logo
The Road To War: Family feud that sparked Sydney's gang wars

The Road To War: Family feud that sparked Sydney's gang wars

News.com.au23-06-2025
Sydney's underworld has exploded in recent months in an escalation in the city's underworld wars.
The most recent was a triple shooting in the heart of Sydney's west, which critically injured a female kebab shop worker who was caught in the crossfire.
Alleged underworld figure and the man at the 'epicentre' of a simmering underworld feud, Samimjan Azari, 26, was targeted for the fourth time last Monday when two masked men stormed a Turkish food outlet at Auburn and opened fire on him and another man acting as his bodyguard.
The underworld war that has been ongoing since late-2020 has escalated to a new level, something many who have followed closely in recent years would have thought was impossible.
But gang wars are not a new thing for the suburbs of the Harbour City, in fact, they have been raging - with highs and lows - for the best part of the last 20 years.
A new doco-series from The Daily Telegraph delves into Sydney's first gangland war between the Razzaks and the Darwiches.
The conflict between the two began in the wake of the Sydney Olympics as the two families went toe-to-toe, gunning each other down in public and spraying the opponents' homes with more bullets than police could count.
At one point, the Darwiches even considered using a rocket launcher to annihilate their rivals.
The Road to War is the latest docu miniseries from The Daily Telegraph, taking you inside the biggest gang conflicts this city has seen.
Episode one 'Til Death Do Us Part - which was released today - looks at how a drug dealer being robbed in 2001 sparked the city's first gangland war.
It started when Bilal Razzak robbed a drug dealer who worked for a rival crime family, the Darwhiches in early 2001. Tensions simmered for two years before an all out war broke out the likes which Sydney had never seen.
How to watch The Road To War
After Bilal Razzak robbed the drug dealer he was confronted by Adnan Darwiche and his enforcer, Khaled Taleb and bashed at a Bankstown shopping centre.
Tit-for-tat drive-by shootings followed before Ali Abdul-Razzak, who was married to the sister of Adnan Darwiche, arranged a sit-down of the two factions. It failed and violence reigned on Sydney's streets for the next eight years.
In 2009, the final chapter played out when Abdul Darwiche was shot in front of his family as he walked out of a restaurant in Bass Hill.
'It was unprecedented. There had been nothing like this before. The underworld killers like Neddy Smith and the like did their business quietly. They more often than not disposed of the bodies in shallow graves,'' says retired Detective Superintendent Stuart Wilkins.
'This was in your face, confronting intimidation and violence against police and the public. They would shoot and leave bodies in car parks, outside restaurants and service stations. Wherever, wherever they decided to attack somebody, they were shot and killed.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wife of Sunshine Coast man Zdravko 'Zed' Bilic pays tribute to her 'entire world'
Wife of Sunshine Coast man Zdravko 'Zed' Bilic pays tribute to her 'entire world'

ABC News

time18 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Wife of Sunshine Coast man Zdravko 'Zed' Bilic pays tribute to her 'entire world'

The wife of slain Sunshine Coast man Zradvko "Zed" Bilic has paid tribute to her husband, who she said was her "entire world". Two teenagers have been arrested and charged over the 57-year-old's death on Sunday night. Mr Bilic was alone at his Warana home, while his wife Gry Tømte was interstate. Police will allege Mr Bilic was fatally stabbed during a break and enter. His body was discovered on Monday night, after his wife asked a neighbour to check the home when she had not heard from her husband. On Thursday afternoon, Ms Tømte released a statement through police. In the statement, she said the void Mr Bilic, or Zed as he was affectionately known, had left behind was "unbearable". "Zed was my entire world for 28 years," she wrote. "From the moment we met, both of us living away from family in the new country we had fallen in love with, we knew instantly we were each other's person. "We were complete opposites — and together we made a whole." Ms Tømte runs a successful beauty business, with clinics in St Kilda and Northcote in Melbourne. The couple moved to the Sunshine Coast three years ago, but regularly travelled back for work and to see family and friends. "People say I'm the strong one — but I could only be strong because he allowed me to be, and because he wrapped his arms around me daily to make sure I could," she wrote. Ms Tømte described Mr Bilic's love of soccer and how he rarely missed a Melbourne Victory game. "He was the MLP [most loved person] in his soccer teams — both in Melbourne and on the Sunshine Coast," she wrote. "And he loved them right back. He was the kind of friend who would drop everything to help anyone. "And even if you weren't his friend, if he saw you on the street, he'd smile and have a chat." Ms Tømte said Mr Bilic's biggest legacy was the one he left behind with his work at Ginger Sport. "He was an exceptional male role model for the kids he worked with at the early childhood centres up here on the coast," she wrote. "Whether we were walking on the beach, going to the mall, or visiting the zoo, there would always be a little, enthusiastic, excited voice yelling 'Coach Zed, Coach Zed!' "It was so clear to me and everyone who saw this that he was a superhero to the little kids he worked with." Ms Tømte has now returned to the Sunshine Coast, and has thanked the community for its support, but has asked for privacy while she grieves. "If you've had the privilege of being in Zed's presence, you'll know that he was literal sunshine," she wrote.

Loitering charge dropped against National Socialist Network member Thomas Sewell
Loitering charge dropped against National Socialist Network member Thomas Sewell

ABC News

time18 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Loitering charge dropped against National Socialist Network member Thomas Sewell

A charge has been dropped against National Socialist Network member Thomas Sewell over a march through the Adelaide CBD on Australia Day. Mr Sewell, 32, appeared in the Adelaide Magistrates Court on Thursday, via telephone, where a charge of loitering was dropped by the prosecution. The 32-year-old was among 17 members of a group that was arrested after the march on the Australia Day long weekend this year. He was also previously facing a charge of displaying a Nazi symbol — but that was dropped earlier this year. Defence counsel Matthew Hopkins for Mr Sewell told the court on Thursday that the charge his client had been facing was "appropriately described as selective enforcement" and that he had been part of a "peaceful assembly". "This prosecution is a political prosecution," he said. "The charges were for an improper purpose to disrupt their political activities." Mr Sewell also appeared in court for the first time on a charge of breaching of bail on May 16 at Hindmarsh in Adelaide's western suburbs. His defence counsel flagged with the court he would be requesting the prosecution to pay their legal fees in excess of $2,000. "We haven't had the opportunity to prepare an argument, and we have attempted to negotiate reasonably with the prosecution," he said. The matter will return to court in September for an argument on costs, while the breach of bail matter will return to court next month.

‘Very nasty': ABC personality's fiery fence dispute with neighbour sparks ‘cover up' accusation
‘Very nasty': ABC personality's fiery fence dispute with neighbour sparks ‘cover up' accusation

News.com.au

time18 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

‘Very nasty': ABC personality's fiery fence dispute with neighbour sparks ‘cover up' accusation

A fiery dispute over a fence between ABC personality Myf Warhurst and her neighbour has sparked accusations of a 'cover up' by the public broadcaster. Karla Martinez, a prize-winning Melbourne architect, was initially charged with assaulting Warhurst's then partner, Brian Steendyk, in an explosive row in late December 2022 captured on police bodycam and mobile phone footage. You can watch some of it in the video player above. The charges were later dropped, but Ms Martinez has now accused the ABC of running a 'one-sided hit job' with an article on its website and social media last May about the incident, without disclosing that the Spicks and Specks presenter was a central player in the bitter feud, The Australian reports. The mother-of-three claims the ABC breached its editorial guidelines and displayed flagrant bias after picturing and naming her in the article, while not naming Warhurst and her then boyfriend. It stated only that Ms Martinez has been accused of 'unlawfully assaulting a neighbour, who lives with an ABC contractor'. The article has since been removed from the ABC's website, and the broadcaster has not responded to questions about the source of the story and the reasons it was eventually taken down. 'That article destroyed my job, life, career and harmed my family while protecting the source of the story,' Ms Martinez told The Australian. 'It was essentially about a civil dispute which escalated to numerous criminal charges against me — which have all been struck out by the courts. The ABC doesn't even name Myf or her partner in the story — why not? Because they're trying to protect their own. My lawyers have repeatedly asked the ABC to reveal the source of the story but they are refusing to say. They're trying to cover it up.' Warhurst vehemently denied playing any role in the ABC story. Her agent told The Australian she was unaware of the May 2024 article's existence 'until a friend brought it to her attention after it was published' and that she had 'no involvement in its publication and has wished at all times for this matter to remain private'. The wild dispute at their North Warrandyte home in Melbourne's outskirts broke out in late December 2022, when Mr Steendyk started tearing down a 26-metre stretch of disputed fence using a 'chainsaw and grinder'. Tensions between the neighbours had been brewing over a concrete wall Ms Martinez intended to construct along the property line. Ms Martinez told The Australian 'everything started out friendly enough' when Warhurst moved into the home in early 2022, but 'all hell broke loose as soon as they found out we were going to start constructing a concrete wall along the property line'. 'She hated it — the wall, design, everything,' she said. She alleged the couple decided to take matters into their own hands on December 28, 2022, and began ripping down the contested section of the fence. 'So I go out and started screaming and it all becomes very nasty, and I asked my kids to call triple-0 and get the police to come,' Ms Martinez said. Warhurst also called triple-0, telling police Mr Steendyk had been 'hit on the head with a pipe' by Ms Martinez 'as he was trying to cut down the fence'. Officers from Eltham police station arrived and tried to defuse the situation. The blow-up led to years of back-and-forth legal salvos between the neighbours, including competing intervention orders. The ABC's article was published as Ms Martinez was waiting to face court on the yet-to-be-dismissed assault charge, as well as seven 'criminal charges' over the construction of the wall, which carried a $200,000 fine. Ms Martinez said all those charges had since been dropped. She sent an email to ABC chairman Kim Williams accusing the broadcaster of deliberately 'humiliating and defaming me through malicious content which Myf [allegedly] orchestrated' and demanding the presenter be stood down. A lawyer for the ABC responded, telling Ms Martinez her 'assumptions and assertions … are inaccurate', according to The Australian. 'On this basis, the ABC does not agree to comply with your request,' he wrote. 'In any event, we note (without admission) the article in question has been removed from websites controlled by the ABC.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store