Naw Kham, head of the gang that murdered 13 Chinese sailors on the Mekong River last year, attends a court session at the Yunnan Provincial Higher People's Court. [File photo: LIU XUEBIN / FOR CHINA DAILY]
A Chinese court on Wednesday rejected appeals from six people convicted of murdering 13 Chinese sailors on the Mekong River last year.
The court upheld death penalties for the case's prime convicts -- the Myanmar drug lord Naw Kham and three of his right-hand men.
The Provincial Higher People's Court of Yunnan also sustained sentences for the two other Myanmar convicts, known by their Chinese names Zha Bo and Zha Tuobo. They were handed a death sentence with two-year reprieve and eight years in prison, respectively.
The six were convicted of intentional homicide, drug trafficking, kidnapping and hijacking by a local court in Kunming, capital of Yunnan, in November.
Nicknamed "The Godfather," Naw Kham was the boss of the largest illegal armed drug trafficking gang on the Mekong River, which flows through China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam.
The gang was busted earlier this year in a joint operation conducted by police from China, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand after the brutal murders of Chinese sailors triggered calls to rein in rampant crime in the border region.
Naw Kham's gang was found to have colluded with Thai soldiers and to have organized an attack on two Chinese cargo ships in October last year, gunning down 13 Chinese sailors and trafficking drugs. The gang was also involved in another kidnapping-for-ransom case targeting Chinese citizens on the Mekong in April last year, according to the court.
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