Pubdate: Sun, 14 Jul 2002 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2002 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Authors: Paul Harris and Burhan Wazir DEADLY ASIAN HEROIN GANGS CARVE UP LUCRATIVE NEW TRADE A Furious Row Followed An MP's Claim Last Week That the Drug Trade Was Destroying Asian Communities. Paul Harris and Burhan Wazir Report From Bradford, Where Young Men Fight For a Share of the Spoils - and Crack is a Growing Menace Abdul Salim ground a cigarette butt into the pavement. A steady evening rain had started to fall in Bradford, but he did not go inside. Salim is a drug dealer and there were customers to serve. Across the street, two police cars passed by and their occupants strained to look out of the windows. Salim, 26, watched as they drove off down the street. 'They know what we're doing here,' said Salim. 'Sometimes they leave us alone. Sometimes they don't.' Like his parents before him, Salim is a pioneer. But instead of settling down to the hard-working toil of previous generations of Asians, Salim and others have blazed a new trail into the violent world of drug dealing. Hard drugs have arrived in Britain's Asian communities and are rapidly creating a social problem of spiralling crime rates and increased numbers of addicts. It has led to the emergence of Asian drug gangs who are willing to use violence to carve out territories and defend the enormous profits the trade can bring. On the streets of some northern towns gang shootings have led to public killings and a climate of fear that the drug dealers are only too willing to encourage. But it is not a problem confined to the North. Last December police in London smashed a huge crack and heroin dealing operation in the East End that controlled a trade worth millions of pounds. The gang, based on several large Asian families, had run a 24-hour operation supplying drugs to thousands of the capital's users. It led to local MP Oona King describing Tower Hamlets, which has a large and deprived Asian community, as the 'heroin capital' of the country. In Keighley, on the northern outskirts of Bradford, the problem has become even more lethal. A furious turf war between rival drug gangs left four young Asians dead in the space of six months. The last to die, 24-year-old Qadir Ahmed, was beaten and stabbed to death in the street after his killers' shunted his car off the road as he drove home from a football match. In some parts of Keighley heroin has been sold for as little as ?2 a wrap as dealers have sought to entice more users into their expanding market. Experts say the reasons for the problem are obvious. Drug gangs emerge wherever there is poverty, unemployment and social exclusion. It has been the rule on white sink estates for decades and describes deprived Asian - mainly Pakistani - communities across the north of England and in London. 'It really should not have come as a surprise to see this happening. It is now a real problem and growing fast,' said Kamlesh Patel, director of the ethnicity and health unit at the University of Central Lancashire. Asian communities have also been hit by the phenomenon of successful young men and women moving away as soon as they get jobs and degrees. What they are leaving behind are poor, vulnerable and isolated communities: places that have been invaded by gangs. They have brought with them a culture of extreme violence and ostentatious wealth that seems more at home in the ghettoes of Los Angeles than those of Yorkshire. To many it would seem an appalling lifestyle. But try telling that to Salim. He knows where his role models lie. And it is not in his parents' family business. It is instead the gold-chain wearing drug traffickers with their new BMW cars, souped-up hi-fi systems and latest designer sportswear. Salim, who dropped out of his civil engineering degree five years ago, says he can earn up to ?200 a night. As the rain got heavier, he pulled at his Ralph Lauren wind-breaker. 'This cost me ?150. There's no way I could afford that if I was a student. Or even if I was working,' he said. Fifteen minutes later, a young Asian man drove by in a gleaming Mercedes. 'He does the same thing as me,' said Salim, almost in awe. 'That's what I want. But you need to spend time out here in these streets. That man's taken it to the next level.' But the 'next level' is a violent place. The culture of 'saving face' among drug gangs can lead to the slightest perceived insult being punished with horrific violence. Recently two Asian men, who had been refused entry into Bradford's Milk Bar nightclub, threatened to return with 'shooters'. They kept their promise, spraying the club with bullets and shooting four revellers in the legs. The gangs are highly organised and stretch from the inner cities of Britain to the poppy fields of Afghanistan. At the bottom of the pile are the 'runners', usually young teenagers who make drug deliveries on specially bought mountain bikes. Then come street dealers like Salim, supplying runners and customers with their fixes. Above him are the murky upper echelons of the gang world, often using family ties with Pakistan to arrange the courier routes that bring the drugs, nearly all heroin, back to Britain. The profits are high: a kilo of refined heroin bought in Pakistan costs ?125,000 but is sold in Britain for twice that amount, before being cut and sold on the streets. If the drug is bought in the form of raw opium it is even cheaper. The callousness is staggering. In April a 13-year-old Bradford girl was stopped at Heathrow. She was being used to smuggle more than ?1 million of heroin. Older people are victims too. Patel, who is one of the few drug researchers working with Asians, has come across numerous cases of elderly Asians being used as drug mules after they got into financial problems. As the gangs have grown they have also become more sophisticated. Over the past two years Patel said he has noticed crack cocaine make its first appearances among the Asian gangs. From concentrating on their own communities, they have moved on to supplying white users too. It leads to friction with other drug gangs, but the potential profits are just too great to ignore. For Salim the economics of the situation are obvious. The trickle of customers is steady, despite the bad weather. Individual customers - white and Asian - pass by and make discreet hand signals. Look-outs stand nearby. 'If you ignore white people, then that's a lot of money you're missing out on. Why ignore all those people who want to buy from me? And I've found the guaras (whites) to be good customers,' Salim said. But there is a conspiracy of silence hanging over Britain's Asian drug problem. From within the community few are willing to speak out, while outsiders - such as outspoken Keighley MP Ann Cryer - are castigated as damaging race relations. For anti-drug campaigners it is a nightmarish situation: they have to deal with a disaster that few will speak of, or even admit exists. Many older Asians refuse to see there is a problem. They were brought up in a society where immigrants got their heads down, worked hard and ignored racism. 'It doesn't set the pattern for the whole city. Yes, there are a few kids selling drugs. But that is to be expected,' said Abdul Karim, 56, a Bradford shopkeeper. But young Asians, born and brought up in Britain, have left their parents' generation a long way behind. There has been a massive communication breakdown. Now a few of the elderly are starting to admit there is a crisis. Waqas Abdullah, 56, has lived in Bradford's Manningham area for 30 years. He has tried to take his three sons to the local mosque and instill in them values of family, religion and work. But it has not succeeded. And he knows it. 'They've forgotten who they are. I know that some of their friends are selling drugs to make a living. It's a problem and the Asian community doesn't want to talk about it,' he said. The stigma of drug abuse is so strong in the community that some families have sent addict children back to Pakistan to kick the habit. Unfortunately, they discover a country grappling with its own heroin problems and where a fix is much cheaper than in Britain. There is also a language problem. Few of the services aimed at treating addicts or at educating a community about the dangers of drugs or gangs are available in south Asian languages. As a result few Asians seek official help. 'They are simply not accessing the services as they should be doing,' said Mahmood Hussain, a project worker with an anti-drugs scheme in Rotherham. On the other side of the equation are the howls of protest that greeted Cryer's recent remarks on the drugs gripping the Asian community in Keighley. Despite a few brave voices in support, including some from the Muslim community, her warning that drugs gangs were 'terrorising' Asian communities were drowned out by those accusing her of being irresponsible and uninformed. In the wake of last year's riots across the North, discussing the region's Asian communities has become a politically correct minefield. A recent Bradford University report, ironically called 'Breaking the Silences', refused even to address the problem of whether Asians could be racist against whites. 'It is a controversial issue on which we do not wish to take a view,' the report said. But those working on the frontline of the problem welcomed Cryer's comments. 'I totally agree with what she said. This is an issue and the community has to face up to it,' said Hussain. A lot is at stake. 'If we don't defeat this our children will become part of the problem. We must break this cycle,' Cryer said. She could not be more right. Earlier this year 10-year-old pupils from St Andrew's school in Keighley were encouraged to write about their fears as the town faced up to the rash of drug killings that had rocked its Asian community. The resulting letters, sent anonymously to Cryer and the local police, made for sobering reading: 'Nearly every day I see people in a gang coming and breaking our windows and phone boxes. People are selling drugs everywhere. I feel trapped, unsafe, worried and frightened,' wrote one child. Some things are being done. In South Yorkshire Madge Wilson is setting up a drugs helpline that will offer advice and guidance in Punjabi and Urdu. She hopes it will help reach those most unable to deal with the problem affecting their communities. 'There is a need for this. We want to break down this barrier for people who are trying to seek help,' she said. There are countless other small-scale projects popping up all over the country. Patel has recently completed work on a two-year scheme aiming at tackling drugs issues in the Greater London borough of Southall. His workers have trained dozens of women and youngsters to educate people about the dangers of drugs and the criminality that goes with them. He estimates they reached more than 500 families in total, spreading a message in their own language and by members of their own community. 'It really is all about education in the end. Education and the opportunity to get jobs outside the business of drug dealing,' Patel said. There are signs that the issue is at last starting to emerge on to the agenda: inside the Asian community and outside. But the Salims of this world are hard to beat. The growing violence of the gangs creates resentment and feuds that spread into the wider community. It leads to a higher police presence in areas where relations with the police are often already strained. Amid the heroin and marijuana already on the streets, crack is now making significant inroads: offering a bigger high and fatter profits. There is still little hope of local jobs offering wages that can compete with the sums offered by the drugs trade. At the moment anti-drugs police in the Bradford area are talking a tough game on the subject. 'If you get involved in drugs in this city you are going to end up in court or a box. You will not get rich. Bradford and Keighley are not good places to be a drug dealer,' said Chief Superintendent Graham Sunderland. But the situation on the ground appears very different. For Salim the money is rolling in. He has many regular users from all over the city who return to him several times a week and he carries on his work largely unmolested by police or rivals. On his patch of Lumb Lane, once notorious as a red-light area, the local dealers have arranged an informal truce. No one wants a repeat of the Keighley slayings on the streets of Bradford. It is not good for trade. And the drugs business is booming. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake