British media echo Albanian criminality: 50 Albanian thugs arrested every week

Police are facing a wave of Albanian crime, where 50 people are arrested every week, these arrests are made within the framework of drug combat, writes the Daily Mail. These figures show that thousands of people from the small Balkan state are being held in Great Britain for murder, sexual acts, drug treatment, money laundering, smuggling of people [...]
Police are facing a wave of Albanian crime, where 50 people are arrested every week, these arrests are made within the framework of drug combat, writes the Daily Mail.
These figures show that thousands of people from the small Balkan state are being held in Great Britain for murder, sexual acts, drug treatment, money laundering, human smuggling and death threats.
The National Crime Agency has indicated that the gangs of Albanian drug dealers are now a significant threat to Britain's streets.
Police chiefs in Britain said organised crime groups from the former communist country now have a major impact on supplying cocaine across the country, and are willing to protect their market at any cost. In total, last year, police arrested 8% Albanian criminals more than in 2015.
Thousands of Albanians living in Great Britain allegedly have false identities, they are supposed to be from neighbouring Kosovo, claiming persecution during the regional conflict 18 years ago. Britain is now facing drug and prostitution scandal
MP Jane Collins, Internal Affairs spokesman U The KIP, it said, has been expressed: the <x0.Nirium of Albanians arrested for other crimes being here illegally demonstrates that our borders are currently not appropriate for the purpose, even though we are an island.
I think we have people in the government and the House Office with a 16th-century view of border management, while trafficking gangs are developing new strategies every day to get their human burden in this country illegally”.
“We are hampered by our EU membership, which limits our ability to deal with immigration, but a large amount of guilt must be placed at the door of politicians and civil servants who have constantly mismanaged and cut off finances for police and security. )
In late June, 649 Albanian prisoners were in prison, making them the third largest foreign group. The AKK report found that criminals from the Balkans were increasingly linked directly to cocaine traffickers from South America.
In London, according to a report, 1,325 Albanians were arrested, 14% more than a year ago. The next largest number was West Midlands with 225, followed by Susex (140), the Great Manchester (107) and Kent (95).
In a case last year, a gang of 20 Albanian gangsters using false Greek and Italian passports developed a dial-a-way rocket in Manchester, targeting city nightclubs.
Known in the crime world, Albanians ran a sophisticated phone line “dial-a-drug”, and acquired figures reaching 250,000 and living in luxury apartments in the centre of town. One of the main players, Mevlan Lova, 33, was imprisoned eight years after a kilo of cocaine plus 55,000 pounds were found in his apartment in the city.












