China Executes 11 Members of the Ming Clan in Cross-Border Scam Case Linked to Myanmar’s Lawkai
The convictions covered crimes including murder, kidnapping, fraud, and illegal gambling, while more than 20 other relatives received prison terms of up to life.
China has executed 11 members of the Ming family after convictions tied to a criminal enterprise operating around Lawkai, a border area in Myanmar that became associated with casinos, sex work, and later large-scale online fraud.
The group was convicted of multiple offences, including murder, kidnapping, fraud and running illegal gambling operations.
The case traces back to Lawkai’s transformation from a poor town into a lucrative illicit economy where several criminal clans operated.
The Ming network collapsed in 2023, when family members were arrested and sent back to China by ethnic armed groups that had taken control of Lawkai during clashes with the Myanmar military.
Authorities say the scams were conducted largely online and inflicted heavy financial losses, with many victims described as Chinese nationals who lost billions of dollars.
The fraud ecosystem also relied on coercion: the United Nations has said hundreds of thousands of people have been trafficked for scam operations in Myanmar and other Southeast Asian countries, with trafficked workers forced to participate in targeting victims.
Within the Lawkai landscape, the Ming family was described as one of the few clans with mafia-like control.
Their rise was linked to the early 2000s, after armed group leaders in the city were toppled during a military operation led by Min Aung Hlaing, who later became Myanmar’s military leader following the 2021 coup.
Ming Xuechang, identified as the head of the family, was described as running one of Lawkai’s most notorious scam centres, known as Tiger Villa.
The family’s income reportedly began with gambling and prostitution before shifting into online fraud operations, and accounts from freed workers described harsh conditions, tight security, and recurrent violence, including beatings and torture.
The executions were not the only sentences in the case.
More than 20 other members of the Ming family were sentenced to prison terms ranging from five years to life imprisonment for their roles in the criminal operations, including the trafficking and abuse of workers.
Myanmar’s military reported in 2023 that Ming Xuechang took his own life while attempting to escape arrest.
Separately, Chinese authorities have released confessions from some of those arrested as part of a state documentary presenting the crackdown as an effort to eliminate scam networks.
The broader architecture behind these schemes is not confined to one family or one town, with similar scam operations cited across parts of the region, including Myanmar, Cambodia, and Laos.
What happens next will be shaped by whether enforcement pressures dismantle remaining networks, how trafficking routes are disrupted, and whether additional prosecutions follow for other clans linked to the same cross-border scam economy.