How to prevent street crime, opportunists
If you are unlucky enough to have any problems with criminals during your travels, it’s likely to be with opportunists: pickpockets and petty thieves who are after an easy, non-violent way to separate you from your valuables.
Pickpockets
This advice will help you stay clear of most pickpockets.
*Always stick to well-lit and busy areas, but avoid public transport and stations during rush hour.
* Don’t wander around with a map or guidebook in your hands: if you get lost, duck into a café to get your bearings.
* If you’ve only got today’s cash in your wallet or pocket, you won’t lose much. Some people carry a dummy wallet in their back pocket, while their real one is zipped inside a jacket pocket or carried in their front pocket.
* Don’t carry, or show, valuable things in poor areas. Leave jewellery and electronics locked in a safe, not on display.
* If you use a money belt to store valuable documents and cash, keep it secret and keep it safe.
* Be especially alert in markets and, if anyone bumps you, check for your wallet… they might be that good.
* If you can handle the fashion faux pas, consider buying trousers with zippable pockets: they make it that much tricker for pickpockets.
*Always lock bags with a sturdy padlock, and carry backpacks or messenger bags in front of you in high-risk areas.
Bag cutting
When pickpockets can’t find their way into your bags through the normal methods of sliding open zips, they might take the risk of slicing open the bottom of your bag with a knife.
This is often done by small groups, with many hands making quick work of all your possessions as they fall to the ground. To deter this type of theft, use a bag with hefty material, rather than lightweight nylon or silk bags. Carry the bag in front of you, rather than on your back. Don’t be seen to be putting valuable things into the bag and, if you are carrying laptops or electronics, put them into suspended pockets within the bag, rather than in the main compartment.
Additionally, putting something bulky like a jacket in the bottom of the bag might stop things from falling out if it is cut open.
Snatch and run
Snatch-and-run crimes are more aggressive, but normally non-violent. In these cases, the criminals will cut a strap, pull sharply to break a strap, or simply make a grab at a loose item such as a purse, smart phone or camera — then run. They might have partners to distract you or to slow down a chase, or they might use a motorcycle or scooter to race up behind someone and get away almost before you know what is happening.
At particular risk for these crimes are electronics hanging from neck straps, like DSLR cameras or MP3 players and cell phones on a lanyard. A quick-fingered person running a knife near the back of your neck is never a good thing, and the weight of these electronics mean they drop swiftly into their hand. Messenger bags looped from one shoulder are also at high risk, especially when carried behind you. You’ll notice it going, but might not be able to do much about it.
Motorbike snatch-and-ride
Perhaps the most dangerous snatch-and-run technique is when criminals use a motorcycle or scooter. One person will drive, while the snatcher rides pillion behind them. They will drive up onto the pavement or target a person walking near the roadside and grab at a loose-hanging bag or handheld purse, relying on the speed of the bike to break any straps.
However, occasionally the straps don’t break, and the victim will be dragged along the roadside, unable to disentangle themselves. It’s very unlikely the criminals will let go of their prize: the tighter you hold, the more value they will assume they have found. Our advice in this case is to keep yourself as unharmed as possible: let go, get out of the straps, do whatever you must to avoid being dragged behind the vehicle.