The
suspects were identified following a report of carob theft inside a property in
Almancil, and were found by the GNR in possession of "around 360 kilos of
carob, with an estimated value of 900 euros".
As part of
the police action, the six men were charged and "12 bags with 360 kilos of
carob" were seized in the parish of Almancil, the GNR said, noting that
the facts had been referred to Loulé Judicial Court. According to the GNR,
"the recovered material was delivered to its rightful owner".
This month,
around 200 Algarve carob producers gathered in Loulé to demand that the
Government provide "mechanisms to control" commercial circuits, in
order to put an end to "almost daily" fruit thefts from their farms.
At the
sit-in, called by AGRUPA, the Algarve's only carob and almond producers
association, which took place near Loulé Town Hall, the farmers "demanded
that a law be promulgated" following the proposal presented by a working
group as part of the action plan against the theft of citrus fruits, avocados
and carobs.
The number
of seizures of stolen carob in the Algarve has doubled compared to last year,
with around eight tonnes of the fruit seized in the region since January,
according to GNR data revealed to Lusa.
The
commercial value of the fruit - an arroba (15 kilos) is worth more than 40
euros, when four years ago it was five euros - makes it the main target for
thefts from farms in the region, and several seizures have already been
recorded, although the harvest usually lasts until September.
According
to data from the GNR's Faro territorial command, between 1st January and 21st
July this year, a total of 16 carob seizures have been recorded in the Algarve
- double that of the same period in 2021 - with five people arrested and 39
identified. During the same period last year, there were no arrests and only
six people identified.
Also in
this period, in 2021, the GNR had registered 20 reports of carob theft, a
number that increased this year to 73. However, last year around this time, the
amount of carob seized (12 tons) exceeded the amount seized this year (eight).
According
to the police, the increase in the number of reports may be related "to
the fact that the fruit ripened earlier, as well as to the existence of a
greater awareness for reporting this type of crime, also motivated by the
increase in the price of the product".
These thieves cleaned out people's farms - robbed them clean stealing all their vegetables and herbs majority of the people here plant food for the year for their families these people steal to sell. It is becoming increasingly popular to just do this. The one farmer his whole crop was raided not a single fruit or vegetable left, they damaged a wall left a mess. The other farmer all his machinery was stolen, another 3 sheep and 6 babies were stolen in the middle of the night that's in the village itself. The government should increase the payroll of police and hire trained police officers who do not use abuse or power to assault but there definitely need to be enforcement for petty crimes and so on not just speed tickets and drugs but so much more. How about cameras in the villages and streets as a start to observe if any crime takes place investigation.
By Lynette Lima from Other on 19 Aug 2022, 06:51