The Borneo Post

Italy police arrest mafia’s alleged new mob boss in Sicily

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PALERMO, Italy: Italian police have arrested the suspected new head of the Sicilian mafia and 45 other alleged mobsters in a major blow to organised crime on the Mediterran­ean island, the government said yesterday.

“There is no more room for this type of scum in Italy,” Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio wrote on Instagram.

The previous boss of bosses, Salvatore “Toto” Riina, died in prison last year after spending almost a quarter of a century behind bars for ordering dozens of murders, including those of two of Italy’s most celebrated anti-mob prosecutor­s.

Among those arrested yesterday was Settimo Mineo, an 80-yearold jeweller suspected of heading local mafia families in the Sicilian capital Palermo and of being promoted to lead the whole crime group in May, police said.

“The arrests ... represent one of the biggest blows inflicted on the mafia by the state. Mineo had been elected ‘ heir’ of Toto Riina after his death,” Di Maio added.

A police source said Mineo was elected boss at a meeting of provincial leaders of the Sicilian mafia, known as ‘Cosa Nostra’ ( Our Thing), on May 29. It was believed to be the first such gathering of mob families for more than 25 years.

Once all-powerful on Sicily, the world’s most famous crime gang has been squeezed over the past two decades, with many bosses put behind bars, businesses sequestere­d and locals increasing­ly ready to defy it.

The meeting in May of the Cosa Nostra cupola, or hierarchy, was seen by investigat­ors as a sign the group was looking to rebuild.

“With an extraordin­ary operation in the Palermo province, the police have dismantled Cosa Nostra’s new ‘cupola’,” Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said on Twitter.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Settimino Mineo, jeweller and new head of the Sicilian mafia, is escorted by carabinier­i as he exits a police station after his arrest, in Palermo.
— AFP photo Settimino Mineo, jeweller and new head of the Sicilian mafia, is escorted by carabinier­i as he exits a police station after his arrest, in Palermo.

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