A Case of Robberies Against Lithuanian Farm Workers

Published: 22 March 2005 y., Tuesday
Lithuanian workers on Danish farms receive blackmail threats from mafia organizations at home. ‘Pay up, or your family suffers. We know where they live.’ Lithuanian mafia organizations do not seem to have many scruples about pressing money from their compatriots working in Denmark. The Skjern City Court opened a case of robberies against Lithuanian farm workers on Monday. The four suspects are Lithuanian as well, and Public Prosecutor Jens Dissing said the criminals were obviously organized. ‘The story is that farm workers have to pay USD 100 a month to ‘be allowed’ to work in Denmark,’ he said. The robbers used knives and pistols to threaten the workers to hand over their passports, money, and cars, and told them things would happen to their families at home if they told the police. In many cases the workers have declined to report the incidents to the police, and many witnesses have either disappeared or refuse to say a word to the police, Dissing said.
Šaltinis: cphpost.dk
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Indian wives and daughters rally

At the national war memorial in New Delhi, India's war widows and daughters remember their fallen. more »

New skills = better jobs

By 2020, three out of four people employed in the EU will be working in services like insurance, healthcare, retail and education, according to a new report on the future of the European job market. more »

Berlin zoo thrilled with baby hippo

Berlin Zoo's very pleased about the new arrival, as she's the first hippo to be born in Berlin in three years. more »

Europe's workers tell us what they think of working hours

MEPs and EU ministers are trying to reach an agreement on how many hours we should work and whether countries should continue to be allowed to opt out of these rules. more »

MEPs to debate clearer export licences for arms

Tanks, guns, socks: the buying of military equipment like this from abroad is complicated due to export rules all being different. more »

New Taj Mahal opens in Bangladesh

The life-size replica of the real monument of love has just opened to the public. more »

Dispatch from Poznań climate change talks

A series of ice statues symbolizing the dangers of global warming welcomed delegates to the climate change conference taking place in Poznań this week. more »

Diamond sells for record price

The diamond is 35.56 carats and dates back to the 17th century. more »

Muslim pilgrims stone the devil

Around two million muslims performed the pilgrimage on their haj, which in the past has been tarred by hotel collapses and stampedes. more »

China's first "private" dining

Yuebin or Happy Guest restaurant became Communist China's first private restaurant. more »