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Tuesday, July 11, 2023

Ross Meurant: Gangs - Unbridled Power

What is a gang? 

A group of bikies?  A group of one ethnicity? Adolescent street urchins?  A group of rugby supporters celebrating victory in a bar? Mercenaries?  Was Red Squad a gang?  Are roadside workers gangs?  Sheep shearers? 

Unless a group or gang is subject to and complies with the rule of law in which it operates, adverse outcomes invariably occur.

Some even suggest top level bankers are members of a gang who make their own rules and that bad economic outcomes are a manifestation of this abuse of codes of compliance.

In this article however, I focus on gangs with guns.

Mercenaries.

Wagner Mercenary Group (WMG) has loomed large in media these past few weeks.  Not so much for their self-proclaimed intrepid performances in the battle for Bakhmut in Ukraine via the boasts of Yevgeny Prigozhin, the leader of that pack, but because unquestionably, mutiny, by Prigozhin.

Not only was President Putin exposed as being remiss in many respects, apropos ensuring that he had no information on what his hired substitutes for the Russian military were doing, but also, no knowledge of what the former chef (Prigozhin) had on his menu for each day.

Not only did the thirty plus thousand hired underlings who make up what has emerged as a private army, decide to take on its principal employer i.e., the Russian government by riding a high horse to Moscow whether as a genuine challenge to the authority of President Putin or as show pony parody, WMG sent a very clear message to all but the most adle pated world leaders: “Mercenary groups can pose serious threats to any country when they have unbridled power.”

WMG is not alone in this category of unbridled power. The American government backed Blackwater mercenary group of former US navy SEALS (1), is but another of such “legalised” gangs which plague the globe, ostensibly on missions of altruism.

My research indicates that wherever WMG setup, for examples Syria or Central African Republic, Prigozhin was cunning enough to get his hands on natural resources of his “host” countries – be it oil or diamonds, as reward for replacing the French in Africa and/or the Russians in Syria. Conversely, in Ukraine, WMG could not secure natural resource and was funded directly by Russia.

However, WMG demonstrated that whatever law they were operating under (be it contractual), that when a large armed gang or its leader decides it, or he, is bigger than the game, problems at mill are assured.

If Mercenaries can be made legitimate by empathetic world leaders such as President Trump pardoning Blackwater crimes (2) and that WMG can walk away with apparent impunity from a blatant mutiny, the situation with the next category of gangs, would seem not to be so easy to resolve.

Drug Cartels.

To the casual observer it might seem that Mexico is pretty much under the control of drug cartels. (3)  Almost as bad if not worse than Colombian drug overlord Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria (December 1, 1949 – December 2, 1993), often referred to as the "World's Greatest Outlaw".

One can make a case that if dope was legal (4) there would be no profit in supply and gangs would lose their source funding and the problem of drug lords would evaporate.

Unquestionably, where there is demand for product, be it drugs, alcohol or abortions, making that product illegal does not stop the supply but merely elevates the cost and inevitably, criminal networks.  Reflect on the consequences of 1920ies alcohol Prohibition in USA!  Al Capone arrives and a criminal network which endures to this day.

Therefore, whereas America is the largest market for South American (and probably Afghanistan) dope, making dope legal in North America might solve the omnipotence of gangs in South America?    Perhaps that solution is a little too hard to sell?

Illegal Immigrants

Last week, unemployed immigrants from North Africa, exposed the vulnerability of President Macron to control France when the gangs turned feral.   Across the Channel, the British would be stupid not to expect similar outbreaks in London town as more and more Middle East and African illegals into Europe, make it across La Manche.

Unemployed Sudanese refugees in Melbourne, now loom as a growing problem.  Earlier arrivals in Sydney from the Middle East are well established in the drug supply business. Aussie cops already had bikie gangs similar to what we have endured in New Zealand since the 1970ies but with the new category of gangsters, Australia has a serious problem. 

ANZAC Gangs.

Today, both Australia and New Zealand ignore at their peril, the size and power of what these multiple groups have evolved into.

Putting Illegal immigrants to the side, ANZAC gangs are right in the cross-hairs of the drug cartels because that’s where the money is to be made at this point in time in the antipodean southern seas. 

Recent NZ media has carried several very impressive drug related raids, arrests and court convictions by both Aussie and Kiwi police. (5)  Courts also seem to be reflecting the penalties previous parliaments installed in drug crime legislation.

Question is however, police seizures of cash and cars, arrests and subsequent incarceration of incumbent gang leaders, does not make the problem of gangs go away. Another gang boss emerges.  Territorial wars among gangs erupt.

Few of the general public will be bothered if gang warfare results in gang members being shot. The danger is however, that innocent parties are caught up in the skirmishes. Drive by shooting hits the wrong pedestrian. Most concerning for the future is the entrenchment of these gangs who quite clearly do have access to firearms.

Notwithstanding that thousands of Kiwis with gun licences had their hunting tools taken from them by a government policy now completely exposed as knee jerk ill-considered targeting the wrong blokes, gang members still have guns!

Make no mistake. Gangs are seen by a massive majority of Kiwis as a threat to the safety and security of our country. 

By the mere presence of gangs, most New Zealanders are intimidated.  Few if any New Zealanders, irrespective of the fact that they might be physically capable young men, are unwise enough to do what many in my generation would have done as younger men: Stepped up to try to prevent a crime in progress.

Today it’s different. If police do happen to attend before a reported crime in progress has been done and dusted, and an arrest is made, Court sentences or outcomes, seem not to deter gang members from violence.  Ram Raids.  Indiscriminate bashings in or outside clubs/cafes.  Dairy robberies with hammers or knives. Just keep on keeping on.

Not all of these events are gang related.  But the perception of the power of the increasing number of gangs and their membership, is of major concern to the majority of law-abiding Kiwis who want no more than a safe environment in which to bring up their kids.

References:

(1)   https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/dec/23/trump-pardons-blackwater-contractors-jailed-for-massacre-of-iraq-civilians 

(2)   Ibid

(3)   https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/justice-department-announces-charges-against-sinaloa-cartel-s-global-operation#:~:text=Once%20led%20by%20Joaquin%20Guzman,and%20into%20the%20United%20States.

(4)   https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/ross-meurant-the-case-for-decriminalisation/DO3J7EI6CYH5A3GILOD4PZB52Y/

(5)   https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/jun/15/six-charged-over-seizure-of-17bn-worth-of-meth-allegedly-en-route-to-australia

Ross Meurant. Former police inspector. Former Member of Parliament.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

And by far the most dangerous 'gang/mafia/cartel' is that one masquerading as our government.

Anonymous said...

Gangs and gangsters are anti-social and non-productive entities that cost society far more than they contribute to it.
Families are overtaken by gang member parents and or relatives and held hostage to the gang culture. Ill-gotten gains are spent on man toys such as bikes, cars and guns.
There is no fear or respect for law and order. They purposely intimidate the everyday citizen with their very appearance including wearing ugly patched clothes and congregating in huge numbers where they take over public facilities including hospitals and roads with impunity. Their behaviour is raucous and infantile, similar to wild animals. They fight and kill each other like stone age people. Do we like, need or appreciate them for any reason?
Hell no! So why do we not do something about getting rid of them?
For starters, ban patches, confiscate ill-gotten gains and noisy vehicles. Turf them out of their gang pads and lock them up for drug crimes. Hound them until they want to be a decent person and part of decent society.
The hour is late but we have already wasted the last 50 years letting it come to this hopeless point. We have to do something now and it needs to be drastic.
Hearing stories from reformed gang members who regret their past means there is room for improvement. However, the cunning ones are moving into political activism and riding the government largesse to organise voting accommodations for the incumbents.
In the 1970's there was a man at work who said there should be open season on gang patch wearers. That was 50 years ago now and the problem has only got worse, as we knew it would.
Anyone with warm and huggy reform methods who wishes to kowtow to gangs should be housed with them to help implement the outcomes.
MC

Anonymous said...

So, who do we appoint to address it and give us all succour? The Hon. Ginny Andersen. Between her and 'cuddles' Coster, we can all sleep soundly at night - yeah right!

Anonymous said...

Clear analysis.
So much for Ardern's " kind society".

The question is: what is the aim of all this violence and who is supporting this ?

Ross said...

Take a look at Ecuador 25 July Five prisons taken over by gangs days after a city mayor shot dead by gangs

Gangs control much of South America and Mexico

How did this come to be?
Find the answer and then avoid the outcome in NZ