“Co-operatives”, Chinese mafia suspected of 39 troops in England

English police suspect that 39 Chinese immigrants, who were found dead in a truck in England, are part of human trafficking that has been managing the Chinese mafia for nearly four decades, “Cuy-Germans”, which are also linked to Italian Kosa Nostra. Snakeheads are a mob group coming mainly from the Fujian area of China. Business [...]
English police suspect that 39 Chinese immigrants, who were found dead in a truck in England, are part of human trafficking that has been managing the Chinese mafia for nearly four decades, “Cuy-Germans”, which are also linked to Italian Kosa Nostra.
Snakeheads are a mob group coming mainly from the Fujian area of China. Their business is the traffic of people who want to emigrate from China to rich Western countries. They thrived in the Chinese district of New York, “Cheinataun”, in the 1980s, when the Chinese migrated en masse to the United States. The network then expanded to Europe and Australia.
The most famous leader of the group was Sister Ping, who in the 1980 ' s received between $17,000 per capita from Chinese immigrants to U.S.; from $350,000 in the 1990 ' s, and today it is thought that the price has increased by up to $700.000.
Sister Ping was arrested in Hong Kong in 2000, extradited to the United States in 2003, and died of cancer in 2014, but many Chinese people in the U.S. paid tribute to him after giving them the opportunity to create a new life in America. But Sister Ping didn't do it from a white heart. To force her to pay the fee after coming to the U.S., she used Fujian gangsters to beat and intimidate. The most frequent method was to rob a family member until others gave money.
Even after her death, the Fugian mafia has continued to commit various kidnappings, becoming increasingly dangerous, increasingly violent. During the 2000-2010s, there have been several arrests in Great Britain and the US. They brought immigrants from China to Western countries with different ways, including trucks like the case of England, but they often ended up taking hostages.


















