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Denmark's Forgotten Far-Left Terror: The Blekingegade Gang

How a dozen communist radicals robbed millions to fund Palestinian militants—and changed Danish security forever

Sagsdetaljer

Quick Facts

Klassifikation:

Sager der forandrede verden
Sted
Copenhagen, Denmark

Dansk venstrefløjsterror der reformerede PET

Quick Facts

LocationCopenhagen, Denmark

In November 1988, a cash-in-transit vehicle pulled up to the Københavergade post office in Copenhagen. What happened next would become Denmark's most consequential act of political violence in decades: a robbery that netted over 13 million kroner and left 22-year-old police officer Jesper Egtved Hansen dead.

The perpetrators belonged to a secretive communist cell that called itself the inner core of three organizations: Kommunistisk Arbejdskreds (KAK), Kommunistisk Ungdoms Forbund, and Manifest-Kommunistisk Arbejdsgruppe (M-KA). They would become known simply as the Blekingegade Gang—named after the Copenhagen street where authorities would eventually discover their weapons cache.

## The Architects of Anti-Imperialism

The group's ideological roots traced back to Gotfred Appel, a communist hardliner excommunicated from Denmark's Communist Party in 1963 for embracing Maoist theory over Soviet doctrine. Working with co-organizer Ulla Hauton, Appel built a dozen-member cell devoted to a singular mission: funding armed struggle against imperialism by any means necessary. Their primary beneficiary was the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a Marxist-Leninist organization fighting Israeli occupation.

What distinguished the Blekingegade Gang from most European far-left groups was their operational sophistication. They didn't stage public bombings or claim credit for attacks. Instead, they treated crime as clandestine warfare. Members wore full disguises including theatrical makeup and masks. They carried no identifying documents during jobs. Getaway vehicles bore stolen license plates unrelated to the cars themselves. Each robbery—from the December 1975 interception of a 500,000-kroner cash delivery to a post office heist netting 550,000 kroner—followed the same brutal precision: overwhelming force, terror to prevent resistance, execution in seconds to minutes.

In November 1982, the gang's reach extended beyond Denmark when they raided a Swedish Army weapons depot near Flen, 100 kilometers west of Stockholm. They walked away with explosives, hand grenades, land mines, and 34 antitank missiles. A year earlier, in November 1976, they'd defrauded the postal service of 1.4 million Danish kroner through an elaborate scheme involving fake tax refund money orders and forged driver's licenses.

## The Palestinian Connection

The gang maintained direct links to militant infrastructure. In February 1977, Appel, Hauton, and other members negotiated with Wadi Haddad—a senior PFLP strategist—in Baghdad. After Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon, the group intensified operations, suggesting their activities weren't random crime but calculated political action.

For 16 years, Danish authorities treated the robberies as ordinary criminal matters. The intelligence and security apparatus struggled to connect the dots between seemingly unrelated heists and their ideological purpose. No one publicly claimed responsibility. No manifestos circulated. The gang operated in the shadows of a country that believed such violence belonged to other nations' histories.

## The Reckoning

Everything changed in May 1989. Following arrests made in April connected to the November 1988 robbery, police discovered the gang's hideout on Blekingegade Street. The weapons and explosives cache left no doubt: these weren't ordinary criminals. Seven M-KA members were charged, though prosecutors struggled to make terrorism charges stick under Danish law.

The legal outcome frustrated investigators. All seven were convicted, but lenient Danish sentencing meant no member served more than ten years. By most standards, justice felt incomplete. Yet the gang's exposure forced a reckoning. Danish intelligence had been blind to a domestic terrorist cell operating for nearly two decades. The Blekingegade case would reshape how PET—Denmark's Security and Intelligence Service—understood radicalism within its borders.

Today, the gang survives in Danish memory as a peculiar historical artifact: communists who robbed banks not for wealth but for revolution, who killed a police officer in service of a foreign cause, and who demonstrated that Nordic social democracy wasn't immune to the ideological violence consuming other corners of the Cold War world.

## Sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blekingegade_Gang

https://snylterstaten.dk/anti-imperialism-undercover-an-introduction-to-the-blekingegade-group-by-gabriel-kuhn/

https://trustnordisk.com/movie/the-left-wing-gang

https://the-primer.com/2019/09/11/victory-of-the-third-world-the-story-of-the-blekingegade-gang/

Read more

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Sagsmappe

Denmark's Forgotten Far-Left Terror: The Blekingegade Gang

How a dozen communist radicals robbed millions to fund Palestinian militants—and changed Danish security forever

Sagsdetaljer

Quick Facts

Klassifikation:

Sager der forandrede verden
Sted
Copenhagen, Denmark

Dansk venstrefløjsterror der reformerede PET

Quick Facts

LocationCopenhagen, Denmark

In November 1988, a cash-in-transit vehicle pulled up to the Københavergade post office in Copenhagen. What happened next would become Denmark's most consequential act of political violence in decades: a robbery that netted over 13 million kroner and left 22-year-old police officer Jesper Egtved Hansen dead.

The perpetrators belonged to a secretive communist cell that called itself the inner core of three organizations: Kommunistisk Arbejdskreds (KAK), Kommunistisk Ungdoms Forbund, and Manifest-Kommunistisk Arbejdsgruppe (M-KA). They would become known simply as the Blekingegade Gang—named after the Copenhagen street where authorities would eventually discover their weapons cache.

## The Architects of Anti-Imperialism

The group's ideological roots traced back to Gotfred Appel, a communist hardliner excommunicated from Denmark's Communist Party in 1963 for embracing Maoist theory over Soviet doctrine. Working with co-organizer Ulla Hauton, Appel built a dozen-member cell devoted to a singular mission: funding armed struggle against imperialism by any means necessary. Their primary beneficiary was the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a Marxist-Leninist organization fighting Israeli occupation.

What distinguished the Blekingegade Gang from most European far-left groups was their operational sophistication. They didn't stage public bombings or claim credit for attacks. Instead, they treated crime as clandestine warfare. Members wore full disguises including theatrical makeup and masks. They carried no identifying documents during jobs. Getaway vehicles bore stolen license plates unrelated to the cars themselves. Each robbery—from the December 1975 interception of a 500,000-kroner cash delivery to a post office heist netting 550,000 kroner—followed the same brutal precision: overwhelming force, terror to prevent resistance, execution in seconds to minutes.

In November 1982, the gang's reach extended beyond Denmark when they raided a Swedish Army weapons depot near Flen, 100 kilometers west of Stockholm. They walked away with explosives, hand grenades, land mines, and 34 antitank missiles. A year earlier, in November 1976, they'd defrauded the postal service of 1.4 million Danish kroner through an elaborate scheme involving fake tax refund money orders and forged driver's licenses.

## The Palestinian Connection

The gang maintained direct links to militant infrastructure. In February 1977, Appel, Hauton, and other members negotiated with Wadi Haddad—a senior PFLP strategist—in Baghdad. After Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon, the group intensified operations, suggesting their activities weren't random crime but calculated political action.

For 16 years, Danish authorities treated the robberies as ordinary criminal matters. The intelligence and security apparatus struggled to connect the dots between seemingly unrelated heists and their ideological purpose. No one publicly claimed responsibility. No manifestos circulated. The gang operated in the shadows of a country that believed such violence belonged to other nations' histories.

## The Reckoning

Everything changed in May 1989. Following arrests made in April connected to the November 1988 robbery, police discovered the gang's hideout on Blekingegade Street. The weapons and explosives cache left no doubt: these weren't ordinary criminals. Seven M-KA members were charged, though prosecutors struggled to make terrorism charges stick under Danish law.

The legal outcome frustrated investigators. All seven were convicted, but lenient Danish sentencing meant no member served more than ten years. By most standards, justice felt incomplete. Yet the gang's exposure forced a reckoning. Danish intelligence had been blind to a domestic terrorist cell operating for nearly two decades. The Blekingegade case would reshape how PET—Denmark's Security and Intelligence Service—understood radicalism within its borders.

Today, the gang survives in Danish memory as a peculiar historical artifact: communists who robbed banks not for wealth but for revolution, who killed a police officer in service of a foreign cause, and who demonstrated that Nordic social democracy wasn't immune to the ideological violence consuming other corners of the Cold War world.

## Sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blekingegade_Gang

https://snylterstaten.dk/anti-imperialism-undercover-an-introduction-to-the-blekingegade-group-by-gabriel-kuhn/

https://trustnordisk.com/movie/the-left-wing-gang

https://the-primer.com/2019/09/11/victory-of-the-third-world-the-story-of-the-blekingegade-gang/

Read more

Ghislaine Maxwell
Case

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Der Fall Ghislaine Maxwell — die verifizierten Fakten
Case

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Kahla-Massaker 1997
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Ghislaine Maxwell

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Der Fall Ghislaine Maxwell — die verifizierten Fakten

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Kahla-Massaker 1997

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Fritz Honka — Seriemorder i Hamburgs St. Pauli-kvarter

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Advertisement
SS

Susanne Sperling

Share this post: