The Guardian (USA)

Italian politician­s and police among 300 held in mafia bust

- Lorenzo Tondo in Palermo

Italian military police have arrested more than 300 people including politician­s and officials on suspicion of membership of the ‘Ndrangheta, in what is being described as the second biggest mafia bust in the country’s history.

About 2,500 officers participat­ed in raids centred on the Calabrian city of Vibo Valentia on Thursday.

The suspects were variously held on suspicion of extortion, murder, money laundering and belonging to a mafia organisati­on.

The investigat­ion started in 2016 and covered at least 11 Italian regions including Lombardy, Sicily, Veneto, Tuscany and Campania. Suspects were traced to and arrested in Germany, Switzerlan­d and Bulgaria.

Those arrested included Giancarlo Pittelli, a well-known lawyer from Catanzaro and a former member of Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia party. Pittelli, who was also a member of a justice commission and a regional coordinato­r of Berlusconi’s party, is accused of mafia associatio­n.

A former regional official, a mayor, a political party official and a police commander were also among those arrested. “I have been working on this investigat­ion since I became chief prosecutor in Catanzaro,” said Nicola Gratteri, an anti-mafia prosecutor who led the investigat­ion. “This is the biggest operation since the maxi-trial of Palermo,” he added, referring to proceeding­s targeting the Sicilian mafia in Palermo between 1986 and 1992.

In the course of that trial, held in a bunker courthouse built specifical­ly for the purpose, prosecutor­s indicted 475 alleged mafiosi.

Thursday’s operation revealed some of the ‘Ndrangheta’s secrets. In a pizzino, a small slip of paper used by the mafia for top-level communicat­ions, the police learned of the phrase that prospectiv­e mobsters must repeat before becoming fully fledged ‘Ndrangheta bosses.

The sentence contains a quote from three 17th-century knights who, according to legend, founded the Cosa Nostra in Sicily, the Camorra in Campania and the ‘Ndrangheta in Calabria.

Nicola Morra, the president of an anti-mafia parliament­ary commission, said: “Tonight, the state has once again demonstrat­ed its ability to react by deploying personnel and equipment for a full-frontal attack. From today in Calabria, the air you breathe is better. It is air with the taste of freedom. Today is a beautiful day for legality.”

 ??  ?? Police officers and soldiers stand guard outside the Italian national anti-mafia services HQ in Rome. Photograph: Andreas Solaro/AFP via Getty Images
Police officers and soldiers stand guard outside the Italian national anti-mafia services HQ in Rome. Photograph: Andreas Solaro/AFP via Getty Images

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