Pubdate: Fri, 04 Sep 2009 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Kim Bolan BBC LATEST TO PICK UP ON VANCOUVER'S GANG VIOLENCE PROBLEM The reputable British Broadcasting Corporation is the latest international media outlet reporting on the dramatic increase in gang violence in Metro Vancouver. The BBC reports - on radio, television and online - highlighted the increase in organized crime murders in the last two years, interviewing police, victims' families and an ex-gangster. "Drug Trouble in Paradise," one BBC headline blared online. "The west coast Canadian city of Vancouver, home to the 2010 Winter Olympics, is routinely voted one of the best communities in the world to live in, a place people here like to think of as paradise. But there is a dark side to paradise," the article continues. Over the last few months, the Los Angeles Times, the London-based Independent newspaper and the Economist magazine have all focused on Vancouver's gang wars. Solicitor General Kash Heed said Thursday that we have to acknowledge the problem highlighted in the international coverage, while recognizing that a lot has been done to combat gangs. "We've had [a] difficult time. In 2008, we had 29 more homicides on our streets and that is unacceptable," Heed said in an interview. "But in February of this year, we announced the seven-point gang and organized crime strategy to deal with this violence." That plan, which included more cops and more designated prosecutors, resulted in dozens of gang arrests and hundreds of charges in the last few months, Heed said. "We have had recent success." And there are many other cities in the world with a much worse organized crime problem. But the BBC reports come after a rash of gangland slayings in recent days. Homicide detectives were probing seven new homicides in four days last week alone. Heed said the B.C. government is still pushing for legislative changes in Ottawa that would aid police in their anti-gang investigations. "We also believe in taking a balanced approach to this problem so we can get in front of it," Heed said. "And that includes not only being tough on these gang members and pursuing them aggressively, but being equally tough on the social conditions that breed them. " And he said while it is important to focus on the gang problem, it is equally important to take note that overall violent crime is down in B.C. "My goal is to have the most effective and accountable police service in British Columbia and part of that is to review our processes and our structures to ensure that we are targeting our problems and policing smarter than we ever have before," Heed said. Vancouver pollster Angus Reid was in London Thursday, where his company has an office. When his taxi driver heard he was from Vancouver, "he confronted me with the story on Guns, Drugs and Crime that he heard on the BBC," Reid said in an e-mail. "It was quite weird really - normally when I come to London ... I chat with people who, upon finding I'm from Vancouver, dish out the usual praise 'what a great city,'" Reid said. "The cabbie told me that he thought Vancouver seemed like Chicago in the 1920s - gunfights on the street, gang wars. It was really a bit of a wake-up call that our international reputation leading up to our "Olympic" moment may not be quite as perfect as we think." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart