Pubdate: Sun, 12 Apr 2009 Source: Sunday Times (UK) Copyright: 2009 Times Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/newspapers/sunday_times/?days=Sunday Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/439 Author: John Harlow Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Vancouver Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) GANG WARS TURN LAIDBACK VANCOUVER INTO MURDER CITY WITH its backdrop of snow-capped mountains facing the Pacific Ocean and relaxed life-style, Vancouver was once bracketed among the world's most desirable cities. It has been ranked with Zurich and Vienna as having the highest quality of living and sits alongside Cape Town and Sydney for its natural beauty. Not any more: with shootings on the rise and drug gangs fighting over turf, the city's image is suffering just before it hosts the Winter Olympics. Criminologists are calling it Vancouver's "year of the gun". There have been 47 shootings, 19 of them fatal, this year alone, twice as many as five years ago. Peter Van Lorn, Canada's minister for public safety, has declared Vancouver the country's new gang capital. Jim Chu, the city's police chief, admitted: "There is a gang war and it's brutal." Critics say it is a war the police are losing. The city's troubles were high-lighted last week at the trial of a gangster who had murdered an innocent young man who just happened to walk past a neigh-bour's flat where a gangland execution was taking place. Eileen Mohan, the victim's mother, watched as Dennis Karbovanec, 27, an "enforcer" for Vancouver's Red Scorpion drug gang, was jailed for 15 years - a rare triumph for law and order in a city that has always prided itself on its liberal attitude to drugs but is now paying the price. Mohan, 45, is leading a countercharge against the complacency which, she believes, contributed to the death of her son 18 months ago, shot dead in a massacre that police say marked the start of the murder "spike". "People must learn that the world has changed. We must modernise the judiciary and increase police numbers to take down such monsters," she said. Her 22-year-old son, Chris, was leaving their flat in the suburb of Surrey, when he noticed a toolbox left outside a neigh-bour's door. He poked his head around the open door of apartment 1505, usually one of the quietest flats in the block, only to walk into a slaughterhouse. Police believe that Karbovanec and other Red Scorpions had already killed four rival drug dealers, who were living there, as well as Ed Schellen-berg, a gas-fitter sent to repair a fire. They then dragged Mohan into the flat and shot him through the back of the head. The dispute, over "tax" owed by one of the victims to the Scorpions, ended in six deaths. It is stark evidence that Canada is no longer the "peace-loving country filled with gun owners" depicted in Michael Moore's 2002 polemic Bowling for Columbine: across the nation, say critics, gangsters are getting away with murder. Michael Chettleburgh, author of Young Thugs, explained that the city was suffering a crime wave because police in eastern Canadian cities have driven their gangsters out west. "Vancouver is an anomaly, a perfect hothouse for gangsters as young as nine years old," said the adviser to several Canadian police forces. "There is widespread cultural tolerance of marijuana, which is traded across the British Columbian border for cocaine and guns. Hell's Angels run the docks and while many dealers come from poor homes, there are a rising number of south Asian kids from million-dollar homes getting involved in the business." Chettleburgh estimated that there were 25,000 full-time gangsters in Canada, 10% of them in Vancouver, and they are increasingly violent. "We have maybe 10 years to split the 15% hard core gangsters from their followers to prevent a Canadian epidemic," he said. On Thursday, as Karbovanec was led away to give evidence against fellow gangsters, the city's latest "gang-related" victim, Lionel Tan, 24, was buried. He had been cut down in a hail of bullets on Monday night as he stepped out of his BMW. Last week Jana McGuinness, a spokesman for Vancouver police, said they were getting calls wondering if the city would be safe for next February's Olympics. Stephen Harper, Canada's prime minister, wants to increase jail sentences for gangsters and has pledged 15,000 extra police for the Games. By that time, he hopes, the west coast gangs will have sorted out their territorial issues "one way or another". - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake