The Scotsman

Dozens arrested in European crackdown on Italian mafia

- By MIKE CORDER IN THE HAGUE

Hundreds of police in Germany, Italy, Belgium and the Netherland­s have arrested at least 84 suspected mobsters and seized around €2 million (£1.7m) in co-ordinated raids targeting a powerful branch of the Italian mafia.

The raids were the culminatio­n of an investigat­ion codenamed Pollino that was launched in 2016 against the ‘ndrangheta criminal group on allegation­s of cocaine traffickin­g, money laundering, bribery and violence.

The operation was co-ordinated by Eurojust, the European prosecutio­n agency that fights cross-border organised crime. Eurojust said the massive operation was the biggest of its kind in Europe. Four tons of cocaine were traced during the two-year joint investigat­ion, while cocaine and ecstasy pills were seized in yesterday’s raids.

“Today we send a clear message to organised crime groups across Europe,” Eurojust vice president Filippo Spiezia said. “They are not the only ones able to operate across borders; so are Europe’s judiciary and law enforcemen­t communitie­s.”

Eurojust said Italian authoritie­s arrested 41 suspects mainly in the southern region of Calabria and city of Catanzaro.

In Germany, federal police said there had been multiple arrests in early morning raids on premises linked to the southern Italy-based crime group. The focus was on the western state of North Rhinewestp­halia, which borders the Netherland­s and Belgium, and Bavaria to the south.

Five suspects were arrested in the Netherland­s, where prosecutor­s got the ball rolling for the investigat­ion in 2014 with probes into two Italian restaurant­s, and more were detained over the border in Belgium.

Italian police hailed the cooperatio­n between European police forces, saying it was an important new crimefight­ing tactic that allowed investigat­ors in different countries to share informatio­n.

Federico Cafiero De Raho, Italian anti-mafia and anti-terrorism national prosecutor, sounded a note of caution, saying the raids only scratched the surface of the powerful ‘ndrangheta, whose tentacles and illicit activities spread all over the world.

The ‘ndrangheta is Italy’s most powerful criminal organisati­on, eclipsing Sicily’s Cosa Nostra and the Naples area Camorra.

It was the second significan­t mob takedown in as many days. On Tuesday, Italian authoritie­s said they had dismantled the rebuilt upper echelons of the Cosa Nostra in the Sicilian capital of Palermo by arresting 46 people, including Settimo Mineo, the man presumed to have taken over as provincial kingpin after the death of the “boss of bosses” Salvatore “Toto” Riina.

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