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UPDATE: Canada exposed in Chinese–Mexican Drug Shipping Methods Exposed — Vancouver as a Global Meth Hub

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
Staff member
I hope that we can really crack down on these organized crime cartels/syndicates that are killing people for profit.

It is going to take a multi-national concerted effort to accomplish this, my guess is that New Zealand, Canada & the US will play nice. China and Mexico will go along kicking and screaming because they will be forced to do so.

From The Bureau >>> https://www.thebureau.news/p/exclus...&r=6d95av&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email



Exclusive: Chinese–Mexican Syndicate Shipping Methods Exposed — Vancouver as a Global Meth Hub


AUCKLAND — The case of Fatima Qurban-Ali, a 30-year-old Canadian sentenced recently in New Zealand for attempting to import nearly 10 kilograms of crystal methamphetamine on a flight from Vancouver — coerced at gunpoint by a transnational drug syndicate, the court heard — has illuminated a troubling global pattern.
Across a series of recent prosecutions, New Zealand Customs records and sentencing reports show that Canada — particularly Vancouver’s port and airport — has become a major node in the production and shipment of synthetic narcotics by networks supplied through China-based syndicates and Mexican cartels.
Qurban-Ali, an immigrant from Afghanistan whose brother worked as a translator for U.S. and New Zealand forces, arrived in Auckland from Vancouver on December 8, 2024, carrying a red duffel bag filled with packages wrapped in festive paper. Inside, Customs officers found 9.9 kilograms of methamphetamine with an 80 percent purity — a haul valued at roughly NZ$2.9 million.
At her sentencing in Manukau District Court, the judge accepted that Qurban-Ali had acted under threat of violence. Evidence showed she had been lured under false pretences — told she would provide “bottle service” for wealthy clients at a private event similar to ones she’d worked in Vancouver — only to be threatened at gunpoint when she tried to back out.
Her lawyer said Qurban-Ali, an honours graduate who had worked with Indigenous communities in Canada, was “extremely susceptible and vulnerable” to manipulation. Her brother, an interpreter for the U.S. military who once assisted New Zealand forces in Afghanistan, has been missing since 2021.
The judge agreed her case was consistent with coercive recruitment — “how international syndicates tend to obtain their couriers and custodians” — and imposed a three-year, two-month sentence. But as New Zealand’s Stuff reported, her story was part of a larger trend. Just thirty minutes earlier, another Canadian, David Blanchard, was convicted for smuggling a similar quantity of methamphetamine — his crime driven by addiction and the promise of quick money.
Also in August 2025, Customs records show, authorities intercepted a 124-kilogram shipment of methamphetamine concealed in machinery parts shipped by air freight from Canada and allegedly linked to the Auckland-based Killer Beez gang. The drugs’ street value exceeded NZ$37 million.
Police said the operation — dubbed Vault — followed a series of “dry runs” in June consisting of machine-part shipments from Canada designed to test border vulnerabilities.
In September 2025, a 23-year-old Canadian woman received six years’ imprisonment after Customs officers found 15 kilograms of methamphetamine in her luggage on a flight from Vancouver.
And from The Bureau’s earlier reporting, three men were convicted last week in the largest methamphetamine seizure ever recorded at New Zealand’s border — 713.8 kilograms of the drug disguised as maple-syrup bottles, shipped from Vancouver’s port in January 2023. That single load carried an estimated social-harm value of NZ$800 million.
Together, these prosecutions reveal a striking pattern: repeated meth consignments originating in Canada, exploiting both air-cargo and passenger routes to penetrate New Zealand’s lucrative market.
Former U.S. DEA Operations Chief Derek Maltz, who led international cartel investigations under Project Sentry, told The Bureau the trend emerging in New Zealand and Australia mirrors what he has tracked globally. Chinese and Mexican criminal networks — with Chinese actors supplying chemical precursors and laundering proceeds from fentanyl, methamphetamine, and cocaine, and Mexican cartels managing large-scale production and distribution — have been shifting parts of their operations beyond Mexico, into countries including Canada.
“They’re getting inundated in Australia with cocaine. Same with New Zealand. And now, of course, they’re getting hit with fentanyl shipments. And I believe — I don’t have proof of this — that a lot of it’s coming from these Canadian production operations,” Maltz said.
His assessment aligns with mounting evidence from both hemispheres: Canada has become a strategic transshipment and production hub for synthetic narcotics sourced from China’s chemical and Triad-linked supply base, feeding the lucrative Pacific drug markets.
The deeper roots of the network now targeting New Zealand — which investigators believe include elite Chinese Triad leadership operating from mainland China, Hong Kong, and Canada — stretch back several years. In 2023, Hong Kong national Chi Pang Li was sentenced to ten years and four months in prison after a New Zealand Customs investigation uncovered a parcel-post smuggling operation that moved 20.9 kilograms of methamphetamine from Canada into New Zealand.
Investigators found nine packages of methamphetamine hidden inside tubs of protein powder, each parcel weighing more than two kilograms. All were traced to Canadian postal origins, revealing an organized trafficking route already linking Canadian exporters to Chinese supply sources.
The methods Li’s network used in New Zealand — employing fictitious names and short-term Auckland rental addresses to receive deliveries — mirror techniques seen in Canada, where chemical-precursor shipments from China are processed in a sprawling network of drug labs across British Columbia, according to The Bureau’s investigations.
A Canadian police intelligence source said Chinese networks are exploiting Canada’s Non-Resident Import system, which allows foreign nationals to receive opaque shipments from China under minimal scrutiny.
Customs Manager Cam Moore said Li first entered New Zealand legally from Hong Kong in 2018 as part of a tour group but disappeared the day before departure.
“Li remained in New Zealand unlawfully and, as Customs’ investigations uncovered, he embarked on a smuggling enterprise that involved bringing significant quantities of drugs into New Zealand, which imposed both social and economic harm on our country,” Moore said.
Li’s methods — using Canadian postal channels, false identities, and short-term rental addresses in New Zealand — foreshadowed the much larger air-freight and maritime consignments that followed. His case shows that by 2020, Chinese non-resident import-export networks operating through Canada were already coordinating narcotics flows into Oceania, embedding operatives on both the export and import sides. They exploited the lighter scrutiny applied to Canadian shipments compared with direct exports from China, turning Canada into a preferred staging ground for the global synthetic-drug trade.
A Canadian intelligence source told The Bureau that shipping facilities in Richmond — a predominantly Chinese-immigrant municipality within metropolitan Vancouver that hosts both port and airport infrastructure — have become key staging points where Asian organized-crime networks package synthetic narcotics and marijuana for shipment across the Asia-Pacific and into the United States, often concealing drugs within legally traded goods such as furniture and industrial materials.
Seafood production and shipping facilities have also been used by Triad networks in Richmond and Toronto to export methamphetamine from Canada, the source said.
The Vancouver-area Chinese networks have deep ties to Beijing’s foreign-interference and intelligence arm, the United Front Work Department, according to Canadian intelligence and a report by former U.S. intelligence official David Luna.
Across North America, sources confirmed to The Bureau, transnational crime networks are using commercial-trucking fleets to move narcotics across the northern border, exploiting the sheer volume of legitimate trade between Canada and the United States.
The issue has now reached Canada’s political arena. With President Donald Trump’s administration placing renewed pressure on Ottawa over cross-border fentanyl trafficking, Parliament is debating legislation to strengthen export controls — including greater powers to inspect postal shipments and tighten border-inspection regimes.
Some North American media outlets have criticized Washington’s stance as unfairly portraying Canada as a source country for fentanyl. Yet within law-enforcement circles, the concern is real: transnational synthetic-narcotics syndicates originating in China — and operating through Latin American cartel networks — have exploited Canada’s porous ports and liberal trade systems for years.
What began with mail-order protein powder, visa fraud, and exploitation of Canada’s Non-Resident Import system — as New Zealand’s case against Hong Kong national Chi Pang Li demonstrated — has evolved into multi-tonne, containerized narcotics traffic: evidence that Canada’s Pacific gateways have become critical arteries in the global synthetic-drug economy, connecting China’s chemical suppliers, cartel logistics networks, and Oceania’s growing demand.
 
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Investigative journalist Sam Cooper, author of Willful Blindness, calls Canada the “Western hemisphere capital” for Chinese Communist Party networks laundering money for Mexican fentanyl cartels. In an interview with Daniela Cambone, Cooper cites a U.S. Treasury report linking Chinese underground banking to over $300 billion laundered in four years via what he dubs the “Vancouver model.”

Weak Canadian laws, he argues, have turned the country into a net fentanyl exporter and a major U.S. security threat. This deliberate regulatory laxity allows foreign-backed criminal networks to thrive, fueling cartels, corrupting financial systems, and putting North American communities at grave risk.

Sadly this is a 20 minute video.

Basically Carney came to the US to meet with Trump to try to get rid of some of the trade tariffs, but there are deep issues regarding Canada's weak legal structure on financial transactions that allow drug trafficking. Carney left without a deal. Let's hope that Carney did leave with a better understanding of the "money laundering" that Trump is concerned about and realizes that Washington is not going allow Canada to remain a security threat to the US as a conduit for Canada's drug money.



Here is a short form on the same general topic, less depth, on Instagram, this one discusses China but doesn't get into the implications of Canada and its financial laws that allow money laundering and transshipments of precursor drugs.

 
So. Trump was correct again???
Hmm.
How about that?
But listen to CNN, ABC, CBS. NBC and believe them and then vilified Trump. Amazing.
 
So. Trump was correct again???
Hmm.
How about that?
But listen to CNN, ABC, CBS. NBC and believe them and then vilified Trump. Amazing.

YUP

And it sure looks like Canada's former PM, little Castro, was either truly ignorant or, possibly willfully ignorant, of the money & drug flow. My guess is the latter. How can the government be unaware of billions of dollars flowing through it, without an understanding of what is generating the money flow?

Looks like new PM, Mark Carney, probably wants to keep the money flowing for the sake of his economy, but perhaps is starting to understand that Trump is not going to allow Canada to continue to be a poison conduit to kill American and enrich our enemies (drug cartels & Chinese communists).
 
I thought Canada only made Maple Syrup and Mooses?

I'm really curious what the typical Canadian knows about the Canada-China-Drug Cartel connection and transshipments of drugs through their ports as well as the billions in money laundering?

Given the huge price inflation of real estate in major Canadian cities, the influx of foreign money into the nation, there clearly were signs of 'something' going on. But do Canadian citizens realize what their politicians have allowed? In fact do they even know about this international problem?

I've looked at a bunch of recent mainstream media stories, from both sides of the border, published over the past 4-5 days regarding the Carney-Trump meeting and I only found 1, that only briefly, even mentioned the Chinese drug shipments/financial issues.

So maybe people are simply unaware that Canada is apparently a huge money laundering nation for international drug cartels? And also are they unaware that Canada is apparently a huge transshipping point for the precursor chemicals to make drugs and these are distributed from Canada all around the Pacific rim?
 
I consider it very likely that anyone who might know the facts and could be in a position to stop any criminal activity.....

......... is probably getting a fat paycheck to look the other way.
 
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