Kuwait Times

Gangs’ car bombs rattle Montenegro’s capital

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PODGORICA: Heavily-armed police are guarding the streets of Montenegro’s capital after a spike in gangland violence rattled the Balkan country, which is on the brink of joining NATO. Drug mafia feuds began in the coastal towns of Bar and Kotor, hotbeds of organized crime, where anti-terrorist police swooped in to tackle the deadly rivalries last summer as tourists came and went on cruise ships.

But the troubles have come to the streets of the capital Podgorica in the past few weeks, with two people killed and two others seriously injured in three explosions. “Recent events in Podgorica and events that preceded them in other towns have understand­ably provoked the anxiety of citizens, who expect the authoritie­s to do all they can in a merciless struggle against organized crime,” said Interior Minister Mevludin Nuhodzic. He admitted that “in some way, order is threatened”. Twelve people were killed last year as a result of gang feuds in the country of 620,000 people, whose tourism sector is growing under the threat of powerful organized crime.

In one incident in September, a sniper shot a prisoner dead in broad daylight in a yard in Montenegro’s highest-security jail in Podgorica. The man had been jailed for extortion. The recent spike in attacks has resulted in dismissals and resignatio­ns at the top of the police force and an intensifie­d presence on the streets. After nightfall for the past several days, heavily-armed officers have patrolled the squares of the capital, closely monitored customers in bars and cafes and carried out tight security checks on cars.

So far they have seized several guns, drugs and one vehicle, but no arrests over the Podgorica blasts have been announced. Residents of the capital fear becoming collateral damage of the warring gangs. “This has crossed all limits... the whole society is descending into the underworld. I am afraid of innocent people being killed,” said Milos, 45, an economist who witnessed the latest blast in the centre of Podgorica on January 19. A young man with a criminal record was killed in the explosion and the passenger in his car had to have her leg amputated.

‘Unbearable’

Another resident in the capital, 47-year-old lawyer Ana, described the situation as “unbearable” and wondered “what has prevented the authoritie­s from strengthen­ing their fight against crime?” Local people who spoke to AFP were reluctant to give their family names for security reasons. Nuhodzic insisted the government was “taking permanent action. Our goal is to create insecurity for criminals”. But Nebojsa Medojevic, a leader of the main opposition Democratic Front alliance, said the security situation was “worrying” and that there was a “political character” to Montenegro’s organized crime. “There are no boundaries between the state and crime,” he told reporters on Friday.

NATO signed an accession agreement with Montenegro last year, paving the way for the country to become the 29th member of the Western military alliance. So far more than 20 of the 28 NATO allies have ratified the accession of the former Yugoslav republic, which is also a candidate for European Union membership. But mountainou­s Montenegro, which declared independen­ce from Serbia in 2006, has struggled to contain the widespread scourge of organized crime and related violence. The EU regularly urges authoritie­s to do more.

 ?? — AFP ?? PODGORICA: Montenegra­n police officers investigat­e a crime scene in the capital Podgorica. Heavily-armed police are guarding the streets of Montenegro’s capital after a spike in gangland violence rattled the Balkan country, which is on the brink of...
— AFP PODGORICA: Montenegra­n police officers investigat­e a crime scene in the capital Podgorica. Heavily-armed police are guarding the streets of Montenegro’s capital after a spike in gangland violence rattled the Balkan country, which is on the brink of...

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