THE RISE OF MIDDLE EASTERN CRIME IN AUSTRALIA
Wednesday, June 1, 2005 at 13:04 Tim Priest
I believe that the rise of Middle Eastern organised crime in Sydney
will have an impact on society unlike anything we have ever seen. In
the early 1980s, as a young detective I was attached to the Drug Squad
at the old CIB. I remember executing a search warrant at Croydon, where
we found nearly a pound of heroin. I know that now sounds very
familiar; however, what set this heroin apart was that it was Beaker
Valley Heroin, markedly different from any heroin I had seen. Number
Four heroin from the golden triangle of South East Asia is nearly
always off white, almost pure diamorphine. This heroin was almost
brown. But more remarkable were the occupants of the house. They were
very recent arrivals from Lebanon, and from the moment we entered the
premises, we wrestled and fought with the male occupants, were abused
and spat at by the women and children, and our search took five times
longer because of the impediments placed before us by the occupants,
including the women hiding heroin in baby nappies and on themselves and
refusing to be searched by policewomen because of religious beliefs. We
had never encountered these problems before. As was the case in those
days, we arrested every adult and teenager who had hampered our search.
When it came to court, they were represented by Legal Aid, of course,
who claimed that these people were innocent of the minor charges of
public disorder and hindering police, because they were recent arrivals
from a country where people have an historical hatred towards police,
and that they also had poor communications skills and that the police
had not executed the warrant in a manner that was acceptable to the
Muslim occupants. The magistrate, well known to police as one who
convicted fewer than one in ten offenders brought before him during his
term at Burwood local court, threw the matter out, siding with the
occupants and condemning the police. I remember thinking; thank heavens
we don't run into many Lebanese drug dealers. Lebanese family
terrorises neighbourhood In 1994 I was stationed at Redfern. A well
known Lebanese family who lived not far from the old Redfern Police
Academy were terrorising the locals with random assaults, drug dealing,
robberies and violent anti-social behaviour. When some young police
from Redfern told me about them, curiosity got the better of me and I
asked them to show me the street they lived in. Despite the misgivings
of the young police, I eventually saw this family and the presence they
had in the immediate area. As we drove away in our marked police car, a
half brick bounced on the roof of the vehicle. The driver kept going. I
said, 'What are you doing, they've just hit the car with a house
brick!" The young constable said, "Oh, they always do that when we
drive past." 1 www.australian-news.net
The police were either too scared or too lazy to do anything about it.
The damage bill on police cars became costly and these street
terrorists grew stronger and the police became purely defensive. You
see, the Police Royal Commission was about to start and the police
retreated inside themselves knowing that the judicial system considered
them easy targets. The police did not want to get hurt or attract
Internal Affairs complaints. Call me stupid, call me a dinosaur, but I
made sure that day that at least one person in the group that threw the
brick was arrested. I began by approaching the group just as that
magistrate had lectured me and the other police involved in the Croydon
search warrant. I simply asked who threw the brick. I was greeted with
abuse and threats. I then reverted to the old ways of policing. I
grabbed the nearest male and convinced him that it was he who had
thrown the brick. His brave mates did nothing. By the time we arrived
at the police station, this young fool had become compliant, apologetic
and so afraid that he kept crying. You may not agree with what I did,
but I paraded this goose around the police station for all the young
police to see what they had become frightened of. For some months after
that, police routinely rounded up the family whenever it was warranted.
However, some years later, with a change of Police Commander and the
advent of duty officers under Peter Ryan, the family got back on top
and within months had murdered a young Australian man who had wandered
into their area drunk. They had set up a caravan where they sold drugs
twenty four hours a day. They tied up half the police station with
Internal Affairs complaints ranging from the sublime to the ridiculous,
but under Peter Ryan, these complaints were always treated seriously.
In effect, this family had taken control of Redfern. Senior police did
their best to limit police action against them, fearing an avalanche of
IA complaints that would count against the Commander at Peter Ryan's
next Op Crime Review. I hope the examples I have just used don't give
the impression that I am a racist or a bully. The point I want to make
from the start is that policing has never been rocket science. It is
about human dynamics, street psychology, experience, a little bit of
theatre and a substantial quantity of common sense. Sure, forensics and
the advances of DNA, rapid fingerprint identification and electronic
eavesdropping have taken policing to a new level of sophistication, but
ultimately, when an offender is identified by whatever means,
scientific or otherwise, it all comes down to the interaction between
the investigator and the offender during the arrest and interview
process. Violent and abusive offenders do not respect the law or those
who enforce it. But they do respect the old style cop who doesn't take
a backward step and can't be intimidated. When they encounter cops like
that, they fold quickly there is rarely much behind the veneer of
bravado. In 1996 with the arrival of Peter Ryan, and the continued
public humiliation of the New South Wales Police through the Wood Royal
Commission, a chain of events began that have affected the police so
deeply and so completely that, as far as ensuring community safety is
concerned, I fear it will take at least a generation to regain the lost
ground. The rise of Middle Eastern crime groups in NSW It was about
1995 to 1996 that the emergence of Middle Eastern crime groups was
first observed in New South Wales. Before then they had been largely
known for individual acts of anti social behaviour and loose family
structures involved in heroin importation and supply as well as motor
vehicle theft and conversion. The one crime that did appear organised
before this period was insurance fraud,
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usually motor vehicle accidents and arson. Because these crimes were
largely victimless, they were dealt with by insurance companies and
police involvement was limited. But from these insurance scams, a
generation of young criminals emerged to, become engaged in more
sophisticated crimes, such as extortion, armed robbery, organised
narcotics importation and supply, gun running, organised factory and
warehouse break ins, car theft and conversion on a massive scale
including the exporting of stolen luxury vehicles to Lebanon and other
Middle Eastern countries. As the police began to gather and act on
intelligence on these emerging Middle Eastern gangs the first of the
series of events took place. The New South Wales Police was
restructured under Peter Ryan. Crime Intelligence, the eyes and ears of
all police forces throughout the world, was dismantled overnight and a
British style intelligence unit was created. The formation of this unit
and its factions has been best described by Dr Richard Basham a library
stocking outdated books. The new Crime Intelligence and Information
Section became completely reactive. It received crime intelligence from
the field and stored it. Almost no relevant intelligence was ever
dispensed to operational police from 1997 until I left in 2002. It was
a disgrace. One of the fundamental problems that arose out of the new
intelligence structure was that it no longer had a field capacity or a
target development capacity. With the old BCI there were field teams
that were assigned to look into emerging trends. Vietnamese, Romanian
and Hong Kong Chinese groups were all targeted after intelligence grew
on their activities. When the alarm bells went off over growing
intelligence concerns about a new or current crime group, covert
operations were mounted. Lebanese gangs intimidate police When the
Middle Eastern crime groups emerged in the mid to late 1990s no alarms
were set off. The Crime Intelligence unit was asleep. I know personally
that operational police in south west Sydney compiled enormous amounts
of good intelligence on the formation of Lebanese groups such as the
Telopea Street Boys and others in the Campsie, Lakemba, Fairfield and
Punchbowl areas. The inactivity could not have been because the
intelligence reports weren't interesting, because I have read many of
them and from a policing perspective they were damning. Many of the
offenders that you now see in major criminal trials or serving lengthy
sentences in prison were identified back then. But even more
frustrating for operational police were the activities of this ethnic
crime group, activities that set it apart from almost all others bar
the Cabramatta 5T. The Lebanese groups were ruthless, extremely
violent, and they intimidated not only innocent witnesses, but even the
police that attempted to arrest them. As these crime groups encountered
less resistance in terms of police operations and enforcement, their
power grew not only within their own communities, but also all around
Sydney except in Cabramatta, where their fear of the South East Asian
crime groups limited their forays. But the rest of Sydney became easy
pickings. The second in the series of events began to take shape with
Peter Ryan's executive leadership team. Under Ryan's nose they began to
carve up the New South Wales Police and form little kingdoms where a
senior police officer ruled almost untouched by outside influence. They
then appointed their own commanders in the police stations. Almost all
of them had little or no street
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experience; but they in turn brought along their friends as duty
officers, similarly inexperienced. Some of the experience these police
counted on their resumes included stints at Human Resources, the
Academy, the Police Band in one case, the various cubby holes in Police
Headquarters, almost no operational policing experience yet they were
tasked to lead. Never has the expression "the blind leading the blind"
been more appropriate. The impact that this leadership team had on day
today operational policing was disastrous. In many of the key areas
that were experiencing rapid rises in Middle Eastern crime, these new
leaders became more concerned with relations between the police and
ethnic minorities than with emerging violent crime. The power and
influence of the local religious and minority leaders cannot be
overstated. Police began to use selective law enforcement. They
selected targets that were unlikely to use their ethnic background and
cultural beliefs to hinder police investigations or arrests. It was
mostly Anglo Saxons and Asians that were the targets, because they were
under represented by religious leaders and the media. They were soft
targets. An example of the confrontations police nearly always
experienced in Muslim-dominated areas when confronting even the most
minor of crimes is an incident that occurred in 2001 in Auburn. Two
uniformed officers stopped a motor vehicle containing three well known
male offenders of Middle Eastern origin, on credible information via
the police radio that indicated that the occupants of the vehicle had
been involved in a series of break-and-enters. What occurred during the
next few hours can only he described as frightening. When searching the
vehicle and finding stolen property from the break-and-enter, the
police were physically threatened by the three occupants of the car,
including references to tracking down where the officers lived, killing
them and "fucking your girlfriends". The two officers were intimidated
to the point of retreating to their police car and calling for urgent
assistance. When police back up arrived, the three occupants called
their associates via their mobile phones, which incidentally is the
Middle Eastern radio network used to communicate amongst gangs. Within
minutes as many as twenty associates arrived as well as another forty
or so from the street where they had been stopped. As further police
cars arrived, the Middle Eastern males became even more aggressive,
throwing punches at police, pushing police over onto the ground,
threatening them with violence and damaging police vehicles. When the
duty officer arrived, he immediately ordered all police back into their
vehicles and they retreated from the scene. The stolen property was not
recovered. No offender was arrested for assaulting police or damaging
police vehicles. But the humiliation did not end there. The group of
Middle Eastern males then drove to the police station, where they
intimidated the station staff, damaged property and virtually held a
suburban police station hostage. The police were powerless. The duty
officer ordered police not to confront the offenders but to call for
back up from nearby stations. Eventually the offenders left of their
own volition. No action was taken against them. In the minds of the
local population, the police were cowards and the message was, Lebs
rule the streets. For a number of days, nothing was done to rectify this
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total breakdown of law and order. To the senior police in the area, it
was more important to give the impression that local ethnic relations
were never better. It was also important to Peter Ryan that no bad news
stories appeared that may have given the impression that crime in any
area was out of control. Had these hoodlums been arrested they would
have filed IA complaints immediately via their Legal Aid lawyers and
community leaders. To senior police, this was a cause for concern at
the next Op Crime Review. So the incident was covered up until a few
local veteran detectives found out about it and decided to act. They
went quietly to the addresses of the three main offenders early one
morning and took them away with a minimum of fuss and charged them.
Some order was restored, but not nearly enough. By avoiding
confrontations with these thugs, the police gave away the streets in
many of these areas in south-western Sydney. By putting in place
inexperienced senior police who had never copped the odd punch in the
mouth or broken nose in the line of duty, the police force hung the
community and the local police out to dry. Most of these duty officers
had retreated to non-operational areas early in their careers because
they couldn't stomach the risks of front line policing. Yet they put
their hands up to take vital operational roles because the positions
are highly paid duty officers receive about $30,000 to $40,000 a year
more than a detective sergeant, which is ludicrous. When I say that
this type of policing was condoned and encouraged across wide areas of
New South Wales, I am not exaggerating. The problems in south-western
Sydney are a direct result of covering up criminality because it went
against the script that Peter Ryan and his executive had continually
pushed in the media, day after day after day - that crime was on the
decrease and Peter Ryan was the world's best police commissioner. In
hundreds upon hundreds of incidents police have backed down to Middle
Eastern thugs and taken no action and allowed incidents to go
unpunished. Again I stress the unbelievable influence that local
politicians and religious leaders played in covering up the real state
of play in the south-west. Spread of criminal gangs aided by
incompetent police leadership The third event was the reforming of
Criminal Investigations into a centrally-controlled body called Crime
Agencies. All the specialist crime squads were done away with: Arson,
Armed Robbery, Drugs, Organised Crime, Special Breaking, Consorting,
Vice, Gaming, Motor Vehicle Theft were wrapped up into one size fits
all. Ryan once boasted that by the time he finished retraining the New
South Wales Police, constables could investigate a traffic accident in
the morning and a homicide in the afternoon, a statement that summed up
his Alice-in-Wonderland policing theories. All the expertise and
experience evaporated overnight. It was as if the public hospitals had
suddenly lost every surgeon and had GPs perform major surgery. No
matter how bright and dedicated these GPs were, they would simply not
have the expertise, the training and the experience to take over. It
would be a disaster. Well, that is what happened to criminal
investigation in this state. Crime Agencies was an unmitigated
disaster. Yet those who designed and ran this farce have gone on to
highly paid government jobs. The final straw for the New South Wales
Police was the OCR 0p Crime Review, which Peter Ryan and his executive
team came up with. It was loosely based on the groundbreaking Compstat
program of the New York Police Department, the 5 www.australian-news.net
brainchild of Commissioner William Bratton. The difference between
Ryan's OCR and the NYPD Compstat was that the NYPD model covered
everything on the criminal waterfront. The Ryan-inspired OCR had just
six crimes. And those six included domestic violence, random breath
testing, theft, robbery, assaults and motor vehicle theft - no drugs,
organised crime, firearms, shootings, attempted murders or homicides.
The crimes that instil fear into the average citizen were ignored, and
with plenty of innovative answers as to why. The OCR focused police
attention on a limited number of crimes and allowed far more serious
and deadly crimes to get out of control. So with a police force on the
verge of bankruptcy, the Middle Eastern crime problem was an explosion
waiting to go off. I had observed the beginnings of Asian organised
crime whilst at the Drug Squad and later at the National Crime
Authority where I worked on two task forces, one of which was on
Chinese organised crime. When I look back on the influence of Chinese
organised crime in Australia, I see a gradual but sustained trend, not
one of high peaks in terms of activity or incidents, but one of a well
planned criminal enterprise that attracts little attention. It's there
but you can't always see it. It probably took twenty years for the
Chinese to become a dominant force in crime in this city. But Middle
Eastern crime has taken less than ten years. So pervasive is their
influence on organised crime that rival ethnic groups, with the
exception of the Asian gangs, have been squeezed out or made extinct.
The only other crime group to have survived intact are the bikies,
although the bikies these days have legitimised many of their
operations and now make as much money from legal means as they do
illegally. In many ways they have adopted US Mafia methods of
legitimate businesses shrouding their illegal operations. With no
organised crime function, no gang unit except for the South-East Asian
Strike Force, the New South Wales Police turned against every
convention known to Western policing in dealing with organised crime
groups. In effect the Lebanese crime gangs were handed the keys to
Sydney. Extortion and attacks on Australians The most influential of
the Middle Eastern crime groups are the Muslim males of Telopea Street,
Bankstown, known as the Telopea Street Boys. They and their associates
have been involved in numerous murders over the past five years, many
of them unprovoked fatal attacks on young Australian men for no other
reason than that they are "Skips", as they call Australians. They have
been involved in all manner of crime on a scale we have never seen
before. Ram-raids on expensive stores in the city are epidemic. The
theft of expensive motor vehicles known as car-jacking is increasing at
an alarming rate. This crime involves gangs finding a luxury motor
vehicle parked outside a restaurant or hotel and watching until the
occupants return to drive home. The car is followed, the victims
assaulted at gunpoint, and the vehicle stolen. The vehicles are always
around or above the $ 100,000 mark and are believed to be taken to
warehouses before being shipped interstate or to the Middle East.
Extortion on inner city nightclubs is largely unreported because of the
dire consequences of owners reporting these incidents to police. When I
worked at City Central Detectives just before I retired, I was involved
in the initial 6 www.australian-news.net
investigation of one brave nightclub owner in the inner city who did
report this crime. The Lebanese criminals were arrested after a sting
operation. However, I believe that after many violent threats the owner
sold up and now lives inter-state. He once had a thriving business that
for a nightclub ran a reputable service, keeping out drugs, maintaining
safety for patrons and co-operating with the police. The tactics used
by the gang were simple. A large number of Middle Eastern males would
enter the club, upwards of twenty at a time. They would outnumber the
security staff and begin assaulting Australian male patrons, sometimes
stabbing them. The incident would be over in minutes and the gang
members would be long gone before police arrived. A few days later,
senior members of the gang, well dressed and business-like, would
approach the club owners and offer to provide protection from similar
incidents for around $2000 to $3000 a week. Many of the owners paid up
and considered it a necessary expense in keeping their business viable.
If they didn't pay up, or contacted the police, the gangs would wait
some weeks, even months, before returning to the nightclub and
extracting a terrible revenge on the owners, who would pay up or leave.
There is compelling intelligence that in one well-known entertainment
precinct in the city, nearly all the bars, nightclubs and hotels pay
protection money to Middle Eastern crime gangs. What sets the Middle
Eastern gangs apart from all other gangs is their propensity to use
violence at any time and for any reason. I thought I would never see
the level and type of violence that I saw with the South-East Asian
gangs in Cabramatta, particularly the 5T, the Four Aces and Madonna's
Mob, which were a breakaway from the old 5T. But the violence, although
horrific, was almost always local, that is within the Cabramatta area
and almost always against fellow Asians. As a result of that locally
based violent crime it was relatively easy to identify the culprits and
break them up once we were given the resources after the police revolt
of 1999-2000. Racial attacks against young Australians The Middle
Eastern cycle of violence is not local. It can occur on the central
coast, around Cronulla, Bondi, Darling Harbour, Five Dock, Redfern,
Paddington, anywhere in Sydney. Unlike their Vietnamese counterparts,
they roam the city and are not confined to either Cabramatta or
Chinatown. And even more alarming is that the violence is directed
mainly against young Australian men and women. There is a clear and
definite link between violent attacks on our young men and women being
racial as well as criminal. Quite often when taking statements from
young men attacked by groups of Lebanese males around Darling Harbour,
a common theme has been the racially motivated violence against the
victims simply because they are Australian. I wonder whether the
inventors of the racial hatred laws introduced during the golden years
of multiculturalism ever took into account that we, the silent
majority, would be the target of racial violence and hatred. I don't
remember any charges being laid in conjunction with the gang rapes of
south-western Sydney in 2001, where race was clearly an issue and race
was used to humiliate the victims. But then, unbelievably, a publicly
funded document produced by the Anti Discrimination Board called "The
Race for Headlines" was circulated, and it sought not only to cover up
race as a motive for the rapes, but to criticise any accurate media
reporting on this matter as racially biased. It 7
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worries many operational police that organisations like the
Anti-Discrimination Board, the Privacy Council and the Civil Liberties
Council have become unaccountable and push agendas that don't represent
the values that this great country was built on. The extent to which
Middle Eastern crime gangs have moved into the drug market is
breathtaking. They are now the main suppliers of cocaine in this city
and are now developing markets in south eastern Queensland and
Victoria. They are major suppliers of heroin in and around the inner
city, south-western Sydney and western Sydney. Many of you would have
heard of the horrific problems in France with the outbreak of
unprecedented crimes amongst an estimated five million Muslim
immigrants. Middle Eastern males now make up 45,000 of the 90,000
inmates in French prisons. There are no-go areas in Paris for police
and citizens alike. The rule of law has broken down so badly that when
police went to one of these areas recently to round up three Islamic
terrorists, they went in armoured vehicles, with heavy weaponry and
over 1000 armed officers, just to arrest a few suspects. Why did it
need such numbers? Because the threat of terrorist reprisal was minimal
compared to the anticipated revolt by thousands of Middle Eastern and
North African residents who have no respect for the rule of law in
France and consider intrusions by police and authority a declaration of
war. The problems in Paris in Muslim communities are being replicated
here in Sydney at an alarming rate. Paris has seen an explosion of
rapes committed by Middle Eastern males on French women in the past
fifteen years. The rapes are almost identical to those in Sydney. They
are not only committed for sexual gratification but also with deep
racial undertones along with threats of violence and retribution. What
is more alarming is the identical reaction by some sections of the
media and criminologists in France of downplaying the significance of
race as an issue and even ganging up on those people who try to draw
attention to the widening gulf between Middle Eastern youth and the
rest of French society. That is what we are seeing here. The usual
suspects come out of their institutions and libraries to downplay and
even cover up the growing problem of Middle Eastern crime. Why? My
opinion, for what it's worth is that these same social engineers have
attempted to redefine our society. They have experimented with all
manner of institutions, from prisons to mental institutions and
recently to policing. Some of the problems we now see with policing are
the result of Peter Ryan's dream of restructuring and retraining
police. The Police Academy was changed from a police training college
into a university teaching social sciences and very little else.
Constantly I would see young police emerge from the academy with a view
that as police officers they were counsellors, psychologists, marriage
guidance experts, social workers and advocates for social change. but
with almost no skills in street policing. Their training had placed not
only them in danger, but also their workmates and the community.
Policing is about enforcing the rule of law. It has never been about
analysing every offender for the root causes of crime. That is not our
job. The police enforce the law and protect the community regardless of
race, colour or religion. What we have seen in south-west Sydney is
ethnic communities being policed selectively. The implications for this
are frightening when you look at Paris. They had selective policing of
a particular community, which as a result is now out of control.
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In February 2001 when I appeared before the Cabramatta inquiry, I gave
evidence which at the time was controversial and attracted the usual
claque of ratbags and lunatics from the ABC and their associates at the
Sydney Morning Herald as well as that fruit loop Mike Carton from 2UE.
I said that this city is going to be torn apart by gang warfare the
likes of which we have never seen before. In 2003 I was finally proven
right, but I take no comfort from that. However, the criticism I
received was unprecedented. I was a nutter, a liar, a racist, a
disgruntled detective - but I was right. Ethnic gangs aided and
protected by multicultural industry The critics still refuse to concede
that we have a problem. They are still clinging to the multicultural
theme. To highlight the problems with Middle Eastern communities in
this city is to threaten to tear down the multicultural facade. The
amount of money spent on the multicultural industry beggars belief. It
is a lucrative and sustainable position for many. Governments pay huge
money to anything that bears the word multicultural. Indeed the police
department, like other government departments, spends vast amounts on
multicultural issues, multicultural jobs, multicultural consultancies,
education packages, legal advice, public relations and the rest. Having
expended large amounts of money on multiculturalism, they are hardly
likely to criticise it. Those that feed off multiculturalism are not
likely to question it. When I gave evidence to the Cabramatta inquiry,
I risked my career and my safety in coming forward. I did it because I
had sworn an oath to protect the community I served. That community was
Cabramatta. Cabramatta is made up almost entirely of residents born
outside this country, mostly South East Asians, and their children. But
when I went forward and exposed the shame of Cabramatta, the residents
were not Asians in my eyes, but Australians no matter where they came
from. It was my duty to speak up for them and to protect them. Race was
never an issue. I have received many awards in my police career but the
ones I hold dearest are those I received from the Cabramatta community.
One old man who had spent seven years in refugee camps in South East
Asia before coming to Australia said the day he landed in Australia was
like dying and coming to heaven. Cabramatta was a community of ordinary
people like that old man, who recognised the problems of drugs and
organised crime in their community and spoke up and agitated for
change. It was a slightly built Vietnamese man named Thung Ngo who led
the charge on behalf of a community that had had enough of crime and
forced a parliamentary inquiry into Cabramatta which ultimately saved
their community from destruction. Not once during that inquiry did I
hear any member of the Cabramatta community - apart from the Anglo
Saxon local member
- complain that they were being racially discriminated against because
of the inquiry or its aftermath. They wanted change; they wanted a safe
law-abiding community. It was my duty to do everything I could to
honour my pledge to protect and to serve. But I have not heard anything
like that from the Middle Eastern community. Initially the gang rapes
were the fault of Australian culture, according to one religious leader
in the south west. I note that he has now softened his stance and is
calling for change among Middle Eastern youth. But they are just words;
there seem to be no Thung Ngos among them. What is it that draws such
defence for this community from certain sections of the media? Why
didn't they join in to defend the Asian community during the fallout
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from the Cabramatta inquiry? And where are these apologists when it
comes to the plight of our first Australians, our indigenous peoples?
Their cause is not trendy enough, not global like the refugee or
Islamic issues. Yet one of the most depressing sights that has
confronted me as a policeman is the shame of Redfern. I first saw
Everleigh Street some twenty two years ago, and nothing has changed
since. The atmosphere of sheer hopelessness and desperation still hangs
around the neck of every young Aborigine who lives in those ghettos,
yet they hardly ever rate a mention. National threat The Middle Eastern
crime groups and their associates number in the thousands, not the
hundreds as the government and senior police would have you believe. It
is the biggest crime problem we have ever faced, and it is growing.
Hardly a day goes past without some violent crime involving a "male of
Middle Eastern appearance", though I see lately that description is
watered down now to include "and/or Mediterranean appearance". To an
operational policeman, there is a noticeable difference between an
Italian and a Lebanese male. That these groups of males can roam a city
and assault, rob and intimidate at will can no longer be denied or
excused. You need only to look at Paris and other European countries
that have had mass immigration from Middle Eastern countries to see the
sort of problems we can expect in years to come. My prediction is that
within ten years, Middle Eastern crime groups will spread rapidly
across Australia as they seek to expand their enterprises. There will
be no go areas in south western Sydney, just like Paris. Only recently
I have seen quotes from senior police and retired police who claim that
race is not the issue in organised crime. Those statements are stupid
and dangerous. Organised crime groups with the exception of the bikies
are almost always ethnically based - any experienced detective will
tell you that. The days of Anglo Saxon gangs are almost gone, with the
exception of one or two local beach gangs. I also predict that there
will be a dramatic rise in gang shootings as rival gangs compete for
turf and business. This will be done with almost complete disregard for
police attention, as they are well aware that the New South Wales
Police has to be rebuilt from the ground up. We have seen in the past
three years the phenomenon of drive-by shootings, Los Angeles style.
Not only are the increasing incidents a major cause of concern, but
also the use of automatic weapons that spray hundreds of rounds at
their targets. This is virtually unprecedented in this country. In many
ways, what we are seeing is the copying of Los Angeles gangs: the
Crips, the Bloods and others. The motor vehicles, the music, the dress
codes, the haircuts, the weaponry and the attitudes towards authority
are almost identical. These gangs in Los Angeles have been around for
nearly thirty years and a culture has grown around them. The culture
surrounding the Middle Eastern gangs is still in its infancy but the
transition is not far away. When William Bratton, the most innovative
police commissioner of modern times, took over as Los Angeles Police
Chief recently, he declared the gang problems there a national security
problem, so serious that it was beyond the resources of the state of
California. There is a lesson for us there, but we have to learn
quickly, or this problem will overtake us. 10 www.australian-news.net
The blame for the rise of the gangs in Los Angeles is being spread
around - politicians who refused to acknowledge that it was more than
just an ethnic brotherhood searching for their roots; police inaction
because of political constraints as well as incompetence; the civil
liberties movement particularly among the California superior courts
that refused for decades to use lengthy sentences as a deterrent to
ethnic based crime on the basis that it discriminated against minority
groups. Whoever is to blame is now irrelevant, but they have left a
terrible legacy for the young generations of citizens of Los Angeles
who have to run the gauntlet of drug-crazed gangsters in the suburbs
engaging in deadly shoot outs and drive-bys nearly every day. The
similarities between the situation here, with the denial by the
government of the extent and the implications of Middle Eastern crime,
and the early situation in Los Angeles is frightening. What we saw with
Cabramatta was the covering up of a major problem by this government,
who only acted when the game was up. It's all about denial. If they can
get away with covering up it saves them the worry of making hard
decisions and spending money on fixing problems that have been allowed
to fester for years. The rail system that Michael Costa now has to fix
is yet another example. There is no investment in the future. It is
about looking good day by day. The Peter Ryan-style policing of day to
day media spin is still present. No one seems to have the courage to
say that this is a problem that we need to fix before it gets worse.
The time when the Middle Eastern problem really takes root in this
city, the point from which there is no return, just like Los Angeles,
is but a few years away. The leaders of our government probably hope
this will be another government's fault and that they won't be around
to see their legacy. Maybe we should all buy a property in southern New
Zealand. If the biggest threat to our society is not addressed honestly
and effectively within the next two or three years it will take drastic
action and enormous resources to bring it under control - if that is
even possible. The action we can take now and the resources needed are
a fraction of what it may cost in the future. The potential cost in
human terms is unimaginable. There is also the serious possibility that
some of these Middle Eastern youth that are engaged in organised crime
and have no regard for our values and way of life may go a step further
and engage in terrorist acts against Australia. The ingredients are
there already. It is but a small step from urban terrorism to religious
and political terrorism, as we have seen with groups such as the IRA,
where organised crime often became interwoven with terrorism. I do not
want to paint a picture of gloom, but as a policeman I have seen the
destruction that gangs can wreak on innocent citizens who only want to
live their lives in peace. I just hope we can trust the people in
government and the police to ensure that we don't lose the values and
the rights we have received from past generations. It is fitting that
one day after Remembrance Day, when we look to what was handed to us by
the Second World War generation, probably the most extraordinary
generation of Australians in our short history, we should ask
ourselves: are we going to be remembered for handing a similar legacy
to our children and grandchildren, or are we going to be remembered as
the generation that did nothing about the scourge of gang violence and
simply passed it on to them?
11 www.australian-news.net
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