Vulin announced: Starting tonight, more police in the streets



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Belgrade – The Interior Minister says that the police will be on the streets in greater numbers tonight, when the new measures for the suppression of the coronavirus come into force.


Source: Tanjug

Photo: Illustration / EPA-EFE / FEHIM DEMIR

Photo: Illustration / EPA-EFE / FEHIM DEMIR

According to Aleksandar Vulin, the largest police presence will be closer to areas where public order and peace may be violated.

“Of course we will provide security for everyone,” Vulin told RTS.

He stated that the police will be there if someone opposes the communal militia, as well as that they will warn unscrupulous citizens that they must respect the law, which is the same for everyone.

Vulin said that the head of the Interior Ministry came to continue the fight against crime and especially to intensify the fight against organized crime.

He added that he would focus on street crime, pedophilia, deparoes and all those that disrupt the daily lives of citizens.

Commenting on President Aleksandar Vui’s accusations about fighting the mafia, Vulin said that the president did not say anything by chance and that he was a brave man who, in saying that, put himself and his family as the first targets. .

Speaking of the mafia clashes in Belgrade, he said that it involved two great clans, the Cagliari and the Kavaks, that they had large amounts of money at their disposal, and that the brutality and cruelty they faced was “cinematic”. “It is up to us to fight with almost all the resources, I ask the citizens to support us in that and to be with us,” said the minister.

He pointed out that there is no place in the country for organized crime, which is as strong as the state. “In this country, the mafia will not and cannot have its own state,” Vulin said.

The minister said that the definition of organized crime speaks of the connection of criminal structures with those who have some decision-making power in the state.

He says that some people have been identified, but that it is not the police who decide to publish their identities, but the prosecution.



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