The Arifs are a south-east London-based Turkish Cypriot criminal organization heavily involved in armed robbery, drug trafficking and other racketeering-related activities within London's underworld since the late 1960s. Following the downfall of the Kray brothers, the Arifs were one of several criminal organisations who took control of the London underworld including the Clerkenwell crime syndicate and the Brindle family.[1] with whom they were engaged in a highly publicised gangland war during the 1990s.

Arif family
Founded byMehmet Arif, Deniz Arif and Doğan Arif
Founding locationSouth London
Years active1980s–present
TerritorySouth London
EthnicityTurkish Cypriot
Criminal activitiesDrug trafficking, armed robbery, arms trafficking, extortion
AlliesAdams family
Turkish mafia
RivalsBaybaşin family

The Arifs themselves were considered the leading crime family in the London area throughout the late 1980s before the arrest and conviction of most of its leadership, including most of the Arif family members, for armed robbery and drug-related offences in early 1990s.[2] In 2004, the Irish Daily Mirror called the Arifs "Britain's No 1 crime family."[3] This was also said by some media outlets in 2016.[4]

History

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They are Turkish-Cypriot in origin have been operating in south-east London since the 1960s. After the demise of the Kray brothers, several criminal enterprises attempted to move into the vacuum left behind. The Arifs are known to be, or have been involved in racketeering, drug smuggling, armed robbery and murders. The gang is led by brothers Deniz, Mehmet and Doğan Arif but more brothers are involved in the various operations.[5]

In November 1990, Deniz and Mehmet, wearing Ronald Reagan masks and wielding shotguns, were arrested in Woodhatch (Reigate, Surrey) as they attempted to rob a Securicor van. Mehmet Arif, who was driving a pick-up used in the robbery, was shot by police, but survived. His passenger, Kenneth Baker, was armed with a sawn-off shotgun, and was shot dead as he attempted to open fire on officers.[6]

Bekir Arif, 52, known as "The Duke", one of seven brothers in the family, was convicted of conspiracy to supply 100 kg of heroin worth £12.5 million in 1999 and given a 23-year term of imprisonment. Dogan Arif, also jailed for drug smuggling, is said to be controlling the family fortune from prison.[6] Their family is said to maintain ties with relations in Turkey who oversee shipments arriving in mainland Europe.

See also

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Further reading

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  • Murder of a good man; A drug gang had been cheated and someone had to pay. It cost an innocent victim his life. Daily Record. 03 Dec 2007
  • Drugs gang 'godfather' is facing 20 years' jail. Evening Standard. 04 Nov 2004
  • Busted; Exclusive Top Irish Drug Dealer Is Held In Eur2M Cocaine Raid. The Mirror. 07 Apr 2004
  • Gun Culture: Gun Gangs Of The Capital; Opinion. The Independent. 21 Sept 2003
  • End Of A Long Line Of Criminals. The Scotsman. 3 May 2002
  • Perry police quiz gangsters. Evening Standard. 30 Nov 2001
  • Bands of brothers; London's web of crime. Time Out. 28 Nov 2001
  • Heroin mastermind jailed. Western Morning News. 22 May 1999
  • Cypriot 'mafia' brother jailed for £12m drug plot. Evening Standard. 21 May 1999
  • Just when you thought london was a safer place. Evening Standard. 23 Sept 1998
  • Hitman Brought In To End Feud Jailed; 15-year minimum sentence imposed. Tangled London gangland war cost eight lives, Old Bailey told. The Guardian. 25 Mar 1997
  • Gangland hitman came from Dublin. The Independent. 22 Sept 1995
  • Caution: you are about to enter gangland Britain; British gangs are disorganised, crude and parochial. Triads, Yardies and Mafiosi are not. me They're here. And their methods are catching. The Independent. 21 Aug 1995
  • Men who run Crime UK. Sunday Times. 15 Jan 1995
  • All in the family: The British way of crime. The Observer. 11 July 1993
  • Murder in a tight little manor; Two men were shot to death in a south London pub last weekend, but witnesses are thin on the ground. Cal McCrystal unpicks the gangland ties that blind. The Independent. 11 Aug 1991
  • Death at the Bell. Sunday Times. 11 Aug 1991
  • Police step up fight to curb gangland killings. The Independent. 06 Aug 1991

References

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  1. ^ "Focus: Britain's Top 10 Crimes". The Independent. 2004-04-18. Archived from the original on 2008-09-22.
  2. ^ Steele, John (1997-03-25). "Bloody vendetta that brought eight deaths to streets of London". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2003-05-17. Retrieved 2021-08-04.
  3. ^ "Comment: Drugs Only Deal Death and Misery," Irish Daily Mirror, April 7, 2004 (LexisNexis).
  4. ^ Nevett, Joshua (30 March 2016). "Top mobster jailed after £1.5m drug bust but his lawyer's defence is surprising". Mirror.co.uk. Retrieved 24 August 2018.
  5. ^ "U.K. Organised Crime – Arif's of London | Unreported Cases". Archived from the original on 2014-08-10. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  6. ^ a b William Donaldson, Brewer's Rogues, Villains and Eccentrics: An A-Z of Roguish Britons Through the Ages.