So, where are the conflict places? Every once in a while new forum members ask about places to avoid. Where are them?
Passive-aggressive use of Post-it notes in the laundry room. Hot conflict zone, apparently. Or maybe just âseething animosityâ.
Because âŠ
So youâre effectively saying that every single property in Switzerland is at high risk of burglary?
What planet are you living on?
Back in the 90,s it was the ex Jugoslavians who were problem.
A recent study found that among foreigners sentenced for crimes in Switzerland, the figure for people from the former Yugoslavia increased from 20 per cent in 1991 to 28 per cent in 1998.
But experts warn that the figures do not give the whole story. They say that Albanian mafia criminals only make up a very small minority of the 200,000 Albanians living in Switzerland.
Do you not have anything more recent that than?
The 2020s are very different from the 1990s.
Itâs simply to draw a comparison of the situation then and now and how the govt dealt with it. This govt has to pull their finger out and at last take action like they did in the 90,s.
Comparing to other countries or comparing to 10, 20, 30 years ago?
More recent news:
OMG!!! they are stealing Ferraris, it can happen to me tooâŠoh no, wait a min ![]()
The complacency of garage managers rises some questions. Leaving the keys unsecured in the garage does not look like being diligent enough (personal opinion of someone coming from a low trust society). Not a joke, the police is recommending the following:
I also wonder about what the insurance is telling about these cases, but thatâs a well kept secret.
Thankfully (or not). Thereâs no risk that thieves would want to steal my rust bucket of a car.
One victim observed the thieves speeding away at 200 km/h.
Wait, what??
If youâre already doing 120kmh, it only takes a few seconds to reach 200 kmh. Last week I happily cruised on the autobahn in Germany at illegal speeds in Switzerland ![]()
Fair enough, but how does one speed away at 200 kph from a car dealership or even private garage in Switzerland, where the âvictimâ managed to clock the thief at such a speed?
You guys havenât seen my OH driveâŠ
They were chasing the stolen car in their own car.
They didnât state their own speed but if one assumed they were speeding themselves then knowing their own speed, and observing how much faster the stolen car was, they could probably say, with certainty, that it was over 200Km/h (not exactly 200km/h):
His girlfriend gave chase in her car and contacted the police, but when the perpetrators reached the highway, they sped off at over 200 km/h. âWe had no chance.â
What is more interesting is that his girlfriend gave chase and not him!
I live in a middle to lower income apartment complex. And the apartments here have been broken into on numerous occasions.
Send these criminals to the Gulag or put them in the Russian military.
Thatâs a question to ask Omtatsat, heâs apparently the one with all the answers.
Lol, the post-it note scenario in the laundry room reminds me of the caretaker we had at our last apartment building. She was in her 60s, wore tiny mini skirts, fishnet tights, patent thigh boots and was not to be messed with. My OH was convinced sheâd previously been a dominatrix in the Kleinbasel red light zone ![]()
More burglary in RĂŒebliland. This time the car keys were in a vault. Burglars fail to open the vault, take it away but abandon it i nearby forest.
There seems to be a wave of this kind of burglary.
