Bangkok Post

Police bust Chinese mafia group in Italy

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ROME: Police officers in Italy swooped down on a Chinese mafia organisati­on on Thursday, arresting 33 people on suspicion of running a criminal enterprise that dominated the transport of Chinese products in Europe, financed with money from prostituti­on, gambling and drugs.

The mass arrests captivated attention in Italy, where the term mafia originated, and provided a glimpse into the extensive economic tentacles of Chinese gangsters in Europe.

The network’s headquarte­rs was in Prato, a Tuscan city northwest of Florence that has long been home to a large Chinese community that manufactur­es low-priced garments. It also had affiliates in Paris, Madrid and Neuss, Germany, as well as in some northern Italian cities and in Rome, where the group’s leader lived, the police said in announcing results of a seven-year investigat­ion.

The police operation broke up “a dangerous organisati­on that had used force to take control of trucking, and was financed by its illegal activities,” Interior Minister Marco Minniti said in a statement.

“Being able to shed light on the mafia character of this group is almost incredible,” Federico Cafiero De Raho, Italy’s chief antiMafia prosecutor, told journalist­s at a news conference in Florence. “It’s quite unusual to be able to identify a complex Chinese mafia organisati­on.”

Francesco Nannucci, chief of the Prato Police Department’s investigat­ive unit, called the investigat­ion “one of the most relevant against the Chinese mafia in Italy and in Europe.”

“Controllin­g transporta­tion for the thousands of Chinese fast-fashion companies in Prato is an enormous power,” Mr Nannucci said in a telephone interview. “It means easy access to Europe. Being a strongman in Prato means being strong in Europe.”

The authoritie­s seized assets worth a few million euros, including 61 bank accounts and eight vehicles used to transport the items.

The group’s gangster hierarchy came from the eastern Chinese provinces of Zhejiang and Fujian, the police said. The areas are well-known for enterprisi­ng criminals.

A man identified as the group’s leader, Zhang Naizhong, 57, was arrested early on Thursday in a Prato hotel. Nicknamed the “black man” by affiliates and “boss of all bosses,” reminiscen­t of the powerful Western Mafia leaders, by prosecutor­s, he usually came to town once a week with his son to attend to his business, police said.

The evening before his arrest, the police said, he had visited businesses in Prato and used eight cars to avoid being followed or identified.

In 2010, Mr Zhang won a power battle among gangs that had shed blood in the streets Prato for years, and culminated with the killing of two young Chinese men with a machete in a restaurant.

Mr Zhang was then said to rule over a vast criminal ring that used threats and violence against Chinese business owners and profits from illegal activities such as prostituti­on, drug traffickin­g, extortion and gambling to build a transport company that won a near-monopoly in the movement of items for thousands of Chinese companies.

Prato is home to around 4,500 Chinese companies that import textiles or accessorie­s components from China and assemble them for sale at low- and mid-price retailers all over Europe.

Since the early arrivals of Chinese migrants in Prato in the 1980s, the community has become one of the biggest in Europe.

Such waves have also opened the way for foreign crime groups to compete with Italy’s indigenous Mafia that has invested in legal activities like restaurant­s and the management of migrant centres.

 ?? EPA ?? Policemen check merchandis­e during the operation against the Chinese mafia called ‘China truck’ in Prato, Italy, on Thursday.
EPA Policemen check merchandis­e during the operation against the Chinese mafia called ‘China truck’ in Prato, Italy, on Thursday.

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