Entries in crime (2)
'Organised crime brings fear to Vancouver’s streets'
Bring on the local indignant reax stories...
Drug gangs in Canada British Columbia or Colombia?May 28th 2009 | VANCOUVER
WHILE campaigning for an election on May 12th in which he was easily re-elected, Gordon Campbell, the premier of British Columbia (BC) province, had a personal brush with violent crime. As he was being interviewed by a reporter at a Vancouver hotel, a woman with a gun ran by, having robbed a jeweller. The premier’s bodyguard hustled him to safety; the robber was later arrested. But the incident should have reminded Mr Campbell that crime worries voters almost as much as the recession.
From The Economist print edition
Organised crime brings fear to Vancouver’s streets
When bullets and ballots collide
Find your riding! 2009 Lower Mainland shootings compared with B.C. electoral boundaries."If I were a gang member right now, I would keep real quiet until the election's over," a local political observer said to me recently.
It was a sort of throwaway comment, the point being that someone who works to circumvent the law would probably be best served by not giving those who make the law too much fodder around election time.
Yet it's worth noting that so far in April, Vancouver has been (mostly) spared the seemingly daily shootings that have plagued us this year, and indeed sporadically over the last several years as a gang war simmers its way through our streets.
Who would have thought names like Jarrod and Jamie would be bandied about as freely in the press as Gordon and Carole? Abbotsford's Bacon brothers have even made for fashion commentary, courtesy of a certain editor at The Province newspaper.
Here are a few words looking at the awkward intersection of gangs and politics this campaign, published today in 24 hours and on The Tyee:
Keith Roy is feeling nostalgic these days. The Vancouver realtor recalls the good old days in his city, when the only gun that went off was the nine o'clock cannon in Stanley Park.
These days, Roy feels like he reads about a new shooting almost every morning.
"That's not the city I grew up in," says Roy.



