TOKYO: Japanese police raided the offices of a recently formed splinter group of the country’s biggest yakuza crime syndicate on Wednesday, following fears the rift will spark bloody inter-gang violence.

Authorities conducted the raid in the western city of Kobe after allegations that members of the Yamaken-gumi illegally obtained credit cards and pin numbers from the elderly by disguising themselves as police, Jiji Press news agency said. But police also wanted to collect more information about the group which was officially formed at the weekend, it added.

Leaders of 13 factions kicked out of the Yamaguchi-gumi syndicate — Japan’s largest mobster group which boasts 23,000 members and associates — held their first formal meeting on Saturday in Kobe, local media said.

The head of the Yamaken-gumi, which has about 2,000 members, was chosen to lead the spin-off group, according to the top-selling Yomiuri newspaper. The new gangster group is thought to have around 3,000 members in all, the paper added.

Police, which held an emergency meeting last month involving officers from around the country, have warned that the split could set off turf wars and violence between Japan’s organised crime groups.

Published in Dawn, September 10th, 2015

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