Thirteen drug dealers have been sentenced to death at a vast show trial in China watched by 10,000 people.
Eight were executed straight after the hearing — slammed by human rights activists as barbaric — in the southern city of Shanwei, Guangdong.
Local reports said the group were found guilty at a sports arena on June 24 of producing and selling hard drugs in a crime-riddled part of the port city.
Photos show how those that were put to immediate death were loaded on to trucks and driven out of the packed stadium.
They were among a total of 18 people who appeared to face drugs charges, with five handed suspended sentences and a further five having their executions postponed.
Beijing News said the area of Lufeng, home to 1.7 million people, is a criminal hotspot which authorities have been on a ruthless mission to clean up.
In 2015 a crowd of 38 dealers were sentenced in front of 10,000 spectators — with 13 people handed death sentences and three executed immediately, Beijing News reported.
Human rights groups have criticised the mass executions for failing to prevent drugs production in the Guangdong region — China’s drugs factory and the largest producer of methamphetamine in the country.
William Nee at Amnesty International told MailOnline: “The mass sentencing rally that took place — including the execution of eight people involved in drug-related crimes — is absolutely tragic and barbaric.
“Despite China continuously executing hundreds if not thousands of people per year for drug-related offences, China is actually experiencing a growth in drug manufacturing and trafficking — which obviously shows the limitations of the “kill the monkey to scare the chickens approach”
“China should immediately end the use of the death penalty for offences that do not meet the threshold of ‘intentional killing’ in international law, and devise other ways to tackle the drug problem that don’t perpetuate a cycle of violence.”
In 2014 an investigation by the Daily Telegraph reported that in one day 3,000 police closed down as many as 77 meth labs in one town near Lufeng.
One in five of Boshe’s 14,000 residents, including pensioners and children, were involved in the drugs trade, earning it the title of “China’s number one drugs village”.
Earlier this month local news site NewsGD.com said police had seized 640kgs of drugs from boats heading from Guangdong to Malaysia.
It is thought they were bound for Australia, New Zealand and the US.