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Book Review: Around the world in 80 crimes

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  • Book Review: Around the world in 80 crimes

    Globe and Mail, Canada
    April 12 2008


    Around the world in 80 crimes
    JULIAN SHER

    April 12, 2008

    McMAFIA
    A Journey Through the Global Criminal Underworld
    By Misha Glenny
    Anansi, 375 pages, $29.25


    A middle-class woman sips her white wine in a comfortable
    neighbourhood in Surrey, England, when a knock on the door announces
    a pizza delivery. The man at the door promptly shoots her several
    times in the head.

    It's a case of mistaken identity. The assassin was after her sister,
    a BBC producer whose Armenian husband had gotten into some shady
    dealing with Chechens. The entire family has since gone into hiding,
    on the run from the rising crime lords in the former Soviet Union.

    Misha Glenny starts his rollicking book with that anecdote and never
    lets the reader go, determined to shake us into realizing none of us
    are safe in the end from the tentacles of the new global underworld.
    Glenny, a former BBC correspondent, pulls off with aplomb what is
    always the biggest challenge for true-crime writers: making it
    matter.

    He reveals the politics of crime and the crime in politics. Glenny's
    central thesis is that two powerful currents in the 1990s - the fall
    of communism and the liberalization of international financial and
    commodity markets - unleashed a golden age for capitalism but also
    for crooks. "They were also good capitalists and entrepreneurs," he
    notes wryly, who "saw real opportunity in this dazzling mixture of
    upheaval, hope and uncertainty."

    Glenny first spotted this trend covering the wars in former
    Yugoslavia for the BBC in 1990s. But, as he says, "Nobody had
    connected the dots." He sets out to do that, sketching a map of the
    world you thought you knew. But you have been reading the wrong road
    signs.

    McMafia takes you down the "new silk route" from Asia to Europe, a
    criminal highway that extends from the former Soviet republics to the
    troubled Balkans and the turmoil in Pakistan and Afghanistan,
    allowing for the swift and easy transfer of people, narcotics and
    cash. Glenny takes you along the silnice hanby, the Highway of Shame,
    linking Dresden and Prague via the heart of the old Czechoslovakia,
    where young Eastern European women sell themselves for a few dollars.

    Few countries escape Glenny's penetrating wrath. Israel has let
    itself be colonized by "oligarchs and organized crime bosses" from
    Russia. Dubai has become the "washing machine of the world," where
    money-laundering is blatant and easy. The Nigerians perpetuating
    those ubiquitous e-mail scams - don't laugh, one survey estimated
    they pulled in more than $3-billion from 38 countries - grew up in
    the "sewers of Nigeria corruptocracy." They are simply mimicking the
    criminal behaviour of their "thieving elite." In China, a country
    that once wiped out its opium shame, the heroin trade has returned
    with a vengeance. China, in turn, is now turning North Korea -
    renowned as the world's largest producer of virtually undetectable
    counterfeit U.S. $100 bills - into an economic vassal.

    Even British Columbia's booming marijuana trade comes in for searing
    criticism. (A disclosure is in order here: Glenny cites a book I
    co-authored on the Hells Angels as "very revealing" about Canada's
    politics of crime.) Assuming law enforcement estimates of at least a
    $4-billion annual trade in B.C. bud, involving 100,000 workers,
    Glenny argues "western Canada is home to the largest per capita
    concentration of organized criminal syndicates in the world."

    What is remarkable is how businesslike the new crime bosses are. The
    Firm, one of the super gangs in South Africa, operated an informal
    bank, offering start-up capital to prospective members. Colombian
    drug lords, "like good global entrepreneurs ... sought out new
    marketing and distribution strategies" when they realized the
    collapse of the Berlin Wall offered a new middle class and fresh
    markets.

    But they are a seedy and dangerous bunch as well: "Nixon," a
    narco-trafficker in Bogota who "snorted, screwed and shot his way
    across Colombia." Chen Kai, part of China's "political criminal
    nexus" between local tycoons and Communist Party bosses. And Viktor
    Bout, the "merchant of death," who was arrested recently for selling
    arms to a Colombian guerrilla group, the latest in a long list of
    unsavoury clients.

    And there are the heart-wrenching tales of their victims, such as
    Ludmila, the sex slave in Tel Aviv who was tricked into coming to
    Israel only to be brutalized, raped and infected with HIV.

    If Glenny's portrait of crime is grim, his prognosis for the future
    is even bleaker. He lashes out at "unimaginative politicians who lack
    the vision or interest to address the structural inequities in the
    global economy upon which crime and instability thrive." He concludes
    that a cynical Russia, an incompetent European Union, a hostile
    United States and the unstoppably ambitious China have combined to
    usher in a "vigorous springtime for both global corporations and
    transnational organized crime."

    Glenny's book is bound to dissatisfy some. Not everyone will buy his
    cogent arguments to legalize drugs, although he points out the
    billions spent on the so-called "war on drugs" has simply left an
    industry that has merely grown in size, profits and human sacrifice.
    He notes that cybercrime represents perhaps the "greatest challenge
    for public law enforcement," but - except for the Nigerian scam
    artists - devotes little time to it. And one would wish there was
    more on the good guys: We only meet a handful of investigators, and
    then only briefly, who are trying to do battle against the behemoth.

    But Glenny's book should be appreciated for the powerful wake-up call
    it is. Think of it as a Lonely Planet Guide of Organized Crime. Don't
    leave home without it. Our brave new world of globalization may be
    flat, but it also very, very crooked.

    Julian Sher is the author of five books about crime and the justice
    system. The latest is One Child at a Time: Inside the Police Hunt to
    Rescue Children from Online Predators.

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet /story/LAC.20080412.BKMCMA12/TPStory/Entertainment
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