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Western German motocycle gangs targeted in dozens of police raids

DPA/The Local
DPA/The Local - [email protected]
Western German motocycle gangs targeted in dozens of police raids
Photo: DPA

More than 500 police officers have launched a series of raids across the western state of North-Rhine Westphalia, targeting an Iraqi crime gang.

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The organized crime syndicate, known as Al-Salam-313, is accused of people smuggling as well as being involved in the drug and weapons trade. 

Raids were carried out in eleven cities across North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany's most populous state, including Cologne, Dortmund, Essen, Hünxe and Siegburg. 

SEE ALSO: Crime committed by clans plagues west German state

More than 500 officers were involved in the raids, which included police, members of the special forces and state investigators. 

The operation commenced at 5am on Wednesday morning. Police expected the raids to continue through the morning and into the afternoon. 

A spokesperson for the police told DPA that the group had been the subject of an ongoing investigation for some time. As yet, no arrests have been made in relation to the raids. 

Police raids have taken place across the entire NRW region. Photo: DPA

German tabloid Bild is reporting that the group is said to have used some of the proceeds from their illegal activities to support militias in Iraq. 

The paper is also reporting that some of those targeted as part of the raid have been in contact with members of the Iraqi government. 

Organized crime

Organised crime has been a topic of growing concern across Germany in recent years.

While gang activity tends to have a focus on Eastern European and Middle Eastern communities in Germany, police have been careful to point out that gang membership is far more diverse than depictions in well known movies and television shows. 

Around a third of gang members are German-born, while one in five is female. 

While gang activity has been seen across the country, much of it has been focused on larger cities like Berlin and Frankfurt, as well as cities and towns across Germany’s largest state of North Rhine-Westphalia. 

SEE ALSO: How Berlin's crime clans are targeting refugees: special report

As reported by The Local earlier in May, a total of 14,225 offences committed by crime gangs in North-Rhine Westphalia (NRW) were logged between 2016 and 2018. 

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Anonymous 2019/05/22 20:49
North-Rhine Westphalia is Germany's largest state? It's the most populous, Bavaria being the largest.

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