Kuwait Times

Mafia’s tentacles extending into the virtual world

Mafia’s tentacles extending into the virtual world

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MILAN: A week after the death of Cosa Nostra boss Toto Riina, key figures in Italy’s judiciary and police have warned the mafia’s tentacles are extending into the virtual world. Gangrenous and omnipresen­t in the south, the country’s various criminal networks are as powerful as ever and are also developing in the wealthier, industrial­ized north, a major conference on the fight against organized crime was told. “The mafia has not won, but it has not lost either,” Justice Minister Andrea Orlando said in the keynote speech.

The two-day gathering, which concluded Friday, was the culminatio­n of a year of research and reflection involving more than 220 experts. “For years we have had the most extensive antimafia legislatio­n in place, we have been mounting operations non-stop for 25 years, how is it possible that the mafias can still be so powerful?” asked Franco Roberti, who was the national anti-mafia prosecutor until last week.

Thousands of mobsters are behind bars and more than 30 billion euros ($35 billion) of illgotten assets have been seized in the last two decades. Yet still the clan and family-based networks of ‘Ndrangheta (based in Calabria in Italy’s deep south), the Camorra (in and around Naples), Cosa Nostra (Sicily) and the lesser-known Sacra Corona Unita (Puglia), continue to flourish, at home and abroad. “They accumulate money in incredible proportion­s, and this cash ends up in our economy, in companies, in activities that are often run by honest and respectabl­e people,” said Roberti’s successor, Federico Cafiero De Raho.

Italy’s criminal networks are as powerful as ever

Not just drugs

“When they move their companies into a particular sector, they grab the whole market for themselves,” he adds. “That is how it works in the centre and north of the country - in the south they are everywhere.” A report presented at the conference noted that Milan, economic capital of the industrial north, was now third in the ranking of areas by value of assets seized from the mafia, behind Palermo (capital of Sicily) and Naples.

“Within a few years, it is plausible to envisage Lombardy (the region including Milan) and Latium (Rome and its surrounds) overtaking Calabria and Puglia and getting to the level of Naples and Sicily (in terms of mafia infiltrati­on),” the report warns. Drugs, from street dealing to internatio­nal traffickin­g on a major scale, are at the core of all the Italian mafias’ activities. But their tentacles also stretch into supermarke­ts, restaurant­s and bars, constructi­on, farming and all forms of food production, sport, people traffickin­g and refuse management. “The persistenc­e of the mafia is not an accident of history,” noted the Justice Minister. “It tells us something profound; it is a reflection of a social and political crisis.”

‘Bitcoin mafia’

“Mafia power fills a vacuum, it depends on the state withdrawin­g, on the weakness of civil society, on problems of integratio­n. It slips into the fissures, taking advantage of the slightest weakness to get stronger. “Our enemies are proactive, dynamic and multifacet­ed. They are capable of adapting to social and economic change.”

One example is that contempora­ry mobsters order the killings of fewer people than the likes of Riina, the Sicilian godfather who died last week. Aged 87, the “boss of all bosses” was serving 26 life sentences for some of the 150 murders he is thought to have ordered. Corruption, Riina’s successors have realised, is more efficient than the threat of violence. “They’ve stopped using arms and explosives to do their talking but they’ve found more insidious methods,’ said Pietro Grasso, a judge who presided over some of the biggest mafia trials and is now the president of the Senate.

The famous “pizzini”, tiny scraps of paper used to transmit coded messages between made men, have been replaced by briefcases. Funds are now more likely to be stored in the form of Bitcoin than notes stuffed in milk churns.

 ??  ?? SICILY: A video grab shows relatives of mafia boss Toto Riina walking behind his coffin during the funeral at the Corleone cemetery in Sicily. Former ‘boss of bosses’ Toto Riina, one of the most feared Godfathers in the history of the Sicilian Mafia,...
SICILY: A video grab shows relatives of mafia boss Toto Riina walking behind his coffin during the funeral at the Corleone cemetery in Sicily. Former ‘boss of bosses’ Toto Riina, one of the most feared Godfathers in the history of the Sicilian Mafia,...
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