thailand is the most dangerous

— The 381,000 Britons who travelled to Thailand between 2005 and 2006 were nearly five times more likely to die than those visiting the second deadliest destination — India. Some 224 Britons died in Thailand

— British visitors to the country were also 50 per cent more likely to be taken to hospital in Thailand than in second-placed Greece. The latest figures show that 233 were taken to hospital

— Almost 900 Britons required serious assistance from a consulate in Thailand. That figure equates to 24 for every 10,000 visitors, double the rate for Australia

— Travel agents say that the problems are a result of cheap flights and under-prepared travellers

Times story here

Daily Telegraph

Daily Mail

The Nation

The Guardian

The Independent

Daily Record story here

Birmingham Mail

Mirror story here

Pensioner loses home stolen by Thai lawyer - Sunday Mail Scotland Oct 14 07

14 October 2007

Oap Loses Thai Home After Brief Steals It

A PENSIONER has lost his Thai retirement home after his lawyer stole it.

Alec Morton, from Dunfermline, has been ordered to leave his house in Bang Saray, 120 miles east of Bangkok.

Alec, 65, tried to beat rules which ban foreigners from buying Thai homes by organising the sale through lawyer Pijit Kerdchorn.

Morton Alec and Nina

 On yer bike. Alec Morton and Nina on the beach after losing their home in Bang Saray, Thailand

He asked him to set up a company which then bought the £30,000 house in the Pattaya resort, where Alec wanted to live with his Thai wife Thawee and daughter Nina, 12.

But when Alec went to see his new home after renovations, he found a Thai family living there.

He said: “They bought the house at auction. I rushed to see my lawyer and he was hiding under his desk. It’s unbelievable.”
Kerdchorn had forged the signatures of Alec and his wife and transferred the title deeds to his name.
He gave the papers to a housing bank to get a loan and when he defaulted on payments, they put the home up for auction.
Alec took Kerdchorn to court but lost his case.
He said: “I produced all receipts. We had proof he forged our signatures. But as I cannot own a house in Thailand, the court ruled against me.”
Alec has separated from his wife, who has come back to Scotland.

Sunday Mail story here

Bikie witness disappears - Sunday Mail Adelaide October 14 2007

KATE KYRIACOU and ANDREW DRUMMOND in BANGKOK
October 14, 2007 12:15am

AN Adelaide man has vanished hours before he was to give evidence about an alleged Bandidos’ crime ring in Thailand having told police of threats to kill him.

Paton Smith 3Erik Riemsdyk, who is from Elizabeth but now lives in Thailand, told of the attempt in an explosive 14-page report he prepared for Thai police on the gang’s activities.
Mr Riemsdyk was going to testify against two alleged Bandidos members on the Thai island of Koh Samui when he vanished on October 4.

He was last seen when he checked into a hotel near the court, but checked out again soon after. Australian officials are trying to find the 44-year-old, who has been reported missing by his South Australian family.

The Thai court has ordered prosecutors to find Mr Riemsdyk in time for a hearing tomorrow at which he is required to give evidence.

Mr Riemsdyk, who moved to the holiday island 10 years ago, said in his dossier that Bandidos members had taken over the tropical paradise with drugs, prostitution and standover tactics.

In his report, seen by the Sunday Mail, Mr Riemsdyk said his accusations “specifically related to money laundering, drug dealing and smuggling, extortion, murder, terrorism, internet and media loading and networking to create an unfair business environment”.

‘”This letter is a formal request for assistance with respect to the extortion and attempted murder of myself by high-ranking members of foreign organised crime gangs operating in Koh Samui, Thailand – specifically the Bandidos Motorcycle Gang,” he wrote.

The report, handed to Thai police in 2005, did not provide further details on the alleged attempt on Mr Riemsdyk’s life.

The document was to be used in the case against two accused bikies, both from Europe, who were living in Koh Samui.

They are accused of being members of a secret society of extortion.

One of the pair, a former business partner of Mr Riemsdyk, has claimed the case is nothing more than mistaken identity.

“It was a motorcycle club, nothing more,” he said in a statement.

Mr Riemsdyk detailed the names of 36 bars, 46 restaurants, 14 health spas, 74 hotels and resorts, 32 property companies, 40 individual properties, 10 dive companies and seven water sports companies who he says have links to crime syndicates.

He named 73 individuals – including four Australians – as involved in money laundering and drug running on the island.

One of the Australians faced charges last year and was held by police, but he was later released when the charges were dropped.

Mr Riemsdyk also named a former Australian policeman as being involved in the crime syndicate.

The ex-policeman said he had seen the two alleged bikies, who are currently on trial, wearing Bandidos colours, but denied Mr Riemsdyk’s allegations.

“His report is totally without substance,” he said. “The writings of somebody mentally imbalanced.”

The former policeman was used by the prosecution as an expert on motorcycle gangs.

In his report, Mr Riemsdyk said he was forced to join the motorcycle gang after they took over his monthly real estate magazine.

He said bikies were creating fake land title documents claiming they owned vast stretches of picturesque national park.

They would use the land, the report said, to build 5-star villas that would then be sold or rented to rich clientele, he wrote.

From there, the bikies would provide what he described as the “five Cs” – “cigars, caviar, champagne, cocaine and c***” within the walls of the exclusive communities.

“What I have been exposed to is just the tip of the iceberg,” Mr Riemsdyk wrote.

“I sincerely believe that Samui has been completely overrun by foreign organised crime and that the Bandidos motorcycle gang, along with British organised crime, are leading the assault.”

A Thai news report claimed Mr Riemsdyk went to ground after he refused to transport several kilos of heroin for the Bandidos, but resurfaced to help police in the lead-up to the court case against the two men.

A spokeswoman for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade confirmed it was assisting the family of a man reported as missing in Koh Samui “and have recommended that they contact their local police station to report the man as missing”.

“Our embassy in Bangkok has been attempting to contact the man,” she said.

Members of the Adelaide man’s family said they had “no comment to make whatsoever” when contacted by the Sunday Mail.