Injuries in "brutal attacks" between Arab and Russian gangs in Berlin
Eleven people were injured in three attacks between gangs in Berlin,
in tension between Arab and Russian-Chechen clans, in a new development that reflects
the growing criminal threat among criminal gangs in the German capital.
Early this week, the German capital Berlin witnessed three brutal,
guerrilla attacks between an Arab clan and a Russian-Chechen attack.
Today, Tuesday (November 10, 2020), a police spokesman said that the unit responsible
for combating organized crime in the Berlin Crime Authority has taken over
the investigation of the events in order to verify the relationships related to
these attacks.
These attacks (two attacks that occurred last Saturday evening in the Neukölln
and Gzundbrunnen neighborhoods, and a third attack that occurred on Sunday
evening in the last neighborhood) resulted in the injury of 11 men.
The German authorities arrested six Russian men last Saturday evening before
releasing them later, and the police said that among those involved in these attacks
were "members of a well-known large family."
Chechen gangs, along with criminal members of large Arab families, have been playing
a role in the criminal milieu in the capital Berlin for years.
A report by the Crime Prevention Agency a year ago indicated the existence of
apparent violence in this milieu, and the commission stated at the time
that "Russian and Eurasian organized crime is a major problem."
These gangs are primarily active in the drug trade, forced prostitution
and the collection of royalties.

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