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BIS Points At Gangs' Contacts With Politicians

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  • BIS Points At Gangs' Contacts With Politicians

    BIS POINTS AT GANGS' CONTACTS WITH POLITICIANS

    Prague Daily Monitor
    26 September 2008
    Czech Republic

    Prague, Sept 25 (CTK) - Contacts and links in the Czech state
    administration, police, the judiciary and politicians' surroundings
    help organised crime legalise gains, says a BIS counter-intelligence
    annual report for 2007 released Thursday.

    It says the most significant groups of organised crime came from
    Russian-speaking countries, from the Caucasus and the Balkans, and
    that corruption plays an important role in establishing contacts with
    state structures.

    BIS writes that Russian-language crime has ties with businessmen,
    unspecified "advisers to state officials" and persons "with extensive
    client ties to certain former and current politicians and top civil
    servants."

    Besides extensive contacts in the Czech criminal environment, these
    groups also cooperated with experts, such as lawyers, financiers and
    advisers of various kind and orientation, BIS writes.

    The report writes that gangs with Russian roots attempted in 2007
    to overcome internal discords and to get united under a Russian
    alternative of a Mafia godfather.

    "This effort was complicated by the violent conflict between the
    Chechen and Armenian groups that culminated with attempts to murder a
    high-ranking representative of one of the groups. The police detained
    the hired murderer on the basis of BIS information," the report says.

    The tension prevails because the Russian-speaking groups have been
    unable to agree on the division of territory in Prague.

    In Moravia, the influence of the Ukrainian, so-called Luhan group of
    organised crime, was growing last year, BIS said.

    According to it, Ukrainians do not respect any "laws" of the
    environment and are active in trafficking in arms, in debt and
    protection money extortion, securing prostitutes from Ukraine, people
    kidnapping and murders.

    BIS also says in its report it has recorded, but has not fully checked
    signals about effort to influence courts in deciding on punishments,
    which means that some lawyers act minimally at variance with ethical
    norms.

    The report also mentions the effort by some former policemen to use
    their old contacts to their own benefit when they are prosecuted or
    when they want to legalise illegal incomes.

    BIS writes that organised crime has also started to focus on university
    students for links.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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