Thursday, August 14, 2008

Another day, another hold up

A day can't go by without mentioning a bank robbery in Portugal. After last weeks hostage situation, and yesterday's attempted robbery of a Millennium in Loures comes news of yet another bank hold-up in Lisbon.

This time, a branch of the Banco Popular was the target, when a 50 year-old man wearing a wig held up the staff with a gun. The man fled the bank on foot, and the police have yet to reveal how much was stolen.

This robbery comes on the same day that the Diário Económico reported that in the first SIX MONTHS of 2008 there has been a bank robbery, or an attempted robbery, once every 40 hours in Portugal, with a haul of approximately 439.000€.

Topping the list of banks targetted was Millennium bcp, with 15 robberies, followed by the Caixa Geral de Depósitos (CGD) with 13 and Montepio with 12. Santander, which was fourth on the list, with 8 robberies, actually lost the most money, with a total of 86.000€, while CGD lost 66.000€ the banks Funchal and BANIF lost 48.000€. Aside from the hostage situation last week, BES actually had the least number of branches robbed.

With aprroximately four robberies per week, the survey identified, unsurprisingly, that Lisbon was the city most at risk, followed by Porto in the north and Sétubal in the south. On average, the haul from each robbery was 4.400€.

One thief that won't be contributing to the figures for the rest of the year was Jaime Jímenez Arbe, 51, the robber known as ‘El solitário’, who was caught by police last week after robbing 26 banks.

The daily free sheet Destak compared the figures in Portugal with those in Brazil and the US. With a population of about 10million, if the numbers of robberies continue at their present rate, there will be 100 robberies by the end of the year. By contrast, with a population of 180million there were 529 robberies in 2007, and in the US over 10,000 robberies. On the other hand, Portugal can't compare with Baghdad, officially the bank robbery capital of the world, where approximately $1million a month is stolen.

While the police are chasing bank robbers, the funeral of Paulo Salazar, the 13 year-old killed in the foiled warehouse robbery on Monday, will take place tomorrow. Although family will be there, and no doubt a completment of GNR keeping an eye on the service, one person who won't be is the father of the boy, who hasn't been seen since being driven away from court yesterday. Odds are he won't turn up for his court date, either.

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