The Sunday Telegraph

Hitmen stalk streets of Rome in mafia gangs’ war for cocaine trade

- By Paddy Agnew in Rome

Luigi Finizio was at the petrol station close to his home in the rough Rome suburb of Torpignatt­ara late one night last month. As the 51-year-old filled up his car, two motorcycli­sts pulled up next to him and within seconds had fired eight bullets, killing him instantly.

Five days earlier another man had been gunned down in a hail of bullets by masked men on a scooter in a similar execution-style killing.

It was the third mob-style execution in this corner of the city in a week – a wave of murders that has left residents fearing a return of mafia violence that rocked Rome in the 1980s.

Though these three killings had seemingly little connection, police believe they are linked to a bloody struggle between organised crime families to control the Eternal City’s burgeoning cocaine market.

“There is no doubt that it was the work of some profession­al hitmen,” one police source told a local paper, pointing to links uncovered between Mr Finizio and the powerful Sienese gang.

The brazenness of the killings, coupled with the fact that Rome had not experience­d such events for several decades, led Roberto Gualtieri, Rome’s mayor, to sound the alarm.

There is a “criminal escalation with the third murder in Rome in a few days,” he wrote on Twitter. “We must fight this organised crime and drug traffickin­g”.

The newspaper Il Corriere della Sera made a calculatio­n: in the last six months alone, there have been around 20 homicides in the Italian capital, on top of 15 suspected gang-related shootings.

One judge said he believed the police round-up in recent months of some of the biggest crime lords, including the Cosa Nostra’s Matteo Messina Denaro, has left an unpreceden­ted power vacuum and sparked a street war to control the lucrative drug market.

“Rome is increasing­ly resembling Naples, where clans that make up the Camorra mafia fight each other to control neighbourh­oods, and where there is no overarchin­g criminal power structure,” said judge Alfonso Sabella.

“People haven’t really woken up to what is going on in Rome, and I fear attention will only be paid when a passer-by is hit by a stray bullet,” he added.

Writing in the daily La Repubblica newspaper, Massimo Lugli, an expert on criminal gangs, wondered if his city was seeing a return of the bad old times when the Magliana, the Pesciaroli or the Marsiglies­i gangs effectivel­y ran Rome.

Federica Angeli, an investigat­ive journalist for La Repubblica who has been under police protection for the last decade for her reporting on the Spada clan, told The Sunday Telegraph of what happened after she published an explosive investigat­ion into the family.“People in my community did not want to know me,” she said. “People here in (the seaside town) Ostia were frightened. There were bars where they wouldn’t even serve me coffee.”

She has seen a real change in public attitude towards mafia gangs in recent years, however.

Today, residents who were once “frightened” to report anything, have raised their heads in what she calls a sort of “cultural revolution”.

“Falcone [the leading Sicilian mafia investigat­or killed by Cosa Nostra in 1992] used to say the mafia is not unbeatable, that it is a human enterprise and that, as such, it has a beginning and it will have an end.”

‘People have not woken up to what is going on, and I fear attention will only be paid when a passer-by is hit by a stray bullet’

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