Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Italian mafia targets health sector amid pandemic

-

IN CORONAVIRU­S-hit Italy, mafia groups are eyeing the health sector and EUfunded infrastruc­ture projects as their next big money spinners, police warned in a report yesterday.

“Significan­t criminal investment­s are conceivabl­e in companies operating in the so-called health chain,” Italy’s anti-mafia investigat­ive police (DIA) wrote in a bi-annual report to parliament.

Potential targets include building and renovating hospitals, the production and supply of medical equipment, hospital waste disposal, and sanitary and funeral services, DIA said.

Police also said it was “very likely” that mafia organizati­ons would “try to intercept the new financing channels” set to be made available to upgrade Italy’s infrastruc­ture and modernize its economy.

That is a reference to the more than 200 billion euros ($243 billion dollars) Rome expects to receive from the European Union’s post-coronaviru­s Recovery Fund over the 2021-2026 period.

DIA called for the “utmost vigilance” on companies bidding for health sector public tenders, pointing out that recent corporate changes in ownership, structure or office location may be a sign of mafia infiltrati­on.

They also said that talk of streamlini­ng public tender procedures – to minimize the risk of delays in EU-funded projects – “should be accompanie­d by careful and swift anti-mafia monitoring.”

Italian organized crime groups like the Calabrian ‘Ndrangheta and Cosa Nostra in Sicily have a proven track record of infiltrati­ng major public works projects, often through political connection­s.

In its report, the DIA noted that the ‘Ndrangheta and Cosa Nostra have exploited the economic crisis brought about by the pandemic for loan-sharking to struggling business owners.

They have also curried favor with the poor by distributi­ng food aid or offering casual, blackmarke­t employment to people left jobless by the crisis, the report added.

Last year, Italy’s economy shrank by nearly 9%, in the worst recession since World War II, and nearly 450,000 people – mostly women, younger workers and the self-employed – lost their jobs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye