Daily Mail brings new details from Kosovo's luxurious life that was killed in England

The murder was carried out with ruthless efficiency, like something from a Hollywood action film, or, perhaps, more appropriate, a Noir Skandi crime drama. Flamur Beqiri, 36-year-old, was returning from walking with his wife and young son to their 1.8 million pounds in one of the streets where they live very wealthy [...]
Flamur Beqiri, 36-year-old, was returning from walking with his wife and young son to their 1.8 million pounds in one of the streets where they live very wealthy in Battersea, south-west London, about 9am on Christmas Eve when a single person went out in silence from <x0hija” and shot him to death, four bullets in the body and a final, on the head.
Neighbors heard five shots. Four, in quick succession, were reportedly shot in Beqiri's back. After he fell to the ground, a bullet was fired into his head at the nearest distance, while the killer escaped, broadcast the Indexline.
Beqiri remained in a pool of blood, while his wife, Deborah Krasniqi, screamed for help. Despite the efforts of a nurse who lived nearby, there was nothing left to do for her. He was dead.
In the days that followed, Beqiri turned out to be what police like to call a man with ties.
The Albanian-born immigrant was named just over a decade ago as one of the most wanted men in Sweden, the place he grew up, amid claims that he was the head of an international drug gang smuggled cannabis worth a 2 million pounds.
He fled for nearly two years, but eventually surrendered to the Swedish police. After a brief detention ban and a strange legal dispute, he was released for drug acts, but was convicted of minor charges, given a conditional sentence and a fine, and was allowed to go free.
According to prison sources quoted this week in the Swedish press, Beqiri and his associates immediately resumed their lucrative criminal trade. However, they started in a war with a gang of rival groups seeking to control the streets of cocaine and cannabis from Morocco, via Spain, in the town of Beqiri, in Malmo.
As the dispute escalated, some of his friends were attacked. Last year, one of them was killed. But then Beqiri was in the United Kingdom after receiving the residence in London in 2015 after receiving two death threats.
One of his two sisters turned out to be Misse Beqiri, a former model of the internals and éinfluencer social media who in 2014 married the goalkeeper of Manchester United Anders Lindegard, and two years later played in a reality television series, The Real Houses of Cheshire.
It was through Misse that Flamur met his wife Deborah, a lovely brunette to post images from exotic vacations, luxury cars, and numerous trips.
Their wedding, in October 2018, was extremely luxurious at Lake Como, Italy. The bride's clothing was fascinating, and the guests were given Cuban cigarettes named after the couple. It is estimated to have cost more than 1 million.
But after this fascinating facade, there were unanswered questions that were brought to focus following the Christmas Eve assassination.
Why did the Internal Office allow this convicted criminal, with known links to drug smuggling and organised crime, to be transferred to the United Kingdom, even if Swedish citizens, as EU citizens, are allowed to work here without visas?
How did the authorities he had created money to finance his life - style and allow him to buy a luxury property? Why was he and his associates allowed to create a series of dark businesses in the United Kingdom, through which large sums of money seem to have moved?
In the search for answers, we have to go back to the mid 2000s, when Beqiri, known for friends like Alex, lived in Malmo, writes among other things Daily Mail.
A Swedish citizen with two sisters -- Misse and Valentina -- a fashion blogger who runs a website called VBfashionbook -- he came as a child from communist Albania, to Sweden's third largest city, where his parents (now divorced) Jakup and Ramize still lives.
After returning home to Malmo, he continued to fade into the music business, establishing a label called 20/20 Records, which represented a small number of dance and hip-hop artists, none of whom enjoyed great success.
According to sources, quoted in the Swedish press, he also remained involved in organised crime, with links to networks importing cocaine and cannabis from southern Europe. Beqiri's career faded in 2014, when he began receiving death threats due to a dispute between his associates and a rival local drug gang.
Fearing for his life, he moved to London, home of his new girlfriend, Deborah Krasniqi. Even though he was a convicted criminal, he seems to have not encountered any important control by immigration authorities.
Initially, it seems that the couple lived in a rented apartment near Regent Park. Then they moved to a property in Hampstead, before they bought a large house with four bedrooms on the way to the Battersea Church.
The house, now registered by Deborah, cost 1.7 million pounds in September 2017. The couple then spent large sums of money to improve it, providing at least three planning applications for construction work, including a project to lift its roof from several inches, increase the size of an extension of the first floor, and replace the traditional front door with a modern security door.
After creating their dream home, they formalized their bond, paying dozens of friends and families to fly to the wedding feast in Italy, placing them at the Grand Hotel Imperial, a four - star resort and bathroom, where standard rooms cost up to 600 euros per night.
They were married in October 2018 in Villa d'Este, a 16th-century crowd near Lake Como in 25 hectares of decoration gardens.
In August last year, in what police believe was a revenge attack, Naiffe Adawi, 33, was targeted by a gang in front of a store in the town of Swedish.
He escaped after giving the child to his wife, Carol, a doctor. But the gunman, believed to be Syrian, shot Carol eight times, once in the head while she was on the sidewalk.
Adawa is likely a close friend of Beqiri's who attended his Italian wedding last year, followed the Indexline.
Police in Sweden have described the similarities between Carol's murder and the Battersea shooting. And there is little reason to assume that the murders will stop.












