Teen gangs thrive in Chennai under crime lords

Crime lords find it easy to lure teenagers with offer of money, food and liquor.

Update: 2013-11-15 08:02 GMT
Illustration: P.K. Job
 
Chennai:  Chennai may not have gang wars involving violent youngsters like some other cities of the world — a subject the Brazilian movie  City of God  deals with — but the recent arrest of a five-member teen gang in St Thomas Mount has for­ced the police to take a serious look at the growing trend of  youngsters being drawn into anti-social groups.  
 
Law enforcers admit that a significant presence of teenaged boys in gangs prowling  the city has them worried. “Crime lords find it easy to lure teenagers with the offer of money, food and liquor. Most of the dreaded gang leaders, who have been killed or are in jail, joined their bosses when they were merely 15 or 16 years old. Once they become a part of the gangs, they are eager to show their loyalty and do whatever their leader asks,” says an officer who has been on the trail of several of the­se gangs in the city of late.
 
One teen­aged member of a gang hired to eliminate a real estate broker in Thiruve rka­du  a year and a half ago by his rival, when questioned by the police confessed,  “I too hit him on his head. But I didn’t know who  he was.”
 
His admission reflected the story of many a youngster lured into crime in the city.     The gang  he had joined had mistaken the driver of the realtor to be its target and chased and hacked him to death. The boy, who was doing a vocational course, was offered  a bike to join it. 
 
While this gang was into more serious crime, the police has found that the teen gang nabbed redhanded near St Thomas Mount recently  was mainly into extortion and roadside waylaying to fund its need for   ganja and alcohol.
 
“But there is every possibility of its members graduating into full-fledged gangsters ,” says the officer, blaming  family backgrounds, the social stratas these boys belong to, parenting, and proximity to active criminal gangs for pushing them into a life of  crime.
 
While they may  step into the criminal world quite innocently , lured by the prospect of making some easy money, they soon discover that ‘once you are in, you are in forever.’ Its a hard lesson for the teenagers to learn, but escape they cannot, adds the officer. 

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