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China Executes French Citizen Convicted of Drug Trafficking

BEIJING, April 5 (Reuters) – China confirmed ⁠on ⁠Sunday the execution of ⁠a French national sentenced to death in ​2010 for drug trafficking, saying it did not discriminate against ‌defendants on the basis ‌of nationality, a day after Paris criticised the ⁠court ⁠handling of the case.

The Chinese embassy in France made ​the remarks in a brief statement on the execution of 62-year-old Chan Thao Phoumy after a 20-year stint in jail.

On ​Saturday, the French foreign ministry said it “particularly regretted” that ⁠Chan’s defence ⁠was not allowed ⁠to ​attend the court’s final hearing in violation of his rights.

China, one ​of the world’s ⁠toughest enforcers of laws against drug trafficking, has occasionally executed foreign nationals convicted of smuggling large amounts across its borders, but does not release statistics on ⁠executions.

Chan, born in the southern city of Guangzhou but later ⁠a naturalised French citizen, was one of 89 suspects arrested in 2005 for drug trafficking before being jailed for life in 2007.

He was handed the death penalty in 2010 by a court in his hometown for his role in a 100-million-yuan ($15-million) drug operation that made, transported and dealt large amounts ⁠of crystal methamphetamine in China.

China’s threshold for the death penalty is 50 gm (1.8 oz) of heroin or methamphetamine, but trafficking in much larger amounts is ​generally what leads to execution.

(Reporting by Eduardo ​Baptista; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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