Top Turkish police allegedly protected Swedish gang leader – news Urix – Foreign news and documentaries

Last week Aftonbladet revealed that secret documents had been leaked to members of the Swedish gang Foxtrot. In Sweden, the government held crisis meetings about gang violence in the country. In Turkey, Foxtrot leader Rawa Majid sat and watched the plans laid against him. According to Aftonbladet, a central informant with “high credibility” has suggested that a top police officer in Turkey has kept a protective hand over Majid. Alleged to have protected gang leader The documents were sent from Sweden to the Turkish authorities. They were to put an end to the Foxtrot leader. Majid, also known as “The Kurdish Fox”, is based in Turkey. That makes it difficult for the Swedish police to prosecute him. The diplomatic relationship between Turkey and Sweden is tense. Extradition of the gang leader is not straightforward. Fox effects are a central part of the image of the members of Foxtrot. The leader is called “The Kurdish Fox”. Photo: TT NEWS AGENCY Swedish police / NTB But lately several politicians in Turkey have demanded that extradition be considered. Questions have also been asked in parliament about who it is that protects Majid, writes Aftonbladet. Now it suggests that there may be people in the Turkish police who are leaking information. Here are eight points that explain the wave of violence in Sweden: Internal conflict In September alone, nine people were shot and killed in Sweden. Part of the recent wave of violence must be due to an internal conflict in Foxtrot. Especially between leader Majid and one of his former most trusted members. A shooting incident in Turkey led to the murder of the mother of a gang member in Sweden. Later, several were shot and killed in Stockholm and Uppsala. Police in Vasastan in Stockholm after a person was shot and killed in mid-September. Photo: Fredrik Sandberg/TT / NTB Central to the conflict is a discussion about whether it is right to recruit children into the gang. The children receive shorter sentences for the offences, and are therefore used for part of the rough work. One of the children who fell victim to gang violence is 13-year-old Milo. Milo was killed The family reported Milo missing on Friday 8 September. Three days later he was found dead in a wooded area near Haninge south of Stockholm. – The fact that the murder victim was so young is in itself absolutely terrible and shows another dimension of the reckless violence. This was said by senior prosecutor Lisa dos Santos the day after Milo was found. Now dos Santos confirms to SVT that the murder has links to an ongoing gang conflict in Sweden. She does not want to go into more detail about the conflict in question. – There is information, which I cannot go into further for the sake of the investigation, which shows that the boy was exposed to gross and completely reckless gang violence.



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