The Mercury

Crime rises amid pandemic

-

THE coronaviru­s pandemic could fuel organised crime for years to come in Europe, a continent already at “breaking point” from an unpreceden­ted flood of cocaine, the EU’s policing agency warned yesterday.

In its flagship four-yearly report, Europol said increasing­ly violent criminal gangs are likely to muscle in on legitimate businesses left vulnerable by the economic damage caused by Covid-19.

Criminals are also offering fake coronaviru­s vaccines and home-testing kits as they seek to capitalise on global efforts to recover from the virus, the Hague-based agency said.

“We are at the breaking point,” Europol’s director Catherine De Bolle told AFP in an interview.

“The impact on the lives of citizens, on the economy, on the rule of law is too big. That’s what we see from this... report.”

The “Serious and Organised Crime Threat Assessment” is an in-depth report issued every four years which will be used by EU member states to set crime-fighting priorities until 2025.

“A prolonged pandemic will put heavy strain on European and global economies” and a predicted economic recession “may shape serious and organised crime for years to come,” the report said.

Europol said the drug trade in particular was fuelling corruption across the EU, which De Bolle added “affected everybody from dock workers to politician­s” and was used in almost three-quarters of all serious crimes.

“Unpreceden­ted quantities of cocaine are trafficked to the EU from Latin America, generating multi-billion-euro profits” for criminals in both Europe and South America, the agency said.

The purity of the cocaine arriving in Europe was “at the highest level ever recorded in the EU.”

The cocaine trade “fuels criminal enterprise­s that use their enormous resources to infiltrate and undermine the EU’s economy, public institutio­ns and society,” said Europol.

Police raids in major EU ports such as Antwerp, Hamburg and Rotterdam have seen record seizures including a shipment of 23 tonnes of cocaine by Dutch and German police in late February.

The trade has also stoked increased levels in violence and often criminals “are now not afraid to use guns, hand grenades and torture,” De Bolle said.

“Criminals kill innocent victims in the crossfire, murder journalist­s and lawyers in direct attacks on our democracie­s,” EU home affairs commission­er Ylva Johansson added at the report’s launch in Lisbon.

But the outbreak of the pandemic had a further, major impact on the way organised crime gangs operated, Europol said.

Companies weakened by the pandemic could become easy prey for gangs wanting to legitimise their crimes or using legal businesses for illegal activities, such as money laundering, Europol said.

Crime gangs were also “adapting to the pandemic with great ease” to make profit off the needs and fears of society, Johansson said.

“In the early stages we saw a surge in the trade of counterfei­t face masks and hand sanitiser. Now we see a rise in the trade in fake vaccines and home testing kits,” De Bolle told AFP.

“These (fake) vaccines are a risk for your health. You should not buy it.”

The pandemic has also increased cybercrime as restrictio­ns in many countries mean people have to live and work more online, Europol said.

“Critical infrastruc­ture will continue to be targeted by cybercrimi­nals in the coming years. This poses a significan­t risk,” Europol said.

Internatio­nal police in January disrupted EMOTET, described as the “world’s most dangerous” cybercrime malware tool, used to break into computer systems.

Online fraud is now a major problem, including investment fraud and malware phishing attacks as well as the online sexual exploitati­on of minors, the agency said.

 ??  ?? FRENCH police officers secure a street near the Henri Dunant Hospital where two people were shot in Paris yesterday. One person was killed, another was injured. The gunman fled on a motorcycle. | EPA
FRENCH police officers secure a street near the Henri Dunant Hospital where two people were shot in Paris yesterday. One person was killed, another was injured. The gunman fled on a motorcycle. | EPA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa