Cannabis Ruderalis

Vietnamese gangsters in the 1990s. Infamous gang bosses shown: Dung Hà (second from left), Năm Cam (fifth from left), and Hải Bánh (third from right).

Xã hội đen, or hắc xã hội (Chinese: 黑社会, literally means "black societies"), is a Vietnamese term used to describe criminal forces, whose goal is to make money from illegal and overall immoral activities. The term is believed to have become widly used thanks to Hongkong's TV series and movies about the Chinese secret society Heishehui.[1]

An individual who participates in these criminal activities can be called giang hồ,[a] găng-xtơ,[b] côn đồ,[c] or tội phạm.[d] A criminal organization is known as băng đảng or băng nhóm, depending on its scale.[2][3]

Crime in Vietnam[edit]

According to the law of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, under Clause 1, Article 8 of the 2015 Criminal Code:[4]

A crime means an act that is dangerous for society and defined in Criminal Code, is committed by a person who has criminal capacity of corporate legal entity, whether deliberately or involuntarily, infringes the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the nation, infringes the political regime, economic regime, culture, national defense and security, social order and safety, the lawful rights and interests of organizations, human rights, the lawful rights and interests of citizens, other aspects of socialist law, and leads to criminal prosecution as prescribed by this Code.

Joining a criminal organization is considered to be a "very serious crime" in Vietnam.[5] For example, a person who illegally transported goods or money across the border could "face a penalty of up to 02 years community sentence or 03-24 months' imprisonment;"[e] but the same crime if committed by a member of an organized group would be liable for "a penalty of 02 - 05 years' imprisonment."[f]

Although the law would also make political groups, such as Việt Tân[6] and DTVNCH,[7][8] criminal organizations,[g] they are not part of xã hội đen as their stated aim and genesis is ideological rather than commercial.

Structure[edit]

Small group of criminals, băng nhóm, has simple structure. It is organized loosely with a small number of members. The leader is called đại ca or băng trưởng. They act aggressively and mostly commit crimes such as murder, robbery, theft, and fraud. These small groups may band together to form a larger syndicate or find protectorate from an already existed one.[9][3]

A criminal syndicate, băng đảng, has a clearer, more sustainable organizational structure with long-term operational goals. The leadership can have one or multiple people, but there is one individual at the top known as trùm. Below them is the command level with people who would be in charge of smaller groups within the syndicate. Ordinary members, known as đàn em, are those who directly carry out criminal acts, as well as all tasks assigned by the leaders.

For example, during the 1960s in South Vietnam, there was a powerful gang led by the infamous Đại Cathay, the trùm of his gang and the "Brother of all brothers" (Vietnamese: Đại ca của các đại ca).[10][11] Along Đại were several members that assisted his leadership: cánh tay trái "H đầu bò" (H the bull head), cánh tay phải "Lâm chín ngón" (Lâm the nine fingers), and quân sư "Hoàng guitar" (Hoàng the guitarist).[12][13] The gang bosses that submitted to Đại Cathay were Huỳnh Tỳ and Ngô Cái, who were respectively known as "Second Brother"[h] and "Third Brother"[i] (later "Fourth Brother"[j]).[14][15]

Notable criminal groups[edit]

In Vietnam[edit]

The Golden Triangle is one of the largest opium-producing areas of the world

Vietnamese drug lords control territories in the northwestern provinces. Because Vietnam is located near the Golden Triangle, its heroin trade is concentrated along its borders with Laos and Cambodia.[16] Since 2019, not only has Vietnam become a drug market but also a transit port that criminals use to traffick drug to other countries.[17]

Meanwhile, Vietnamese illegal trafficking groups control areas in Hồ Chí Minh City. Their networks have been linked to the human-trafficking and human-smuggling markets, the ivory- and pangolin-trafficking markets, illicit logging operations, arms trafficking, and drug-trafficking markets.[18]

Name Active Operating in Founder's ethnicity
Black Flag Army 1860s–1885 China–Vietnam border Zhuang
Bình Xuyên Army 1945–1960 Southeastern Vietnam Vietnamese
Đại Cathay's gang 1960s–1966 Sài Gòn-Chợ Lớn Vietnamese
Huỳnh Tỳ's gang 1960s–1975 Sài Gòn-Chợ Lớn Vietnamese
Ngô Văn Cái's gang 1960s–1975 Sài Gòn-Chợ Lớn Vietnamese
Ba Thế's gang 1960s–1975 Sài Gòn-Chợ Lớn Vietnamese
Tín Mã Nàm's triad 1960s–1975 Chợ Lớn Chinese
Năm Cam's gang 1962–2001 Hồ Chí Minh City (HCM City) Vietnamese
Bạch Hải Đường’s robber band 1970-1982 Long Xuyên Vietnamese
Lâm chín ngón's prison gang[19][12] 1970–1988[k] Chí Hòa Prison Vietnamese
Khánh Trắng’s so-called "Đồng Xuân Labor Union" 1989–1996 Hà Nội Vietnamese
Phúc Bồ’s gang [vi] 1990s–1996 Hà Nội Vietnamese
Phước tám ngón’s gang [vi] 1990s–1996 HCM City Vietnamese
Dung Hà's gang 1990s–2000 Hải Phòng[l] Vietnamese
Hải Bánh's group[20][21][22] 1990s–2001 Hải Phòng,[m] later HCM City[n] Vietnamese

Foreign-based gangs such as the Korean mafia[23][24][25] and the Japanese yakuza[26] are also reported to have activities in Vietnam.

Outside of Vietnam[edit]

In the US[edit]

Although Vietnamese crime groups were generally less organized than ethnic Chinese organized crime groups, they were more violent. These gangs were highly mobile and nomadic. The typical crime committed by Vietnamese-American gangs was home invasion robbery, of which they often targeted Asian refugee families.[27][28]

In Canada[edit]

While many gang members from Vietnam when immigrated to Canada were hired by already-established Chinese organized crime groups to work as street enforcers, others would emerged into dominant and violent criminal organizations. They mainly actived in Toronto's Chinatown area.[29]

In Australia[edit]

Australian media reported that Vietnamese crime groups were mainly involved in crimes against their own community with standover and extortion being the most common. These gangs established links with Australian crime figures and were known to be the largest traffickers of heroin in Australia.[27][30]

Brief history[edit]

In 1865, the China-based brigand Black Flag Army crossed the border from Guangxi into northern Vietnam, created a profitable extortion network along the course of the Red River. The group later joined forces with the Qing and Nguyễn to fight off the French.

In 1945, various groups of gangsters unified into an organization called Bình Xuyên, led by Ba Dương. Before that, in the 1920s, Ba Dương was already the leader of a coalition of river pirates. In 1949, Bình Xuyên became a legitimate military organization. In 1954, Bình Xuyên controlled nearly the entire supply of opium of Vietnam. In 1955, Bình Xuyên was defeated in the Battle of Saigon and was disbanded.

Saigon in the 1960s saw the rise of four powerful Vietnamese gangs, whose leaders are known as "Four Great Kings" (Vietnamese: Tứ đại thiên vương) and were behide almost all of criminal activities and rackets within the city:[31]

  • Lê Văn Đại (nicknamed "Đại Cathay") was the son of Lê Văn Cự, a member of Bình Xuyên group who died in around 1946. At the age of 14, he ran away from home and made a living by shining shoes and selling newspaper near Cathay cinema. He quickly built himself a loyal gang group, defeated his rivals, and became the top of the "Four Great Kings" of Saigon's criminal underworld before 1975.
  • Nguyễn Thuận Lai (nicknamed "Huỳnh Tỳ") used to be a gentle and hard-working student who loved poetry. After grade 10, he went out to work and started to involved in criminal activities. He rose up to become the most powerful gang boss until 1964, when he and his gang had to submit to Đại Cathay.[32]
  • Ngô Văn Cái was known for his skillful martial art. He was considered to be the "Third Brother", after Đại Cathay and Huỳnh Tỳ. He later married and involved less in criminal activities. Thus, managed to stay out of trouble with the government.[15]
  • Nguyễn Kế Thế (nicknamed "Ba Thế") was known to be the person that kicked Đại Cathay down the stairs, provoked a war between the then Tỳ-Cái-Thế kings and Đại Cathay.

Beside the "Four Kings", there was also an infamous Chinese crime boss called Tín Mã Nàm (nicknamed "Mad Horse"). He was considered as the "Triad King"[o] of Chợ Lớn and was said to be the second highest-ranking member of Hồng Môn, a triad from China, behind only Hoàng Long ("Yellow Dragon").[33][13]

In 1964, Đại Cathay's gang and Tín Mã Nàm's triad clashed in a bloody fight. Although Mã Nàm won, the battle had caused many people to avoid his casinos and his business sharply declined. Tín Mã Nàm was then forced to call for a negotiation with Đại where he and many of the Chinese gangs in Chợ Lớn decided to give up away the areas between Nancy market and District 1 to Đại Cathay's gang.[34][35]

In 1966, Tạ Vinh, a Chinese businessman, was arrested due to some conflicts with the government. Triads in Chợ Lớn and Hongkong tried to intervene by sending a petition to the embassy of the Republic of Vietnam in Taipei, Taiwan, but failed. Tạ Vinh was publicly executed on March 14.[36][37][38][39]

In November 1966, Đại Cathay was arrested and placed in Phú Quốc Prison. On January 7 of 1967, Đại and his men escaped from the camp, but when he passed through the front gate, the alarmed sound, alerting the guards surrounding the prison. Discovered, Đại was chased to the North part of the island, but the guards never found him and he was never heard from again.

Following 1975 and the reunification of Vietnam, the era of Four Great Kings of Saigon came to the end. This, however, had allowed Năm Cam, a former follower of Đại Cathay, to developed a powerful criminal organization and dominated the South. He is said to have gone on a 15-year long killing spree in order to eliminate his rivals, and is considered as the "Godfather" of Vietnam.

Meanwhile in the North, four crime bosses also appeared:

  • Dương Văn Khánh (nicknamed "Khánh Trắng"), whose group operated in Hanoi under a legal named "Đồng Xuân Labor Union." At its height, Khánh Trắng's organization even received praise from government officials as a model example of an organization that should be replicated. He and his members was finally arrested on 24 May 1996 and Khánh was sentenced to death.
  • Nguyễn Thị Phúc (nicknamed "Phúc Bồ") operated in Hanoi, around Đồng Xuân market. Phúc Bồ occasionally classed with Khánh Trắng until her arrest in 1996. She was released in 2002.
  • Dung Hà, a high-ranking gangster in Haiphong, was considered as one two great mafia bosses of the Vietnamese underworld, along with Năm Cam.
  • Hải Bánh, a follower of Dung Hà until 1995, when Hà was temporary arrested. After that, Hải and some members went to the South and joined Năm Cam's gang.

At one point, both Năm Cam and Dung Hà joined forces to attack Lê Ngọc Lâm (nicknamed "Lâm chín ngón"), another former member of Đại Cathay. In 2000, Dung Hà was assassinated as she tried to expand her operation to Hồ Chí Minh City. In 2001, both Năm Cam and Hải Bánh, along with other gang members were arrested. Cam was executed while Hải was imprisoned until 2022.

In culture[edit]

Vietnamese TV series and movies about gangsters[edit]

  • Ông trùm (The crime boss) [vi]
  • Mùa cúc susi (Susi's chrysanthemum season) [vi]
  • Mê cung (The maze) [vi]
  • Người phán xử (The Arbitrator) [vi]
  • Bụi đời Chợ Lớn (Gangsters of Chợ Lớn) [vi]
  • Bẫy rồng (Clash) [vi]
  • Giang hồ Chợ Mới (New Market's gypsies) [vi]

Legacy[edit]

Khá Bảnh with other people filmed a web drama called Sóng gió cuộc đời

The impact of gangsters such as Đại Cathay and Năm Cam has created a generation that admired the xã hội đen culture. One notable example is Khá Bảnh, a YouTuber known for creating videos that showed him as a man of honor who possesses many moral principles of a giang hồ.[40][41]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ derived from the Chinese word 江湖, which means "rivers and lakes"
  2. ^ derived from the English word gangsters
  3. ^ means "thugs"
  4. ^ means "criminals"
  5. ^ Clause 1, Article 189
  6. ^ Clause 2.a, Article 189, Criminal Code
  7. ^ "Any Vietnamese citizen who colludes with foreign entities in infringing the independence, sovereignty, and territorial integrity of Vietnam, the socialism regime, and the State of Socialist Republic of Vietnam, its national defense and security shall face a penalty of 12 - 20 years' imprisonment, life imprisonment, or death." (Article 108, Criminal Code)
  8. ^ Nhị ca
  9. ^ Tam ca
  10. ^ Tứ ca
  11. ^ Before being sentenced to prison, Lâm was a member of Đại Cathay's gang group. After being released, he wasn't a gangster anymore, but was still targetted by Năm Cam (Năm Cam’s attack on Lâm).
  12. ^ Hà later tried to expanded her influence in HCM City, but was assassinated by Năm Cam
  13. ^ As part of Dung Hà's gang
  14. ^ As followers of Năm Cam
  15. ^ Vietnamese: Vua hắc đạo

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hà, Giang (August 4, 2009). ""Xã hội đen" tại Việt Nam, một thực trạng cần tìm hiểu (Vietnam's "black societies", a situation that needs to be understood)". RFA.
  2. ^ Thành, Văn (December 27, 2012). "Giang hồ Sài Gòn trước 1975: Tiêu diệt sát thủ giấu mặt (Pre-1975 Saigon gangsters: To annihilate the unknown killer)". Người Đưa Tin.
  3. ^ a b Phương, Thảo (August 13, 2017). "Mafia và tổ chức xã hội đen khác nhau thế nào? Băng đảng xã hội đen là gì? (Differences between a mafia and a xã hội đen? What is băng đảng?)". VN Express.
  4. ^ "2015 Criminal Code of Vietnam" (PDF). November 27, 2015.
  5. ^ "Phân loại tội phạm theo Bộ luật Hình sự 2015 (Types of criminals according to 2015 Code)". November 15, 2021.
  6. ^ "Vietnam sentences American for terrorism". NBC News. May 13, 2008.
  7. ^ ""Provisional National Government of Vietnam" is a terrorist organisation". Vietnamet Global.
  8. ^ Pearson, James (January 31, 2018). "Vietnam lists U.S.-based Vietnamese group as 'terrorist' organisation". Reuters.
  9. ^ "5 đặc trưng của tội phạm có tổ chức ở Việt Nam (5 traits of organized crime group in Vietnam)". VnExpress. 2005-06-18.
  10. ^ Vy, Tường (2016-08-02). "Cuộc đời Đại Cathay - trùm giang hồ Sài Gòn xưa (Life of Đại Cathay - the gang boss of old Saigon)". VnExpress.
  11. ^ Lê, Hoàng (2015-09-11). "Vì sao Đại Cathay được coi là Đại ca của các đại ca Sài Gòn?". Báo Đời sống & Pháp luật.
  12. ^ a b "Lâm chín ngón – cánh tay phải của Đại Cathay (Lâm the nine fingers - Đại Cathay's right-hand man)". daisoaidhtv.
  13. ^ a b "CUỘC ĐỜI CỦA ĐẠI CATHAY (LIFE OF DAI CATHAY)". Cafe văn nghệ. 2011-12-23.
  14. ^ "Chuyện chưa kể về Huỳnh Tỳ, nhị ca nhóm "Tứ đại thiên vương" giang hồ Sài Gòn (Huỳnh Tỳ, the second brother of Saigonese gang bosses "Four Great Kings")". Dân Việt. 2014-08-14.
  15. ^ a b "Góc khuất cuộc đời của giang hồ Ngô Cái (The life of gangster Ngô Cái)". Pháp luật và Xã hội. May 18, 2016.
  16. ^ "Criminality in Vietnam". Global Organized Crime Index.
  17. ^ "Strengthening Border Management in Viet Nam to Counter Transnational Organized Crime". United Nations - Vietnam. 2021-08-23.
  18. ^ "Criminality in Vietnam". Global Organized Crime Index.
  19. ^ Nhật, Hoàng (March 14, 2019). "Lâm "chín ngón" - Kẻ đối đầu Năm Cam và cái chết trong... nồi cám lợn (Lâm, the nine fingers - Enemy of Năm Cam)". Dân Việt.
  20. ^ "HẢI BÁNH LÀ AI? TIỂU SỬ VÀ NHỮNG SỰ THẬT VỀ ÔNG TRÙM GIANG HỒ VỪA RA TÙ (Who is Hải Bánh? Life of the released gang boss.)". Người Nổi Tiếng. January 27, 2022.
  21. ^ "Hải 'bánh', đệ tử trùm giang hồ Năm Cam, ra tù sau 20 năm (Hải Bánh, disciple of Năm Cam, was released after 20 years in prison)". BBC News. January 27, 2022.
  22. ^ "Trùm giang hồ Hải 'bánh' ra tù sau gần 21 năm thụ án chung thân (Gang boss Hải Bánh was released after 21 years in prison)". Thanh Niên. January 27, 2022.
  23. ^ "Police hunting S. Korean gang over assault on rivals in Ho Chi Minh City". Tuổi Trẻ News. October 26, 2018.
  24. ^ Thái, Sơn (April 2, 2008). "Xã hội đen Hàn Quốc vào Việt Nam "xử" đối thủ (Korean gang went to Vietnam to "take care" its opponent)".
  25. ^ "Two S. Koreans among 18 sentenced to death in Vietnam drug bust: state media". France 24. December 11, 2023.
  26. ^ Kimota (December 16, 2022). "The Yakuza In Vietnam: A Look At The Japanese Criminal Syndicates Presence In The Country". Visit Nagasaki.
  27. ^ a b "Vietnamese Organised Crime in Australia".
  28. ^ "Vietnamese Gangs in America". US Department of Justice - Office of Justice Programs.
  29. ^ "Vietnamese Criminal Organizations: Reconceptualizing Vietnamese Gangs". US Department of Justice - Office of Justice Programs.
  30. ^ 75. "Viet gangs take over heroin trade", Sunday Mail (Brisbane), 24 April 1994, p. 33.
  31. ^ Duy, Chiến (June 9, 2019). "Những trận giang hồ huyết chiến kinh hoàng dưới chế độ Sài Gòn (Famous gang battle under the Saigon regime)". Báo Mới.
  32. ^ Hoàng, Dũng (May 25, 2014). "Thế giới du đãng Sài Gòn trước 1975 - part 3 (Criminal word of Saigon before 1975 - part 3)". Lao Động.
  33. ^ Trung Nghĩa (2012-12-27). "Tín Mã Nàm - Nỗi kinh hoàng ở Chợ Lớn (Tín Mã Nàm - The horror of Chợ Lớn)". Nguoi Dua Tin.
  34. ^ Trung Nghĩa (2012-12-27). "Giang hồ Sài Gòn trước 1975: Trùm du đãng Mã Thầu Dậu". Nguoi Dua Tin. Retrieved 2017-03-12.
  35. ^ Lăng Nhu (2011-11-11). "Đệ nhất giang hồ' Đại Cathay và cái chết đầy bí ẩn". Mega Fun. Retrieved 2017-03-12.
  36. ^ Ngọc, Minh (July 27, 2016). "Hội Tam Hoàng: Một thời vùng vẫy trên đất Việt (Traids: A golden time in Vietnam)". 24 Giờ.
  37. ^ Vũ, Cao (August 16, 2015). "Hội Tam Hoàng và vụ xử bắn Tạ Vinh: Nhiệm vụ bất khả thi (Triads and the execution of Tạ Vinh: An impossible mission)". Công An Nhân Dân.
  38. ^ "Hội Tam Hoàng và vụ xử bắn Tạ Vinh ở Sài Gòn trước 1975 (Triads and the execution of Tạ Vinh in Sài Gòn before 1975)". REDSVN. December 16, 2023.
  39. ^ "SOUTH VIETNAM: CHINESE BUSINESSMAN EXECUTED AS WEEPING FAMILY TRIES TO SEE HIM (video)". Reuters.
  40. ^ Nguyễn, Hồng Lam (2020-09-09). "Vũng lầy giang hồ (The quagmire of gangsters)". Công an nhân dân.
  41. ^ "Diễn cảnh anh hùng, giang hồ đua nhau làm video bạo lực trên Youtube (Acting as heros, gangsters compete to make violence videos on YouTube)". Lao Động. November 3, 2022.


Leave a Reply