The Greenies will be rubbing their handies in glee as they look forward to Fed Labor winning and RESTARTING the BOATS and FLOODING Australia with violent Black African Terrorists who are better at disrupting Australian society than the formerly favored Muslims. Even tho one of Labor's illegal invaders went berserk in Melbourne a day or so ago.
Just think of the election ramifications for the imposter Vic Labor "Govt" who has encouraged and protected these Black African Terrorists to please the local Greenies who want to see the evil white men who run Australia overthrown.Victorian election: African crime hits Labor seatsBERNARD LANE ROVING EDITOR, LEADER WRITER, DATA JOURNALIST SAMANTHA HUTCHINSON VICTORIAN STATE POLITICAL WRITER 12:00AM NOVEMBER 20, 2018
Elena Morgan, who was attacked by three women of African appearance late last year, in Richmond yesterday. Picture: David Geraghty
East African crime in Victoria is overwhelmingly a problem in Labor seats, with the major hotspots overlapping key sand-belt marginals as well as many electorates considered rock solid for the Andrews government.Analysis by The Australian shows 19 mostly Melbourne local government areas with a significant history of crime by offenders born in Sudan and other Horn of Africa countries over the past 10 years. Those areas overlay 31 Labor electorates, including the four vulnerable bayside seats of Frankston (held on a margin of 0.5 per cent), Carrum (0.7), Bentleigh (0.8) and Mordialloc (2.1).
Premier Daniel Andrews’ district of Mulgrave overlaps with the number two African crime hotspot of Greater Dandenong, while Bill Shorten’s federal seat of Maribyrnong lines up with the council area of the same name that is ranked number one for African-born crime.
It is the first time that the scale, footprint and decade-long trend of police dealings with African-born “alleged offenders” in Melbourne has been put clearly on the map. The data covers all kinds of dealings with police, from official warnings through low-grade offences to brutal crime.
The story of East African crime in MelbourneLaw and order — along with the spectre of burglary, home invasion, assault and carjacking by youths of African appearance — has been a polarising issue in the lead-up to Saturday’s election.
Victorian Police Minister Lisa Neville said yesterday that “high-harm crimes by African youth offenders” had fallen in the latest figures. “We’re delivering an unprecedented investment into 3135 new police, and giving police the powers, resources and tools they need to keep the community safe,” she said.
Elena Morgan was assaulted 11 months ago in East Melbourne on her way to work. She was in the Greens-held electorate of Melbourne and was targeted by three teenage girls of African appearance who had spent a night at a party and set upon her at 7.30am, repeatedly punching her before trying to push her into the path of oncoming traffic.
The traumatic assault left her physically and emotionally injured, “I was fearing for my life,” she told The Australian. It has also left her about $8000 out of pocket through medical expenses, including physiotherapy, psychological help and specialist appointments.
She says victims of crime in Victoria need to be taken seriously.
“The police do such a good job and there are a lot of people in the system who want to help you, but they’re all under huge caseloads and so the waiting times are really long for people who need help paying medical bills,” she said.
“And so when politicians talk about changing the system, they need to realise it’s not just about making people safer and stopping this stuff from happening — it’s also about looking at the other half and the people who’ve been affected by crime and making it simpler for them to get back on track.”
Two of the three offenders involved in the attack, both teenagers, were arrested and charged. One person has been sentenced and another remains at large.
African crime in Victoria: what people are sayingIn today’s crime-data analysis, the combined African “offender incident” count is very low compared with Australian-born offenders but higher than would be expected given their small population in Victoria. The analysis focuses on countries from the war-torn Horn of Africa: Sudan, South Sudan, Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea.
The data does not include Australian-born offenders from Horn of Africa families.
Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Graham Ashton has said the African crime problem involves a small number “(who are) mostly people born here”. Some African parents say their children born locally have to be viewed as products of the Australian experience, not the horrors of the home country.
The election disaster for Vic Labor continues overleaf