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Roland Tan: From a Singapore kampung to Europe’s underworld

Watchman

Alfrescian
Loyal
Price of a high life
Roland Tan: From a Singapore kampung
to Europe’s underworld

Posted on: 9th Jan 2009 1:21 PM

Ansley Ng
[email protected]

EMBROILED in extortion and fights from an early age, he was wanted in connection with the alleged murder of a rival gang member in 1969.
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But before detectives could bring him in, 20-year-old Roland Tan Tong Meng — with the help of the See Tong gang — fled to Amsterdam, then known for its liberal laws. Along with him went several men from his Serangoon kampung, a close-knit community of Hainanese migrants including hardened fugitives and sailors.
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Once in Holland, triad legend has it, Mr Tan and his brethren, who had very little money with them, saw how members of Hong Kong’s infamous 14K gang were doing a thriving drug trade in the capital city. They plotted to take it over.
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After buying pistols, the 10 or so immigrants from Singapore applied nail polish on their fingertips to avoid leaving prints, then launched their bloody assault. Although outnumbered, according to triad folklore, Mr Tan and his gang violently won control of the Amsterdam underworld.
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That was when Mr Tan, or ‘Ah Kong’, went from small-time gangster to the criminal big-time – involved in processing drugs and moneylending under the See Tong flag, in what was then the world’s centre for heroin distribution.
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His unsavoury past caught up with him on Monday evening, when the 61-year-old was shot in the restaurant that he owned in Copenhagen, Denmark, by one of his Vietnamese ‘runners’. He is in stable condition in hospital.
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A Singaporean friend who was with him, known only by his nickname ‘Ah M’, was shot in the stomach and remains in bad condition, Copenhagen homicide chief Ove Dahl told Today. Family members from Singapore have arrived in the Danish capital to see him.
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SUBHD: Like a well run company
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For years, Mr Tan lived the fast and high life of a ‘dragon head’, in triad parlance. Fond of a good steak and blonde women, according to a former associate who spoke to TODAY, Mr Tan moved to Copenhagen in the 1980s, married a Danish woman and took up citizenship.
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But he missed his Singapore food. Flight attendants who knew the chief and his men would bring him packets of hawker fare from home. “Char kway teow, yong tau foo, laksa. You name it, they will bring it over for him,” said the source, once a member of the Ah Kong gang, which was what See Tong called itself after a name-change in 1989.
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Mr Tan’s men, most of whom were Singaporeans, took their mob life seriously.
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Recruits – who were typically fugitives from the law or gangsters deemed to be promising – were approached and sent to Bangkok, the gang’s “recruitment centre”, where they underwent a selection process and their loyalty, obedience and bravery tested. Those who earned the trust of the elders were sent on to Amsterdam.
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“There was a hierarchy in the gang like in any big company,” said the source. “It was very well run. We took care of each other over there.”
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In Amsterdam, newbies were sent to work in drug laboratories, where they processed the raw material from Myanmar. The finished products were sold on the streets or trafficked out of the city, reaping $150,000 profit per kilogramme. “We easily made 80 to 100 kg in a month.”
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The men were paid a basic monthly salary starting from 2,000 guilders, and had their lodging and food taken care of. All the men, even the lowest ranking, were paid a yearly bonus from a “profit-sharing scheme” with the money from drug deals and loansharking.
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They were also given cars and a petrol allowance – for which they had to produce receipts. “We even had a petty cash system where we took money out to entertain our friends from Singapore,” said the source.
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SUBHD: Armani and arms
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Each year, the men got about 20,000 guilders as “clothing allowance”. Suits from Hugo Boss and Armani were highly recommended, said the source.
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But underneath those suits, everyone was armed. As a rule, the men carried a pistol, passport and plane ticket with them at all times.
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:The gang’s “commandos” or musclemen patrolled the streets daily. They were particularly wary of immigrant troublemakers, who would harrass shopkeepers or sell drugs on their turf at lower prices. The gang would take care of these intruders by “catching them and beating them up”.
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But their guns – usually a snub-nosed .38 Smith and Wesson revolver – were rarely drawn, said the source.
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The triad also had legitimate businesses, operating casinos and restaurants. Over the years, however, internal bickering and takeover threats from rivals saw Mr Tan give up control and move to Copenhagen, where he set up his Restaurant Bali in a tourist square.
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His operations, which by then involved “over a hundred men” and extended to cities like Madrid, Sydney and Phnom Penh, were handed over to lieutenants – many of them fugitives wanted for crimes like murder and armed robbery in Singapore in the 70s.
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SUBHD: A loyal but bad tempered man
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:A fan of gambling, especially chor dai dee (Big 2) and Russian poker, Mr Tan would often reminisce about past “glory days” and, despite having lived in Europe for four decades, did not forget his roots – he preferred speaking Hokkien to his men.
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:The source described his former boss as a “kind and loyal man, but with a bad temper”. “If he has only $10 and you needed the money more than him, he would give it to you,” he said.
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:Since opting for a quieter life in Copenhagen where he ran his restaurant, Mr Tan did not arm himself when going out, thought he kept one or two Vietnamese bodyguards with him.
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:On Monday, one of his boys – quiet 47-year-old Nguyen Phi Hung – got into an argument and shot him. He remains on the run.
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One Singapore law enforcer who remembers Mr Tan is Mr Lionel De Souza, now a private detective. Then with the Criminal Investigation Department, he was one of three local officers on standby to extradite Mr Tan from Copenhagen in 1973.
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But the deal fell through. “Having no grounds to detain Tan Tong Meng further, the Danish police had to release him,” said Mr De Souza, who declined to elaborate.
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Asked if Mr Tan could now be extradited to Singapore to help in investigations, a police spokesman told TODAY: “Singapore Police Force have sent out a request to the Danish police seeking more information on the two persons involved.”


Roland Tan: From a Singapore kampungto Europe’s underworld
 

limpeh2

Alfrescian
Loyal
Wow! Feeling quite proud of this uncle who made it big.
Fact: even so-called heartless & devious hk triad no match for LKY regime exiles.
 

GoldenDragon

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
hahaha...dragon, don't quite understand this?
Is there no extradition treaty with these countries?

Not sure about this but ang mo countries quite lax when it comes to this. There was another S'porean who was supposed to be handed over in 80s. Somehow or rather, he managed to escape while in the plane!!!

That chap now super influential. Based in Bangkok. Moves around all over. CBH is his nickname. He shot his own gang member then chaboked.
 

drifter

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
for the recent years Roland Tan right hand man CTS also involved with wildlife smuggling . wildlife smuggling transactions generate between 10-20 billion dollars annually. It could be ivory concealed in a container, cans of caviar in a suitcase or baby chimpanzees in a crate. The smuggling of wildlife goods is a low-risk, high-profit enterprise proving increasingly attractive to crime syndicates.

This means that wildlife smuggling is a close seconds to that of the trade of illicit drugs, in regards to revenue . There is an increase in demand in Southeast Asia and this is due to the region’s economic boom. In other continents like Europe and North America, the demand for wildlife smuggling is used to create luxury fashion items, tourist souvenirs, and exotic pets. extoic pet business is big money .
 

kukubird58

Alfrescian
Loyal
for the recent years Roland Tan right hand man CTS also involved with wildlife smuggling . wildlife smuggling transactions generate between 10-20 billion dollars annually. It could be ivory concealed in a container, cans of caviar in a suitcase or baby chimpanzees in a crate. The smuggling of wildlife goods is a low-risk, high-profit enterprise proving increasingly attractive to crime syndicates.

Drifter...what are fetish of japanese...besides AV.
 

ps07857

Alfrescian
Loyal
incredible story, but we also have our own organized hierarch that implemented the "Everyday Rob People" system... but this one they legalized it themselves so they have the best of both worlds...
Good pay and good recognition as the "Good Guys"!
 
B

BCR101

Guest
Wow, who say sinkie cannot make it big?




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By Agence France-Presse, Updated: 15/12/2010

Hong Kong police arrest triad leaders

Hong Kong police said Wednesday they have dealt a major blow to a notorious triad group, after a territory-wide series of raids rounded up dozens of people, including a suspected gang leader.


A total of 37 suspects, including a 56-year-old alleged ringleader and other senior members of an unidentified crime syndicate, have been arrested in a city-wide operation that began Monday night, Hong Kong police said.

Dozens of police and immigration officers raided multiple locations in the heart of the southern Chinese city, including four nightclubs.

The detainees, 17 men and 20 women, were aged between from 22 to 63 and were arrested for offences including managing brothels, drug trafficking and immigration-related crimes, police said.

"(We) believe this operation has netted several core members of the triad society and successfully dealt a blow to the triad society active in the Kowloon West region," the police said in a statement, referring to a neighbourhood in the teeming metropolis.

It is the latest in a spate of recent crackdowns on organised crime in the former British colony.

Last month, police arrested 56 people in an operation against a major triad syndicate in the city, known as the Wo Shing Wo triad.

In the past year, police have arrested about 2,000 people in Hong Kong, Macau and the Chinese mainland as part of regular crackdowns on organised crime. At least two crime bosses have been executed in mainland China in the last 12 months.

Police declined to identify the group at the centre of their latest raid, but press reports said authorities targeted the powerful Sun Yee On triad.

The arrested women were from mainland China and suspected of illegally working in gang-controlled nightclubs, a police spokeswoman told AFP Wednesday evening.

Seven suspects were charged with "various triad-related offences", she said, while 10 were released on bail.

The seven charged are expected to make their first court appearance on Thursday, she added.

The alleged gang mastermind belongs to the Sun Yee On group and was arrested after officers raided his apartment, the South China Morning Post reported Wednesday, quoting an unnamed police officer.

Sun Yee On is among several crime syndicates operating in the city which are believed to be involved in extortion, prostitution, drugs and copyright piracy.

Police confirmed Wednesday evening that the operation had ended.

Hong Kong police have recorded a drop in the number of reports of triad-related crime in the first 10 months of the year, which totalled 1,645 cases, or 13.7 percent less than the same period in 2009.





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B

BCR101

Guest
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Sun Yee On

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, search
Sun Yee On (traditional Chinese: 新義安; Cantonese Yale: sàn yih òn) (Sun Yee On / New Righteousness and Peace Commercial and Industrial Guild) is one of the leading triads[1] in Hong Kong and Mainland China, with the most members — more than 40,000 — worldwide.[2] It is believed to be active in the United Kingdom, Belgium, France and the Netherlands[3] and in the government of Guangdong Province in Mainland China.[2]

Sun Yee On was founded by Heung Chin, originally from Chiu Chow, in 1919.[4] He was deported to Taiwan in the early 1950s and continued to lead the organization from there.[4] Sun Yee On was allegedly taken over by his eldest son Heung Wah-yim, who ostensibly worked as a law clerk.[4]

The triad operates vice establishments in several Tsim Sha Tsui and Yau Ma Tei nightspots, or at least did in November 2010 when a 29-year-old alleged office-bearer or "red pole" of the triad, named "Sai B" Chan, was arrested for vice offences and money laundering.[5]

In February 1986 a former Hong Kong police officer, Anthony Chung, who had become a member of Sun Yee On, asked the police for protection.[4] He identified Heung Wah-yim as the leader of the triad and this led to the police arresting eleven members of the Triad on 1 April 1987.[4] Whilst searching Heung Wah-yim's law office they found a list of 900 numbered names which appeared to be the membership roster of Sun Yee On.[4] In October Heung Wah-yim was brought to trial, along with five accomplices who all pleaded guilty.[4] Heung Wah-yim protested his innocence throughout the trial, claiming to be the president of a local chapter of the Lions Club and that the list found in his office consisted of potential donors.[4] Chung and together with another former member were the main prosecution witnesses. On 20 January 1988 the jury found five of the defendants guilty, including Heung Wah-yim who was sentenced to seven and a half years in prison, acquitting the sixth.[4]


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B

BCR101

Guest
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Wo Shing Wo


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, search
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wo_Shing_Wo&action=edit) or discuss these issues on the talk page.It does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve it by citing reliable sources. Tagged since May 2007.It may require general cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Tagged since May 2007.




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

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.


Dragonhead

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

Dragonheads of Wo Shing Wo


Poon, known as "Broken Mouth Bun", born c1962. In office: 2008-2010;

■"Shu Tsai". In office from 2010;



History

Wo Shing Wo was established in 1930, in 1931 it moved its base from 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]


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", whom 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]



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Narong Wongwan

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
This triad is related to the Heung brothers, Charles and Jimmy......owners of moive company Win's entertainment.
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Sun Yee On

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, search
Sun Yee On (traditional Chinese: 新義安; Cantonese Yale: sàn yih òn) (Sun Yee On / New Righteousness and Peace Commercial and Industrial Guild) is one of the leading triads[1] in Hong Kong and Mainland China, with the most members — more than 40,000 — worldwide.[2] It is believed to be active in the United Kingdom, Belgium, France and the Netherlands[3] and in the government of Guangdong Province in Mainland China.[2]

Sun Yee On was founded by Heung Chin, originally from Chiu Chow, in 1919.[4] He was deported to Taiwan in the early 1950s and continued to lead the organization from there.[4] Sun Yee On was allegedly taken over by his eldest son Heung Wah-yim, who ostensibly worked as a law clerk.[4]

The triad operates vice establishments in several Tsim Sha Tsui and Yau Ma Tei nightspots, or at least did in November 2010 when a 29-year-old alleged office-bearer or "red pole" of the triad, named "Sai B" Chan, was arrested for vice offences and money laundering.[5]

In February 1986 a former Hong Kong police officer, Anthony Chung, who had become a member of Sun Yee On, asked the police for protection.[4] He identified Heung Wah-yim as the leader of the triad and this led to the police arresting eleven members of the Triad on 1 April 1987.[4] Whilst searching Heung Wah-yim's law office they found a list of 900 numbered names which appeared to be the membership roster of Sun Yee On.[4] In October Heung Wah-yim was brought to trial, along with five accomplices who all pleaded guilty.[4] Heung Wah-yim protested his innocence throughout the trial, claiming to be the president of a local chapter of the Lions Club and that the list found in his office consisted of potential donors.[4] Chung and together with another former member were the main prosecution witnesses. On 20 January 1988 the jury found five of the defendants guilty, including Heung Wah-yim who was sentenced to seven and a half years in prison, acquitting the sixth.[4]


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B

BCR101

Guest
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[COLOR="Red" said:
Narong Wongwan[/COLOR];634960]This triad is related to the Heung brothers, Charles and Jimmy......owners of moive company Win's entertainment.



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Charles Heung



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia




Charles Heung Wah-Keung
is a Hong Kong actor-turned-film producer and presenter. As founder of Win's Entertainment in the 1980s and China Star Entertainment Group in the 1990s, he has helped established the careers of various cinematic icons in Hong Kong that include Stephen Chow, Chow Yun-fat, Johnnie To, Jet Li and Andy Lau among countless others. Apart from being one of the most successful film producers in Hong Kong, Heung is also one of the most controversial due to his family's Triad background.


Background

Heung is widely suspected of ties to one of Hong Kong's largest and most powerful organized crime groups, the Sun Yee On Triad. Heung's father, Heung Chin, founded the Sun Yee On in 1919. Charles is the tenth of the Sun Yee On founder's thirteen children.[1]

Heung Chin's eldest son, Heung Wah-Yim, was convicted in 1988 of being the triad's boss, although his conviction in Hong Kong was overturned on a technicality. The Senate Subcommittee on Investigations also identified him as the triad's leader in a 1992 report on Asian organized crime.


In the 1970s, Charles subsequently married Betty Ting, the actress, who is remembered today primarily because of the "mysterious" death of Bruce Lee in her apartment. The marriage, however did not last, and Charles later married Tiffany Chen, in the early 1980s.

Charles is the older brother of Jimmy Heung, who later became his partner in the formation of Win's Entertainment. The partnership between the two ended in 1992 as Charles felt that Jimmy's style of negotiating business too closely resembled that of a triad member.[1] While Charles sees Jimmy as a "good triad," it is widely believed that Jimmy has moved on, and supposedly runs the triad to this day.

Charles was one of several Heung brothers identified in 1992 by the United States Senate Permanent Subcommittee of Investigations as top office-bearers in the Sun Yee On. Two years later, a former Red Pole for the Sun Yee On, testifying in a Chinatown racketeering case in a Brooklyn Federal Court, identified Charles as one of "the top guys, the biggest," in the society. A year after that, the Royal Commission for Canada sent Heung a letter rejecting his application for a Visa, citing evidence placing him squarely on the ruling council of the Sun Yee On.[1]

Heung agrees that his family has what he calls "a Triad background," but says that he personally has little knowledge of such things, and has had to labor hard to overcome the stigma. He also admits that some people may fear him, but says his business philosophy is to get top actors, actresses and directors to make movies for him because they like him.[1]

In 2000, when his brother Heung Wah-Po was arrested for setting fire to his own apartment (after quarreling with his mistress), Charles refused to help him and publicly announced that he did not know his brothers well since they were given birth by different mothers.[1] To this day, Heung continues to steer clear away from his family's triad background.

Career

Heung started off as an actor making films (mostly martial arts films) in Taiwan during the 1970s, before later becoming a producer. While the triad's influence in Hong Kong cinema became notorious, Heung tried to keep himself away from his family's triad image by creating a company of safe refuge. In 1984, he and his brother, Jimmy Heung, formed Win's Entertainment Ltd., which, beside Golden Harvest, became one of the most successful film studios in Hong Kong. Charles was quoted for saying that, "Every film is a battle" when asked why he named the production company Win's.[1]

Virtually, every major star in Hong Kong, apart from Jackie Chan, had made a film for the Heungs. Jet Li, the biggest martial-arts star in Hong Kong, began making movies exclusively for Heung after his manager was shot dead in 1993. Andy Lau joined Win's' stable of stars after one of his associates, a 26-year-old woman, was hospitalized for injuries she received when her apartment was firebombed. Hong Kong police believed that both incidents were related to triad gang activity.[2]

Heung became a producer and a presenter for films, but he had also gotten fame from acting in supporting roles during the 1990s, with his best known role being as Lung Wu, the God of Gamblers' bodyguard in God of Gamblers and its numerous sequels and spin-offs. He has also appeared in others films, making a cameo appearance in The Prince of Temple Street and co-starring in Casino Raiders, which was co-directed by his brother, Jimmy. In 1993, he received a Hong Kong Film Award nomination for his supporting role in Arrest the Restless.

In 1992, Heung formed China Star Entertainment Group and became the studio's chairman and CEO, with his wife, Tiffany Chen, serving as vice chairman and administrative producer. As a producer, Heung has highlighted a majority of Hong Kong's biggest cinematic icons, including Jet Li, Andy Lau, Sammi Cheng, Cecilia Cheung, Simon Yam, and Lau Ching-Wan. This includes filmmakers, such as Johnnie To, Wai Ka-Fai, Wong Jing, Herman Yau and Dennis Law.

In 1999, Heung established One Hundred Years of Film Co. Ltd., a subsidiary for China Star. His initial plan for the company was to make at least 100 films within three years.[3]

Heung plans to continuing producing and presenting films, now aiming for big-budgeted projects. Following the partnership split between himself and his brother, Heung closed down the Win's Entertainment studio in 2000, and continued to produce and distribute films under the China Star label.


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mako65

Alfrescian
Loyal
14k n "Shui Fong" are also 2 big companies in HK! These Triads in HK are very enterprising, legal or illegal as long as profits are accountable, they are in!
 

kukubird58

Alfrescian
Loyal
of course no ...thats why when you ask me that question im surprise .

hahaha...reason very simple....u stay in jippon...not to mention your jippon wife/in laws....
so the question is regarding japanese...do they keep birds, etc...
 
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