|
Post by pieter on Dec 14, 2019 15:16:57 GMT -7
'Ripdeal' creates huge tension within the Mocro-Mafia world01-05-2015, 11:55A failed drug deal in the Belgian Harbour city Antwerp would have led to the liquidations in the Staatsliedenbuurt (state peoples neighbourhood) in Amsterdam. The perpetrators, Adil A. (26) and Anouar B. (34), both received lifelong for double murder.
Members of the Dutch Mocro maffia Adil A. and Anouar B. whom received lifelong for double murder
The bullet-ridden car of the liquidated Youssef Lkhorf (28) and Saïd el Yazidi (21), at the end of December 2012 in the Amsterdam Staatsliedenbuurt.
The bullet-ridden car of the liquidated Youssef Lkhorf (28) and Saïd el Yazidi (21), at the end of December 2012 in the Amsterdam Staatsliedenbuurt.
Re-enactment of the shooting at the crime scene
Police investigation at the crime scene in the Staatslieden neighbourhood in Amsterdam
The crime scene was sealed off by the Amsterdam police, investigating the double murder
A seriously injured man is assisted in an ambulance. © anp
Police officers investigate the crime scene
A car of another assassination case in the same Staatslieden neighbourhood in Amsterdam
And another one
And yet another one
In March 2012, a group of Moroccan residents from Amsterdam brought 200 kilos of cocaine into the Belgian port. The cocaine is 'ripped' by a rival gang led by the well-known criminal Gwenette Martha. Benaouf A., a young criminal who still has to prove himself in the world, is going to get a story. To find out the disappeared coke, he has members of the rival gang interrogated and tortured. And that goes down the wrong way with Martha: he puts a prize on the head of Benaouf A. It is the start of a series of violent attacks in and around Amsterdam. Seven boys from the rival groups are being killed, before the liquidations in the Staatsliedenbuurt, on December 29, 2012.Court drawing of Benaouf A. (in front) ANPThe groups that are dealing with each other often consist of Moroccans and Antilleans. They are labeled as the Mocro mafia; mocro is street language for someone of Moroccan descent.
"They are bothering packs and hanging youngsters from Amsterdam-West who are rapidly growing into street robbers, robbers and eventually want to participate in the drug trade", writes crime journalist Paul Vugts of the Amsterdan newspaper Het Parool in his book Doorgeschoten (Keep shooting), the new generation of irrepressible criminals. "They get weapons very easily and are not difficult about their use. They really use very brutal force."
Since the failed deal in Antwerp, the Mocro mafia has committed around 20 liquidations. One of the victims is 40-year-old Gwenette Martha. He is under fire with a Kalashnikov and probably one or more automatic weapons in May of last year when he leaves a shoarma shop in Amstelveen, a suburban part of the metropolitan area of Amsterdam. He has more than eighty bullet holes in his body.
Martha was already the target of a failed attack six months earlier. Justice suspected him of a series of criminal liquidations, including those in the Staatsliedenbuurt.
The suspected target of the attack in the Staatsliedenbuurt, Benaouf A., is the source of the dance for the time being. He is serving a 10-year prison sentence for being involved in the murder of Amsterdam-based Najib Bouhbouh (34) in October 2012. It is being wound up at a hotel in Antwerp; probably because he was involved in the disappearance of the 200 kilos of cocaine from the port of Antwerp.Mocro maffia gangster Benaouf A. The Moroccan Dutch gangster Najib Bouhbouh was killed in Antwerp by other Dutch criminals of the Mocro maffiaGwenette M. Photo Justice departmentSource: nos.nl/artikel/2033397-ripdeal-zet-mocro-maffia-op-scherp.html
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 14, 2019 17:24:35 GMT -7
The Belgian, The latest news, news bloqTen years in prison for "hotel murder"CONDEMNED GIFT ORDER FOR KILLING GANGSTER TO CROWN PLAZAKRISTOF AERTS December 2, 2014 4:18 AMPolice investigate the crime scene of the murder in front of the Crown Plaza Hotel in Antwerp.The Amsterdam Moroccan gangster Benaouf A., a notorious member of the Mocro maffiaA court in Amsterdam yesterday sentenced Benaouf A. (30), alias Lange Ben, to ten years in prison as the client for the murder of Dutch gangster Najib ‘Bo’ Bouhbouh. The murder in front of the Crown Plaza Hotel, the result of a rip deal by the Borgerhout Turtles, brought a wave of liquidations into the Amsterdam criminal environment.
The Dutchman Najib Bouhbouh was shot down in broad daylight on 18 October 2012 by two assassins. They were notified by Lange Ben when "Bo" stepped out of the hotel. The perpetrators were waiting in their cars at the gas station next to the former Crest Hotel. They fired no less than 16 bullets and then tore away in a white VW Golf. In Turnhout, on the Health City parking lot, the murderers were met by four Moroccans and drove off in a BMW with German number plates.
The Dutchman Najib Bouhbouh was shot down in broad daylight on 18 October 2012 by two assassins in front of the Crown Plaza Hotel.
Chris Bouman, the man who was with Bouhbouh, was hiding in the scrub at the hotel when Bo was slaughtered. He was "relieved" when the officers found him. During the investigation it turned out that he had played doubles. Bouman had lured Bouhbouh to the hotel to resolve a drug conflict with the Borgerhout drug gang Turtles.In Front of the Crown Plaza Hotel in Antwerp, BelgiumTurn through meat grinderBecause that was the reason for Bo's liquidation. The Turtles had stolen a batch of 200 kilos of cocaine from a group of Antilleans from Amsterdam. The gang didn't just let that happen: a Turtle was kidnapped and threatened to run it through the meat grinder if the cocaine were not reimbursed. Bouhbouh would have mediated as common knowledge, but he was not thanked for that.
According to the court, Benaouf A. was the link between Chris Bouman and the shooters. Bouman sent a text to Benaouf A. just before the victim left the hotel: "We are coming now". That text message was still on the SIM card of the mobile phone that Bouman had thrown away immediately after the murder near the gas station. The back was found immediately, but in the spring of 2013 the investigators also found the SIM card there.Bullet rainThe murder of Bouhboub in Antwerp was the start of more than 10 deadly settlements in the Amsterdam drug environment.
More than two months after the liquidation of Bouhbouh, Benaouf A. in the Amsterdam Staatsliedenbuurt himself was the target of a murder attempt, a revenge campaign for the murder in Antwerp. Two passengers from a Range Rover did not survive the bullet rain. Benaouf and Chris Bouman were then able to escape. Bouman committed suicide in his cell in August 2013 in the Dome Prison of Haarlem.
The shooters would be Rida Bennajem - meanwhile also liquidated - and the Surinamese Amsterdammer Marchano P. That process still has to be conducted.
|
|
|
Post by Jaga on Dec 16, 2019 6:23:45 GMT -7
Pieter, this is a very unfortunate to have a mafia running drug business. Maybe Dutch should find another business model for selling legal drugs which would made mafia's oversight impossibe. Just made it a state business... like cigarettes and tobacco were in the past
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 16, 2019 7:33:41 GMT -7
You got a good point there. But even if it would become a state business, the criminals would find a way to compete with on the black market. The debate about this is going on for decades now. New is that more conservative, anti-liberal political forces have gained ground who want to end the liberal Dutch drugs policies, more restrictions and a Dutch war on drugs.
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 16, 2019 10:49:50 GMT -7
FUGITIVE CRIME BOSS SUSPECT RIDOUAN TAGHI ARRESTEDBy Zack Newmark on December 16, 2019 - 17:00 Police in the Netherlands announced the arrest of Ridouan Taghi on Monday. The 41-year-old wanted fugitive was taken into custody in Dubai, police said. The OM, the Dutch prosecution service, has requested the extradition of Taghi from Dubai.
Officials did not immediately release when he was arrested, or how he was taken into custody, though sources told Emirates media outlet Khaleej Times that he entered the country using a false identity. Taghi, who turns 42 later this week, was thought to be hiding out in the Persian Gulf for months, either in Dubai, or on the island of Kish off the southern coast of Iran and about a two-hour boat ride from Dubai. It led police to make an appeal to the vacationing public last July to keep an eye open for Taghi and his alleged right-hand man, Said Razzouki. Unnamed sources told newspaper the Telegraaf last month that they believed the net was closing in on Taghi.Dutch national police press conference today about the arrest of Ridouan Taghi in Dubai today. Taghi is the most wanted Dutch criminal todayTaghi was wanted for ordering multiple murders and assassination attempts. He and the organization he allegedly runs were tied to nine assassinations, and several failed murders or canceled attacks. He was implicated by the prosecutions key witness Nabil B., whose attorney, Derk Wiersum, was murdered at his home in Amsterdam this past September. The Public Prosecution Service in the Netherlands was also building a case connecting Taghi to motorcycle gang Caloh Wagoh, which may have committed assassinations at Taghi's behest. Prosecutors offered a reward of 100 thousand euros for anyone providing information that would lead to his capture.
"With their criminal activities, [Taghi] and his henchmen pose a threat to the rule of law. It is very important for us as police to protect the rule of law and to remove threats," said Erik Akerboom, the Chief of Police in the Netherlands, in a statement.
Taghi was also suspected fo being part of a "super cartel" that controls about a third of all cocaine trafficked in Europe, according to newspaper AD. The cartel was believed to be operated from Dubai, responsible for at least 30 thousand of an estimated 100 thousand kilograms of cocaine annually through the Port of Rotterdam with members of Italian, Irish, and Bosnian organized crime syndicates.Ridouan TaghiDutch authorities said that the Taghi's arrest would not have been possible without the help of their counterparts abroad. "I have a great deal of appreciation for the professional working methods of our colleagues and those in Dubai," Akerboom said.
Both Taghi and Razzouki were among the most wanted criminals in the Netherlands, and both men were on the Europol list of the 55 most wanted criminals in the European Union. The have been wanted in the Netherlands for years.
“In today's world, building strategic cooperation is more important than ever and it is precisely through close international cooperation that it is possible to act effectively and decisively," said Jannine van den Berg, a the head of the national police unit in the Netherlands.The join national press conference of the Dutch National police and the Public prosecutor's office about the arrest in DubaiThe Police and Public prosecutor's spokes people said that this arrest was a succesful international coordinated operation. But the battle isn't fought yet, there is a lot of work to be done yet. The head of the snake is caught off but the snake has young ones, and the head of the snake good grow on the body again. The second life of the snake must be avoided. These are my words (Pieters words) not that of the police or justice spokespeople. But they said that the authorities will continue to fight organised crime after this major victory.
|
|
|
Post by Jaga on Dec 17, 2019 6:13:47 GMT -7
Pieter, you are right. People will always try to go for easy money, whether the business is legal or illegal. Do you know what it took to overcome Sicilian mafia or Chicago's al Capone mafia? How yo distribute these people so they made less harm? You got a good point there. But even if it would become a state business, the criminals would find a way to compete with on the black market. The debate about this is going on for decades now. New is that more conservative, anti-liberal political forces have gained ground who want to end the liberal Dutch drugs policies, more restrictions and a Dutch war on drugs.
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 17, 2019 8:50:37 GMT -7
Dutch police arrest five men, one woman as Taghi investigation continuesDecember 17, 2019Photo: Depositphotos.comDutch police have picked up a further six people in the Netherlands following the arrest of the Netherlands’ most wanted man, Ridouan Taghi, in Dubai on Monday.
The arrests were made during raids on private homes in Amsterdam, Utrecht, Vianen and Huis ter Heide. Five men and one woman were arrested, ranging in age from 29 to 45. They are suspected of money laundering, weapons offences and the possession of hard drugs.
According to the Telegraaf newspaper, the woman is Ridouan Taghi’s sister.
Taghi was arrested at a private home in Dubai following intensive international cooperation with the Dubai police. The Dutch public prosecution service has made a formal request for his extradition.
Ridouan Taghi was arrested at a private home in Dubai following intensive international cooperation with the Dubai police on monday. Image Soukje Bierman from the Parool newspaper.
Taghi is the main suspect in a gangland trial involving five murders and several attempted murders in a case known as Marengo, which is due to start in March. The brother of crown witness Nabil B is one of the murder victims.
Crown witness Nabil B
Shurandy S, the man who shot his brother dead, was sentenced to 28 years in jail on Monday, but Taghi is suspected of ordering the killing. He is also thought to be behind the murder of lawyer Derk Wiersum (1975 – 2019), who was representing Nabil B in the ongoing investigation. That murder is not part of the Marengo trial.
Shurandy S killed the brother of crown witness Nabil B
The Telegraaf says Taghi’s family have an important role in his crime gang. Two of his sisters have been previously questioned by police, two brothers are in jail in Morocco and a nephew has been arrested in connection with the murder of lawyer Derk Wiersum.On the morning of 18 September 2019, Dutch lawyer Derk Wiersum was shot and killed near his home in Amsterdam. At the time of his death, Wiersum was the lawyer of state witness Nabil Bakkali in the Marengo-proces against the Mocro Maffia led by Ridouan Taghi. The murder caused a great shock in the world of lawyers, and was called ‘an attack on the rule of law’.4 assassinated Moroccan gansters in the Mocro maffia war in the Netherlands
|
|
|
Post by karl on Dec 17, 2019 9:58:01 GMT -7
Pieter Boy oh boy, this news is so degrading to the Netherlands to think such rotten gangsters roam about with such killing and violence. More or less has the flavour of some Colombian drug mobsters such as in the Bogota city and area. Even there, such crimes as committed by such scum as demonstrated by these gangs in the Netherlands does not compare. There will be crime in most areas, states, cities and Puebla is not different, the same organized crime people more or less police them selves for each area they control. If an individual{s} begins to become too self indulgent he/she will find them selves in some trouble or face torture before being left dead in the desert. There are some very prosperious neighbourhoods in this region and hire protection groups for their protection from harm. If the above has the sound of normal, it is certainly not in the sense of our Western thinking, for the same crime gangs are also these same protection groups. More or less a guranteed safety net.The police know this, we know this, and I know this, for I see the usual same guards on my morning cycle rides. We wave to one another and as also the area police patrols. In and about Mexico City, there is a problem of kidnapping of bank and large business leaders. For this reason body guards in high demand in as well as protection agencies. With this a good business of builders of armored cars for such businesses, and this is not enough for full protection, for side walk snatchs are not uncommon. www.nytimes.com/2019/08/08/world/americas/mexico-drug-feud-bodies-michoacan.htmlThe following is one of many methods such gangs keep them selves in line with the groups ideals: mexiconewsdaily.com/news/cartel-war-leaves-7-dead-in-one-night-in-puebla/Karl
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 17, 2019 10:48:45 GMT -7
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_trafficking_in_MoroccoMoroccan organized crime groups in Germany Moroccan organized crime groups, often of Riffian descent, on the other hand, have been reported in Frankfurt. Next to the Serbian mafia and Balkan gangs, the Moroccan organized crime has become one of the active main players in the Frankfurt underworld for heroin trade as well as other criminal activities. As of 2018, there had been many incidents of young male North African asylum seekers committing rapes and robberies.Moroccan Jewish organised crimeThe immigration of Egyptian and Moroccan Jews to Israel and their settlement in the more impoverished neighborhoods led to the creation of crime families among Maghrebi Jews. This is evident in the fact that a large number of Israeli organized criminals have fled to Morocco in recent years. Israeli crime families of Moroccan Jewish descent expanded their operations to Europe and the USA, especially with their involvement in drug trafficking. Some of Israel's more well-known crime families are of North African and Middle Eastern Jewish descent: the Abergil crime family as well as the Abutbul and Domrani clans are originally from Morocco, the Alperon clan came from Egypt, and the Shirazi clan from Iran.P.S.- Most Dutch Moroccan gangsters by the way are not of Jewish descent, but of Moroccan Berber Muslim descent or Moroccan Arab Muslim descent.Corruption in MoroccoThe occurrence of petty and grand corruption in public and private sectors in Morocco are one of the socio-political challenges the country is facing. Corruption has become much more institutionalized under King Mohammed VI, and the royal family has been using public institutions to coerce and solicit bribes.
Corruption is also identified by businesses as a large obstacle for investment in Morocco. Public procurement is an area with a high level of corruption, and government contracts are often awarded to well-connected companies. Corruption committed by highly influential persons are rarely prosecuted
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 23, 2019 2:10:17 GMT -7
'The Netherlands thanks Morocco for helping to find Ridouan Taghi'23-12-2019, 06:34Ridouan Taghi Photo Dutch policeThe Netherlands has thanked the Moroccan National Security Service for assistance in detecting criminal Ridouan Taghi, reports the pro-government news website Hespress.
According to the website, the chief of police of the national police called the director general of the Moroccan security service, Abdulatif Hammouchi. The medium reports this on the basis of a government official.MistakenThe Arabic-language newspaper Assabah reports that there has been close cooperation in this case since the mistaken murder in Marrakesh, where the son of a Moroccan judge was murdered. Taghi is said to have ordered this attack.
The Moroccan security service allegedly gave the Netherlands a definitive answer about the whereabouts of Taghi: he was not in Morocco, and the Moroccans allegedly provided important information about where Taghi was eventually found in Dubai.
An official reaction from the Moroccan government about its role in Taghi's investigation and arrest has not yet been received.High security prisonThe prime suspect in the Marengo trial was arrested Monday in Dubai. A few days later he was transferred to the Netherlands at night. Taghi is now in the highly secured prison in Vught.
The 42-year-old Taghi is suspected of being involved in various liquidations. He is also seen as the leader in the cocaine trade.The highly secured prison in Vught in the province of North Brabant, just south of the industrial and administrative centre of 's-Hertogenbosch.
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 23, 2019 2:30:28 GMT -7
'Dutch assassins are sentenced to death for mistaken murder in Marrakesh'27-07-2019, 12:00Moroccan police officers at the scene of the murder in MarrakeshIn Morocco, two Dutch people were sentenced to death for a mistaken murder. The murder took place in café La Crème in Marrakesh in November 2017.
The two men, Shardyone S. (30) and Edwin R.M. (26), according to the judge, wanted to kill the Moroccan-Dutch owner of the cafe, but would have been mistaken. The court says they killed the son of a Moroccan judge instead. Two people were injured in the attack. One of the injured was the girlfriend of the the son of a Moroccan judge. The killed son of a Moroccan judge and his wounded girlfriend. He was the mistaken victim of a mistaken murder by foreign Dutch Caribbean assassins who worked for Dutch Mocro mafia crime boss Ridouan Taghi.The 2 assassins, Shardyone "Dyon" S. (29) and Edwin R.M. (24), childhood friends from Amsterdam, both of Caribbean origin, who were Ridouan Taghi['s hitmen.Denial The two suspects deny being involved in the crime. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in The Hague says that all Dutch people are entitled to consular assistance. "It is up to the persons in question whether or not to make use of the possibility to appeal."
Mustapha el F., the owner of the café and therefore the intended victim, has also been arrested. The Moroccan Dutchman has been sentenced to 15 years in prison.Heavy punishmentsRidouan Taghi, the most wanted criminal in the Netherlands, is probably involved in the murder. Two of his brothers reportedly supplied material for the murder and arranged the logistics at his request. The brothers were arrested and now sentenced to 10 and 20 years in prison.
A total of twenty people were arrested in this case, which according to the Moroccan justice also included drug trafficking, kidnapping and possession of weapons.
Thanks in part to foreign Moroccans, drug trafficking and the associated crime are booming in Morocco. The Moroccan police have been trying to suppress that for a long time. The country probably wants to send a signal with heavy penalties. The death penalty has not been executed for 25 years. Dutch Foreign Affairs emphasizes that the Netherlands is also working against the death penalty in Morocco.The moment shortly after the mistaken murder of medical student Hamza Chaib, the son of the judge.The mistaken murderThe mistaken murder of the son of a senior Moroccan judge, in November 2017 in Marrakech, intensifies the hunt for leaders of the Mocro Mafia. The oblivion is understandable, but it seems that in addition to the rightly convicted, innocent people have fallen victim to it. Including businessman Najim Yassir (40) from Scheveningen and - to a lesser extent - his cousin Mohammed. The latter was detained in Morocco for two years and has now been released pending appeal. He tells about the hell of Marrakech.
On Thursday evening, November 2, 2017, it is as usual busy on the terrace of café La Crème in the center of Marrakech. The Dutch owner Mustapha ("Moes") F. is sitting at one of the tables. A little further down the road is a medical student Hamza Chaib (26), son of a high judge, sitting at a table with a girl. They have ordered tea.Mustapha ("Moes") FA motor scooter stops at a quarter to eight. A man with a full-face helmet, from which long rasta braids come, shoots Hamza up close. His table companion is seriously injured. Moes immediately knows that the attack was intended for him. Shortly before, he was still sitting at the table where the student was sitting. He flees to Casablanca and is arrested later.
The police soon hold the assassination command: Shardyone "Dyon" S. (29) and Edwin R.M. (24), childhood friends from Amsterdam, both of Caribbean origin. But who is the client? The Moroccan and Dutch police come to the conclusion that Moes was the target because of his role in the Mocro Mafia: he is seen as the successor of the Amsterdam drug dealer Samir "Scarface" Bouyakhrichan, who was wound up in Marbella in 2014. In the Netherlands he is often mentioned as the man behind the No Limit club in Zoetermeer, a building that has been shot at regularly over the past few years. In Morocco, he is the manager of café La Crème and the nearby Club Cappuccino. He feels relatively safe in that country: liquidations are rarely done there. Too dangerous. Whoever is found in possession of a weapon in Morocco has a serious problem.The Amsterdam drug dealer Samir "Scarface" Bouyakhrichanwww.alaraby.co.uk/english/news/2019/7/27/two-dutch-citizens-sentenced-to-death-in-morocco
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 23, 2019 3:34:29 GMT -7
Pieter, you are right. People will always try to go for easy money, whether the business is legal or illegal. Do you know what it took to overcome Sicilian mafia or Chicago's al Capone mafia? How yo distribute these people so they made less harm? You got a good point there. But even if it would become a state business, the criminals would find a way to compete with on the black market. The debate about this is going on for decades now. New is that more conservative, anti-liberal political forces have gained ground who want to end the liberal Dutch drugs policies, more restrictions and a Dutch war on drugs. Jaga,
The problem is the fact that there goes huge sums of money around in the criminal black market economy of drugs production, drugs transport, drugs trade, drugs dealing and the rivalry, ripdeals, extortion business, the rented killer business, and the corruption, fraud, nepotism, clientelism and the maintainance of the organised crime organisations. With their white wash operations these criminals are large investors, stock brokers, own criminal private banks, industrial territory, horeca, real estate, construction firms, night clubs, resorts, car sales companies, cab/taxi companies, law firms and etc. The infiltration of the white market is huge, but in the same time the black market is huge as well. In the Southern North-Brabant city of Tilburg economical crime investigators stated after their throurough investigation that the black drugs market economy was equally big and probably larger than the legal economy of that city, which meant billions.
I think the present day Mocro mafia in the Netherlands, Germany, France, Belgium, Morocco, Dubai, the Dutch Antilles and Suriname is comparable to the Sicilian mafia or Chicago's al Capone mafia.
Karl, these 'Dutch Moroccan and Dutch Antillian' organised crime organisations are also comparable to the Columbian and Mexican drugs cartels, because they also produce and sell drugs, and have the same ruthless organisations, which torture, maim and kill people. They probably have connections with the South Americans and with the Calabrian 'Ndrangheta from Italy. The 'Ndrangheta is also known to engage in cocaine (controlling up to 80% of that flowing through Europe) and heroin trafficking, murder, bombings, counterfeiting, illegal gambling, frauds, thefts, labor racketeering, loansharking, illegal immigration, and rarely some kidnapping. The Dutch Moroccan criminal gangs are mostly involved in the trafficking of marihuana. This is due to the ties of some families to their area of origin, the Rif, which is a known hub of marihuana/hashish cultivating. Certain criminals like Moroccan-Dutch criminal Ridouan Taghi (born December 20, 1977) have also progressed to the trafficking of cocaine. Armed robbery and prostitution are known activities of the Dutch Moroccan groups as well, called the Mocro Maffia.
Cheers, Pieter
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 23, 2019 11:23:36 GMT -7
When you have big shots, mobsters, gangsters, mafia people, you also have the small guys who later become gangsters, but also make mistakes. This short movie shows a gang of Moroccan street criminals.
The movie is in Dutch, spoken in Dutch Moroccan slang, played by Dutch Moroccan actors. They look like Moroccan street kids I know from Arnhem, Amsterdam, the Hague and Utrecht. The images speak for themselves.
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 23, 2019 11:33:33 GMT -7
It starts at the street. Here you see Moroccan street kids in Rotterdam.
|
|
|
Post by pieter on Dec 23, 2019 12:15:47 GMT -7
This movie shows the contrast between Morocco and the Netherlands
The differences in development, advancement, modernity, wealth and prosperity creates the circumstances for organised crime. Look at the poor Sicilian (Italian), Irish and jewish fellows in the USA in the late 19th century and the early 20t century. The mafia and gangsters came from these communities. Like with the Italian-Americans., Irish Americans and the Jewish Americans (the Ashkenazi jews that came from Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania and Russia) amongst the Dutch Moroccans you also have decent, hard working, decent workers and middle class. Like the minority of Dutch Moroccan street thugs, hustlers, lover boys, robers, pick pockets, drugs pushers, drugs dealers gangsters and the Mocro mafia, these Italian, Irish and Jewish young men were impatient with the poverty and hard living conditions of their parents in their impoverished Italian, Irish and Jewish neighbourhoods in New York and Chicago and they started their American branches of the Sicilian mafia, the Irish Mob (gangster organisations), and the largely 'jewish' Murder, Inc. (Murder Incorporated) and The Bugs (Bugsy) and Meyer Mob (with Lepke Buchalter, Bugsy Siegel, Samuel "Red" Levine, Dutch Schultz, Abraham Weinberg and Meyer Lansky).
These today Moroccan Dutch, Turkish Dutch and Kurd Dutch street thugs, mobsters and gangsters can be compared by these poor immigrant kids from the Lower East Side of Manhattan in the early 20th century. The same tough street culture, the same racketeering, the same kind of bootlegging. In staid of the alcohol of the twenties the Moroccans trade Hashish (hash, a drug made from the resin of the cannabis plant) and Cocaine and are involved in bank raids, blowing up a cash machines, rideals of rival gangs, extortion, hijacking, murder and gang wars (the morco mafia war).
|
|