Ex-Yugoslavs Control Euro Smuggling
Rackets
The arrest in Sweden of a Serb murder suspect
underlines former Yugoslav gangs' continued domination
of cigarette smuggling across Europe.
By Hugh Griffiths in Stockholm (BCR No 459, 12-Sep-03)
The arrest of Serbian national Darko Milicevic in Sweden
is the latest in a series of incidents highlighting the
dominant role ex-Yugoslav gangs continue to play in
pan-European crime rackets.
Milicevic, 26, was arrested in the port city of
Gothenburg on August 31, at the request of the Belgrade
authorities. Swedish police said he was wanted for a
number of murders in Serbia, without elaborating.
But the Serbia's interior ministry said it had requested
his arrest on a warrant naming him as a member of the
infamous Zemun gang who was suspected of involvement in
the March 12 assassination of Serbian Prime Minister
Zoran Ðindic
The Zemun gang is believed to have run a major network
which smuggled anything from cigarettes and fuel to guns
and drugs, both in Serbia and beyond.
Milicevic was first arrested in Sweden together with two
ethnic Albanians in connection with the August 2000
murder of two rival drug dealers in Gothenburg. He was
later deported for using a false identity after the case
against him collapsed.
Although it might seem a strange alliance given the
bitter recent history of Serb-Albanian relations, the
Zemun gang is thought to have cooperated with ethnic
Albanians in the past. Drug dealers in Belgrade familiar
with the gang's modus operandi have told IWPR that
Albanians in Macedonia provided Zemun members with a
steady supply of heroin following the Kosova conflict.
Swedish police are holding Milicevic while they decide
whether to charge him with any crimes committed within
their jurisdiction, but their counterparts in Belgrade
are confident that he will be extradited after the
detention period expires.
Organised crime groups originating from the former
Yugoslavia have a long record of operating in Sweden. As
well as a string of murders, their activities have been
highlighted by regular seizures of narcotics, cigarettes
and arms by the Swedish authorities.
Serbia's most notorious gangster, indicted war criminal
Željko Ražnatovic, better known as Arkan, was a
pioneer, leading at least five bank heists in Stockholm
and Gothenburg during the 1970s when he was nicknamed
"the smiling bank robber" by Swedish police.
Swedish-based associates of Arkan, such as Dragan
Joksovic and later Milan Sevo, gained notoriety in the
Swedish media, and were regarded as Stockholm's leading
gang bosses.
Beginning in 1997, Arkan and Joksovic went on to form
part of a pan-European cigarette smuggling network. That
first year, the number of cigarettes smuggled into
Sweden more than doubled, reaching close to 40 million
according to Swedish customs. A single Macedonian lorry
intercepted at the port of Trelleborg was found to be
carrying 16 million cigarettes.
"We know that Arkan and Joksovic represented the Serbian
and Swedish control points of network which smuggled
cigarettes from the Balkans into northern Europe," said
a Swedish customs official working in the Balkans, who
asked not to be named.
Joksovic was murdered in Stockholm in 1998 in a dispute
over smuggled cigarettes, and Arkan was killed in
Belgrade in January 2000. Sevo is currently serving a
prison term for weapons offences. The same week that
they detained Milicevic, Swedish police took Sevo's
brother into custody following the discovery of an arms
cache that included assault rifles, grenades and
ammunition.
Despite the removal of such key players, Swedish customs
officers say that ex-Yugoslav gangsters still dominate
cigarette smuggling across much of Europe.
"We have a number of cases which make it clear that the
import and distribution of counterfeit cigarettes is
controlled by people from former Yugoslavia," IWPR was
told by investigator Tomas Petersson, Swedish customs'
foremost expert on tobacco smuggling.
Petersson said Sweden is a transit route for counterfeit
cigarettes smuggled onwards to Norway and the United
Kingdom.
As the gangs have matured, they have diversified away
from their traditional trafficking routes through the
Balkan countries. Petersson explained how crime bosses
have used the money and expertise gained from earlier
operations to open up new networks in Poland, the Baltic
States and Belarus.
"I think that with some of these new countries entering
the EU, this will get highlighted more. These big guys
from the former Yugoslavia move up and station
themselves in these countries. I know they have some
people in Poland, close to the distributors, just to
make sure the money runs the right way and the right
guys get the right payment," he said.
While former Yugoslavs manage the trade, other
nationalities are used for menial work.
"As soon as you have to use your hands, do any kind of
real work, they prefer to let someone else do it -
Lithuanians or Poles. But it's the ex-Yugoslavs - and in
one case we had Kosova Albanians - who are taking care
of the money question here in Sweden," Petersson said.
Magnus Ramebaeck, a Swedish prosecutor who has handled a
large number of cigarette smuggling cases, confirms this
hierarchy. The people he prosecutes are typically
drivers from Poland or the Baltics, but "from our
investigations we know that we have not yet reached the
key ex-Yugoslav persons high up in the hierarchy.
Arrested suspects have talked about former Yugoslavs
during questioning, but their information is not enough
on its own for us to take action against these people."
Despite the occasional killing or arrest, the smugglers
remain in business. On September 3, Estonian customs
officers seized 640,000 cigarettes on a ship bound for
Sweden.