The Star Malaysia

Resurgent Mafia hit by Mineo’s arrest, says top cop

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ROME: The arrest of “Godfather” Settimino Mineo (pic) has dealt Cosa Nostra a crucial blow as it tries to reorganise after the violent leadership of the Corleone family, Italy’s top anti-Mafia policeman said.

Police arrested jeweller Mineo, 80, and at least 45 others in Sicily last Tuesday just before he was due to be officially anointed the new “boss of bosses”, they said.

“The arrest of Settimo Mineo was an important operation because it’s a kind of preventati­ve operation at a time when Cosa Nostra is trying to reorganise,” Giuseppe Governale, the head of Italy’s Anti-Mafia Investigat­ion Directorat­e (DIA), said.

“Cosa Nostra is having a hard time, they don’t even completely control drug traffickin­g on the island but have to make alliances with the ‘Ndrangheta (the mafia of nearby Calabria) for resupply.”

Mineo was the head of one of the 15 Mafia family groupings in Palermo province, with each grouping having two to four families.

“Four other group heads were arrested with him as well as several family heads, so this is important at a time when Cosa Nostra is trying to find an heir to Toto Riina,” Governale said.

Sicily’s Mafia has historical­ly been headed by a family from Palermo, Governale said, but that was turned upside down when the Corleone family took over in the 1960s, with unusual violence.

“When the Corleones took over there were a lot of conflicts. Some Mafiosi fled but now they’re slowly returning, given that the Corleones are no longer in charge,” he said.

The last overall Mafia boss was the notorious Riina, who died in prison last year, and a reconvened Mafia Commission, or “Cupola”, was to anoint Mineo as his heir after meeting in May for the first time since 1993 – when Riina was arrested.

Riina and Bernardo Provenzano were proteges of Luciano Liggio, who headed the Corleonesi Mafia faction in the 1960s.

Together the three men from Corleone, around 1.5 hours drive south of Palermo, took the Mafia in the Sicilian capital by surprise using daring and, above all, violence.

“This short- circuited Cosa Nostra’s general logic,” Governale said.

“The Mafia used measured violence with precision, like a surgeon uses a scalpel, sometimes a little excessivel­y, but the Corleones’ virulence was incredible, even for the other bosses,” he said.

While many in Italy and abroad considered fugitive Mafioso Matteo Messina Denaro the real boss of Cosa Nostra, Governale says the organised crime goup is “light-years away from seeing Matteo Messina Denaro as its boss”.

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