Australia to crack down on organised crime
AUSTRALIA: Australia will set up an anti-gang taskforce based on an
United States Federal Bureau of Investigation model to combat "the gangs
and guns on our streets", Prime Minister Julia Gillard said Sunday.
Gillard said the Aus$64 million (US$65.3 million) taskforce will be
made up of 70 Police from national and state forces and include officers
from the Australian Crime Commission, Customs and the Tax Department.
"These are new measures to try and make sure we are combating the gangs
and guns on our streets," Gillard told reporters in Sydney.
The Prime Minister announced the plan ahead of her five-day stay in
western Sydney, scene of a recent spate of shootings.
Gillard denied the taskforce was a ploy to win back voters in
Sydney's western suburbs, formerly a stronghold of her Australian Labor
Party but now under threat of swinging to the opposition before
September 14 elections.
"This is about a national plan and bringing new national resources to
make a difference," she said.
The Prime Minister said gun crime had dropped in recent years, but
there had been an increase in shootings in public places, with these
rising from 73 in 2010 to some 130 in 2012 in the most populous state of
New South Wales.
AFP |