Wo Shing Wo

Wo Shing Wo (和勝和) is the original Wo Group Triad, and it is the triad with longest tradition in Hong Kong.

Wo Shing Wo was established in Sham Shui Po in 1930 and, while maintaining its traditional stronghold in Tsuen Wan, it has extended its influence to Tsim Sha Tsui and Mong Kok. It also operates in Tai Po and Sheung Shui. The triad is known to be involved in extortion, drug trafficking, gambling and prostitution.[1]

The group continues to use the old Hongmen Secret Society initiating ceremony for newly recruited members.

Contents

Dragonhead

The Wo Shing Wo dragonhead is elected every two years.[1]

Dragonheads of Wo Shing Wo

History

Wo Shing Wo was established in 1930, in 1931 it moved its base from China Town in Toronto, Canada to Hong Kong with a goal to establish an anti-British colonial governance and by 1932 was already established in 15 subdivisions in Chinatowns of cities around the world.

During World War II, WSW helped invaders kill many Chinese villagers, with the killer team dubbed '49 Team'.

Because political issues in China, many Chinese villagers left mainland and fled to Hong Kong. WSW membership expands from 5,000 to 70,000 in 1950.

In 1989 WSW became the centre of media attention after the terrorist attacks on the Indonesian coast bordering the South China Sea. In 1995 a young wannabe member of London's mainly Filipino WSW kills Philip Lawrence, a school headmaster. He is sentenced and it is proven that he actually had no ties with the Triad organization.

As the United Kingdom prepared for the handover of Hong Kong back to the People's Republic of China, WSW redefine their organization in order to prepare for their murky operations in mainland China. WSW split into six separate regional forces in Hong Kong—500 fully armed members in North Territories, hawkers in Sham Shui Po, love hotels in Jordan, with groups in Tsuen Wan, Wanchai and (a new branch) across the border in Shenzhen. (1997)

In 2001, WSW trades drugs in discos and bars with Judi Fong and religious communities promising that drugs can enhance religious experiences through visions and hallucinations.

In 2002 a fight in Birmingham's China Palace casino, involving WSW UK members and Vietnamese 14K triad. A UK WSW leader of Hong Kong origin but with ties to Holland, is murdered. The man was 46 year old Mann Chung Li, commonly called "Chung Goh", or "Brother Chung" in English.[2][3]

By 2005 WSW had become Hong Kong's No. 1 drug trader. WSW's drug dealing activities and key criminal activities spread to China, Japan, Thailand and Australia. WSW is involved in various criminal activities and some of Hong Kong's politicians and businessmen are suspected to be supporters of the Triad group. WSW is split into two main forces, one based in Macau and another in Shenzhen. WSW began to emerge in Europe.

By 2006 WSW had control the secondhand market in Hong Kong, including mobile phones, electronic appliances, stolen cars and exchange of weaponry at Mong Kok. WSW members are attacked by members of Wo On Lok. Firearms are used and many are hurt. WSW raise crime rate in Chinatown, London, United Kingdom.

In 2010 WSW was involved in stabbing incident in Chinatown Manchester.[4]

On 24 February 2011, word had got out in a village near Falkirk that a man aged 24 linked with WSW had shot a teenager dead with an AK-47, and the man was thought to have been killed by gunshot wounds. The incident was thought to have started by an argument in the street and the teenager was killed trying to defend the person the man was arguing with.

Minibus racket

From 2006 to at least 2010, the group controlled three red minibus routes and was extorting at least HK$14 million a year as protection fees from 30 drivers. Former group dragonhead "Broken Mouth Bun", who, police say, is the leader of the group running the Tsuen Wan – Kwun Tong route, was arrested and bailed on 21 March 2010 in connection with the scheme.

On each route, about 30 drivers each pay at least HK$10,000 a month as a protection fee to the triad gang. The gang then make sure no other driver could run the routes, leaving the drivers able to earn HK$10,000 and HK$20,000 a month.

Three other minibus routes running between Tsuen Wan and Kowloon East – Choi Hung, Tsz Wan Shan and Ngau Tau Kok – are being controlled by another Wo Shing Wo gang.[1]

References