From the BBC:
“Barcelona crime wave tarnishes
boom in tourism”
Several violent robberies,
including the mugging of a foreign diplomat, have drawn attention to a wave of
crime in Barcelona that is alarming residents and the local authorities. The
Afghan ambassador in Spain, Humayoon Rasaw, was robbed on Sunday night in
central Barcelona, when several assailants threw him to the ground and took his
watch. Mr Rasaw suffered a leg injury in the attack. A few blocks away, also on
Sunday night, a 91-year-old French woman suffered head injuries when thieves
grabbed her necklace. Meanwhile, a
German tourist was treated in hospital after being mugged two days earlier in
the same area. Barcelona city hall's head of security, Albert Batlle, has
described the situation as "a crime crisis", and statistics seem to
confirm that this trend began well before the summer. Overall, crimes increased
by 9% during the first six months of this year, compared with the same period
in 2018. Violent crimes were up 31% over
the same period (with a rise of nearly 60% over the last three years), while
robberies with force against businesses were up 66%.
'Out of control'
"It's time to admit the
situation is out of control," said Luis Sans, president of an association
representing businesses on the Passeig de Gràcia, a major street running
through central Barcelona. But while the authorities and the police acknowledge
that the Catalan capital is struggling to cope with this trend, they do not see
one clear cause driving it. The Catalan government has agreed to step up police
patrols in Barcelona A city of 1.6
million residents, Barcelona drew 16 million visitors last year. Pickpockets
and other petty criminals have long been operating in tourist-heavy areas such
as the Ramblas boulevard and the Ciutat Vella neighbourhood that surrounds it. An official at city hall says that the rise in
crime in the city is "a collateral effect" of Barcelona's meteoric
rise as a tourist hub since it hosted the 1992 Olympic Games. Yet the crime
wave has also been attributed to the Spanish legal system. Courts'
interpretation of a 2015 reform of the penal code means that first-time petty
criminals rarely go to prison and even those caught reoffending will often pay
a fine rather than going to jail, if they steal items worth less than €400
(£367). "The legislative and judicial powers are not managing to provide a
response to a specific problem in our society: repeated theft," Andrés
Maluelda, of the law firm Molins, told El Periódico newspaper. The current
legal framework, he said, offers a degree of impunity to professional thieves.
Political wrangling
Others are blaming the presence
of unaccompanied immigrant minors in the city. Alberto Fernández of the conservative Popular
Party (PP) said earlier this year that 80% of these children, who are mainly
from Morocco, "end up in criminal circles and undermine coexistence"
in the neighbourhoods where they live. Statistics supporting Mr Fernández's
claim do not appear to be available and city hall, led by the leftist mayor Ada
Colau, says no such link should be made. "The presence of these
unaccompanied minors in Barcelona is a social problem," says a city hall
source. "[But] we never associate their presence here with the increase in
crime." Although the political opposition has accused Ms Colau of being
soft on crime, she has boosted the city's security budget. Last year funding to
fight crime increased by 16%, according to official figures, followed by a rise
of 11% in this year's budget. Also, the
Catalan regional government has agreed to deploy 300 extra police to the city
in September, following a plea from city hall, which said it lacked officers on
the street. Besides thefts, an upsurge in violent deaths in recent months is
also a concern. In June, a South Korean woman who was visiting Barcelona with a
government delegation died from a head injury after falling when a thief
grabbed her purse. Such incidents have brought bad publicity to a city loved
for its sunshine, beaches, bars and monuments. But its head of security insists the problem
should not be exaggerated. "Barcelona is still a safe city in comparison
with others, like Paris, London or Rome," said Mr Batlle. "This is a
big, complex city and there are many factors at play," said a spokesperson
for the Catalan police, pointing out that the force had increased its arrest
rate in a bid to stem the rise in crime. "We don't believe there is one
cause behind all this."
^ This is a sad trend. I have
family and friends in Barcelona. Hopefully all the government officials (the
Barcelona City Government, the Catalan Government and the Spanish Government in
Madrid) will start doing more to make the city safe again. ^
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