Hong Kong triads using Indonesian domestic workers to smuggle Ice
Organised crime gangs from Hong Kong and southern China have long been key players in Indonesia's illicit drugs market, but recent cases indicate they are diversifying tactics - and according to domestic helper rights groups maids can be easy prey for drug rings looking for couriers.

Hong Kong's triads are targeting Indonesian migrant workers to smuggle drugs into the Southeast Asian nation, the Sunday Morning Post has learned.
Organised crime gangs from Hong Kong and southern China have long been key players in Indonesia's illicit drugs market, but recent cases indicate they are diversifying tactics - and according to domestic helper rights groups maids can be easy prey for drug rings looking for couriers.
Indonesian migrant workers are considered among the most vulnerable members of Hong Kong society, with a recent report by rights group Amnesty International highlighting the "slavery-like" conditions some endure.
Last month, Indonesia's National Narcotics Agency (BNN) solved a number of drug trafficking cases originating in Hong Kong, including one involving an Indonesian domestic helper.
According to BNN spokesman Sumirat Dwiyanto, a Hong Kong criminal syndicate used the worker, who had overstayed her visa, to courier a package of methamphetamine, also known as Ice, back to Indonesia.
The drugs were shipped ahead but the woman was arrested by police when she attempted to collect the parcel at the airport cargo service, Sumirat said. "The [Indonesian] consulate is very much aware that international drug traffickers consider Indonesia a market for drugs. For this purpose, the trafficker has a pattern to recruit foreign nationals as couriers, including Indonesian citizens in Hong Kong," said Sam Aryadi, vice-consul for public affairs at Indonesia's consulate.