Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Germany takes on Arab clans far too late

This is the story of the month. Germany finally moved in force against the Arab clans that control much of the organized crime in the country. One can expect reprisals and an escalation of hostilities, and I would not be surprised if Germany looks like Mexico in 20 years.

In case you are unaware, police negotiators leaked a document detailing meetings between the police and the Arab clans. The clan leaders, mostly low IQ Lebanese Arabs, laughed at the German police, saying that the Germans don't have the manpower to contain them.

Well, the Germans finally acted, but far too late.

German police launched simultaneous raids in six cities across the state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) on Saturday evening, with some 1,300 officers sweeping shisha bars and other venues in Dortmund, Essen, Duisburg, Bochum, Recklinghausen and Gelsenkirchen. 
Authorities said they were targeting family crime clans of Arabic background in the northwestern state. According to the mass-circulation Bild daily, police are focusing on Arabic crime syndicates, especially those with Lebanese background.
The police don't understand that these are not mafia families in the sense of the Sopranos. They are more like the Mexican drug cartels, with deep connections in the community. They also have links to Hezbollah and other international terrorist organizations.
While dozens of people have been searched and multiple properties swept, police are only expected to release official results of the crackdown on Sunday. 
Firefighters, customs officers, members of the tax collection service and communal police officers were deployed alongside police squads. Police forces in the affected cities also shared images of the raids on social media under the hashtag "#NullToleranz," or zero tolerance. 
Where was this response 10 years ago when you were warned that the Arabs posed a major problem to national security?
There are about 50 criminal clans active in NRW, with their collective membership topping 10,000, according to police information cited by the Rheinische Post newspaper. 
That's a massive underestimate.
The police force in the city of Essen said that some clan members show "little respect towards police or emergency services."
 Given that they were reported to have laughed in the face of police investigators, no shit.

The demographics are on the side of the clans.

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