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Archive für 4.5.2009

US Embassy Tirana Launches Facebook Page:

Embassy Launches Facebook Page: Become a Fan!U.S. Embassy Tirana announces the launch of its facebook page.  New media and social networking are integral components of public outreach initiatives.  This page will bring our activities to a broader audience while giving fans of our facebook page greater access to Embassy events, announcements, and forums.  The U.S. page features a host of material, including: embassy contact information, events, announcements, activity updates, as well as great videos and pictures.  You can find the Embassy facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Tirana-Albania/US-Embassy-Tirana/74591195837.   Become a fan today!

The new international of organized crime in the Balkans

THE WORLD SECURITY NETWORK, BALKANS

The new international of organized crime in the Balkans

By Ioannis Michaletos*
“He who does not prevent a crime when he can, encourages it.” Seneca
There are only three ways to become rich; marry the money, invent something or steal” Unknown

The current global financial crisis coupled with the perennial instability of the Balkans raises suspicions around the creation of much stronger organized crime groups that will be able to dictate their rules of the game to both local governments and international institutions.
Already a trend emerges which has not be fully measured nor examined by the media that illustrates a significant rise in illegal activities and a sure rise in the criminal rates.

According to many reliable local sources, criminal gangs tend to merge and form much stronger teams that are often involved in more than one illegal sector and in parallel orchestrate multidimensional operations such as bank robberies in one country and narcotics contraband in another with a timely fashion and a well coordinated structure.
The latest report by the State Department which was issued on the 27th of February 2009, points out that all Balkan states have serious organized crime problems and the local authorities have a great challenge to overcome.
Albania is considered as a transit country for the heroin trafficking from Afghanistan o Western Europe, as well as a production country of large quantities of Cannabis that are exported mainly through Greece and Italy to other EU states.
Bosnia Herzegovina has a serious problem concerning the political clout crime kingpins exercise in its domestic political life, an issue directly related to drug trade, the modern white slave trade and the illegal immigration networks.
Bulgaria has been hit by a recent crime wave, and the domestic crime groups are more involved into synthetic drugs distribution and cocaine as well.
Greece is also hit by a crime wave involving armed robberies and weapons trafficking, and the general trend reveals an at least 20% rise in criminal rates on an annual basis. Illegal immigration networks also operate which gain millions of Euros per month by exploiting mostly Asian and African groups of people.
Montenegro is influenced by cocaine trade from Latin America, a similar pattern with Croatia. Both countries are also exit points for heroin distribution from Kosovo to Western Europe, as well as arms trafficking.
In Serbian drug use has increased and the role of private security firms operating as mafia front companies is being in question.
Romania is the least influenced by organized crime activities, but its Constanja port is being influenced by Albanian organized crime networks relating to narcotics trade, whilst Kosovo remains the undisputed center of every major crime related network in the region. The current fall in remittances from the Albanian Diaspora will most certainly give a rise in street crime in the Kosovo province in the near future.
FYROM is experiencing issues concerning its role as a transit country for illegal immigration from Kosovo to Europe and from Asia as well. Moreover criminal gangs are well into the contraband trade of light arms, mainly Kalashnikovs.
Turkey remains the undisputable geoeconomic bridge between the Asian criminal networks, and the Balkans which mainly operate as a physical traverse route towards the large markets of the core countries of the EU, Germany, Italy, France and the UK.
Moreover there is a general upward tendency for contract killings in the Balkans, with the Albanian and the Bulgarian mafias, thought as the main culprits.
The impact of a Balkan organized crime powerful web cannot be more illustrative that in the Kosovo region. Populated by approximately 1,5 million permanent citizens, it has probably the highest number per thousand people of new constructions and gas stations, although unemployment reaches over 40% and official exports do not account more than 5-7% of the GDP.

The extent by which the local networks are able to formulate their international strategies is truly impressive. Most of the heads of the mafia reside in Kosovo, but there are considerable outposts of importance in a wide global geographical terrain stretching from Milano, Zurich to Vienna and Copenhagen, London to New York and Brussels.
In Kosovo alone the unresolved court cases reach up to 300,000 (One for every five citizens) and the respect for the rule of law according to numerous reports from media such as the -BBC, Guardian, Der Spiegel, Washington Post or security services from various countries, like Italy, Germany and UK- is completely out of touch with the accustomed norms in Europe.
Mari Foucci of the Kosovo Trust Agency in 2004 has complained that most of the developmental aid did not reach the local economy but instead was directed towards the local mafia groups. It is important to highlight that more than a third of Kosovo’s GDP derives from external aid.
The issue grows bigger if one adds the gross misconducts done by UN employees since 1999, and a lot of relevant documents can be found in open intelligence sources such as the wikileaks. Already former UN employees have made joint companies in Kosovo in collaboration with figures related to organized crime and an emerging global corrupted nomenclature is taking control of Kosovo’s economy in full extent.

The globalization process has enabled Balkan related crime groups to expand at a staggering pace across the world, thus making local security issues of a global concern.
A very brief note on the above can be easily traced by recent news updates. In Bolivia a team of suspected assassins of President Morales was disband and the leader of the group was revealed to be Rozsa Flores, of Croatian-Spanish descent who back in 1991 was the head of the Prvi Internacionalni Vod, an international paramilitary brigade that fought alongside the Croatian Army against the Serbs in Bosnia.

Around 95% of the members of this brigade had a criminal record and Flores who died in an exchange of fire in Santa Cruz in Bolivia, was prima facie an international mercenary accused of several executions including one of a photo reporter from Britain. The strong man of the Santa Cruz province and the primal opponent of Morales is the Croatian émigré Branko Marinkovi? . According to many he played a role in the attempted coup and assassination plot having also the role of the nexus between this Andean country and the Adriatic coast states of Croatia and Montenegro.
In another news item from the London Daily News, it was revealed that London has become a center for the employment of Albanian hired assassins who offer the services for 5,000 Sterling Pounds and serve as the iron fist for dozens of criminal gangs in the UK. Most of those found refuge in the country by applying with false papers for political asylum in the aftermath of the Kosovo war in 1999, but have already established themselves by engaging in heavy crime activities in that country. Similar experiences have been made public in Scandinavian countries and in Switzerland for over a generation now.
Moreover, a much worrying trend is the formation of ethnically mixed gangs in the Balkans that tend to recruit people from various states and conduct their operations by adapting fully to the local environment. For the moment there seems to be a combination of Bulgarian and Romanian gangs and of Croatian& Montenegrins ones. The Albanians often join Greek gangs in Greece and the Turks are well-placed within gangs in FYROM, Kosovo and Bulgaria.
Further, “Yugoslavian” gangs encompassing citizens from most ex-federation countries are active as well as networks including Middle Eastern and Western Europeans. Thus the work of the security services becomes more complicated; whilst the criminals can use the outreaches of their individual members so as to penetrate easier each country, acquire much needed information and local resources.
Lastly the current criminal groups in the Balkans, have already amassed a significant amount of capital that cannot be numerated precisely but it can be safely assumed that is reaches quite a few billions of Euros, along with thousands of properties and merchant companies.
Thus, sooner or later this criminal capital will have to be laundered through the legal system so as for the older generation -at least- to disengage itself from outlaw activities and ripe the fruits of law abiding business activity. That requires the collaboration of financial institutions which more likely will be concentrated in the Balkans, since the rest of the European banking system would not simply allow such a massive breach of regulations and most importantly a change of balance in the already established equilibrium of capital power in Europe as it exists since the end of WW2.

The Balkans already known for their corrupted public sector and their proximity with the Middle East will most likely become an important world hub for money laundering and the creation of business elite with a direct criminal background.
In a nutshell, organized crime is still a main threat for the stability of the region and an important aspect when dealing with Pan-European security affairs and the role of the underworld in the modern globalized world.

The signs of the era call for some definite and well structured action by the agencies involved before the situation become unconstrained and create a situation non-containable with the present day conventional methods.

*: Ioannis Michaletos is an Associate Analyst in the International Security Research & Intelligence Agency and a South Eastern European Editor in the World Security Network Foundation.

http://rieas.gr/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=223&Itemid=79

Grosse Begeisterung bei Salih Berishas Auftritt in Vlore

 Grosse Begeisterung in Vlore, vor allem auch bei der Jugend, als Salih Berisha seinen neuen Wahl Slogan vorstellt: “für Veränderung” !  Alle modernen Konzepte für die Zukunft stammen nun mal nur von der Partei Demokratika, die noch heftig nur an sich selbst arbeiten muss.

Vorgestellt werden die neuen Konzepte auch für den Hafen und für den Tourismus.

(Dërguar më: 04/05/09) Gjatë një takimi me të rinjtë e qytetit të Vlorës, kreu i ekzekutivit Berisha ka folur për dy investime të mëdha. Duke e cilësuar Vlorën si qendër të zhvillimit dhe modernizimit Berisha bëri të ditur fillimin e ndërtimit të parkut industrial.

VLORE- Kryeministri Berisha ka zhvilluar një takim me të rinj e të reja të qytetit të Vlorës. Kreu i ekzekutivit tha se ky takim zhvillohej pas dy ngjarjeve shumë të rëndësishme për Vlorën dhe mbarë Shqipërinë siç anëtarësimi me të drejta të plota në NATO dhe paraqitja e kërkesës për anëtarësim në Bashkimin Europian.
Berisha është shorehur se Vlora nga sot duhet të nis ndërtimin e parkut industrial, “Shqipëria është sot kantierë ndërtimi nga Konispoli në Valbonë”- ka theksuar Berisha, ndërkohë tha se së shpejti do të nisin punimet për njërin prej porteve më të mëdha të mesdheut.
“Vlora është sot epiqendër turistike kryesore e vendit dhe një nga qendrat universitare më të fuqishme. Në këtë qytet do të ndërtohet parku industrial. Vlora ka sot burimin e vet energjetik, por do të ketë edhe njërin prej porteve me të mëdha të Mesdheut”, tha Kryeministri Berisha.
Kreu i ekzekutivit teksa ka folur për tunelin e Kalimashit ka ritheksuar realizimin e bashkimit të Tiranës me Prishtinën që do të arrihet përmes hapjes së tunelit, çka do të thotë sjelljen e Kosovës në brigjet shqiptare. Duke folur për prioritete e mandatit të dytë qeverisës Berisha tha se në 4 vitet që vijnë, arsimi do të jetë përparësi madhore.

(a.r/News24/BalkanWeb)

Serbs again break Brđani cordon, man injured

Serbs again break cordon, man injured
4 May 2009 | 10:03 -> 14:11 | Source: B92, Tanjug
KOSOVSKA MITROVICA — A Kosovo Serb representative in Brđani was wounded today during a protest in that area of northern Kosovska Mitrovica.

Brđani

Brđani last week (FoNet)

Brđani last week (FoNet)

An EULEX police tear gas cartridge hit Siniša Lazić in the head. He is now being treated for his injuries. Once again, the EU mission police was using stun grenades against the protesting Serbs.

Some time after 11:00 CET, the protesters again broke the Kosovo police, KPS, cordon, and approached the so-called yellow line of separation. EULEX police intervened afterwards.

The tenth day of protests ended before noon this Monday.

The protests have been going on for over a week regarding the restoration of five homes in the community belonging to ethnic Albanians, with demonstrators calling for Serbs to be enabled to return to their homes in Kosovo first.

International forces used tear gas and stun grenades over the last several days of protests to stop the Serbs from getting any closer to the houses that are being rebuilt.

The Albanian homes are being renovated by the Kosovo Albanian government in Priština and the municipality of the southern part of Kosovska Mitrovica.

Serbs are insisting that the restoration can only be done if Serbs are allowed to return to their homes in the southern part of Kosovska Mitrovica and other parts of Kosovo at the same time.

Serbs in Brđani are asking for reciprocity in the return of people to their homes and says they will continue with protests until there is an agreement on the rebuilding of homes in the northern part of the town.

They claim that the Albanians are renovating the homes in the so-called yellow zone of separation, which was established in 2000.

Members of the EU mission in Kosovo, EULEX, police are located in this zone.

One person was lightly injured last week in the protests when a stun grenade detonated.

EULEX stated that the international police was forced to use the tear gas stun grenades in order to get the protesters away and stop them from breaking through police lines.

The mission claims that they are working as support for the Kosovo police, KPS, and NATO led forces, KFOR, with the goal of maintaining public order and stopping a further escalation of the violence.

It has been reported that EULEX is calling on both Serbs and Albanians to refrain from violence and to begin negotiations and dialogue in order to find a solution.

EULEX confirmed that it would be ready to react to any potential threats to the public order and law in the coming protests.

Albanian gangster policitan murdered

Albanian opposition lawmaker murdered

04/05/2009

Police have offered a 250,000-euro reward for any information that could help them capture those behind Saturday’s murder of an opposition lawmaker.

(AFP, The Scotsman, MIA, AP, Reuters, DPA, Deutsche Welle, MIA, SNA - 03/05/09)

photoAlbania’s Fatmir Xhindi was shot and killed on Saturday (May 2nd). [Gent Shkullaku]

Thousands of Albanians, including political leaders, attended the funeral Sunday (May 3rd) of a Socialist Party (SP) lawmaker who was slain the previous night, about eight weeks before general elections that are critical for the country’s EU bid.

Fatmir Xhindi, 49, was gunned down by two unidentified assailants late Saturday just after parking his car outside his home in the town of Roskovec, about 100km southwest of Tirana. Police spokesman Klodian Branko said the politician, who was serving his third term as a member of Albania’s 140-seat parliament, was hit by six bullets from a Kalashnikov automatic rifle. He died on his way to the regional hospital in the nearby town of Fier.

Xhindi is the second lawmaker to be killed in Albania since the fall of communism in 1990. The first was Azem Hajdari, of Prime Minister Sali Berisha’s right-wing Democratic Party, whose assassination in September 1998 sparked several days of unrest across the country.

EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn joined Albania’s leaders and senior SP officials in condemning Saturday’s killing and in urging authorities to act quickly to identify the perpetrators and bring them to justice.

“I strongly condemn the murder and extend sincere condolences to Xhindi’s family and friends,” Rehn said in an official statement Sunday.

It is an “extremely grave incident, a criminal act which should be investigated and solved as soon as possible”, Berisha said.

President Bamir Topi echoed his words, while Parliament Speaker Jozefina Topalli, who travelled to Roskovec to express her condolences to Xhindi’s family, said she was “shocked”.

Describing his late colleague as a “symbol of maturity and friendship who exuded benevolence”, Gramoz Ruci, a senior SP official, said he could not rule out the possibility that the killing was politically motivated.

SP leader Edi Rama, who also travelled to Roskovec to comfort Xhindi’s family, said it was “a premeditated murder and justice should find those responsible for this very serious criminal act”.

Setimes

Gramoz Ruci = old communist and Sigurime Gangster

Edi Rama = Tokes, drug gangster, money laundering

Fatmir Xhindi = tokes gangster, false documents, money laundering, contrabande, old communist - sigurime gangster

Petric Koci = Mafia Gangster in Police uniform

Artan Lame = tokes gangster and money laundering for the drug cartells

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