News from Italy

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scagghiuni
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Re: News from Italy

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Strax wrote:Are there more places like Zen is,in Sicily ? I know Scampia in Naples and Zen in Palermo,they both look awful.
Yes, there are several places similar to zen in the biggest sicilian cities palermo, catania and messina; there are more shit holes than ordinary neighborhoods... several project houses or even favelas-type
let's say some of them for example borgo nuovo, brancaccio, santa rosalia, falsomiele, sperone, cep, zisa (palermo), librino, san cristoforo, picanello,zia lisa, civita (catania) giostra, mangialupi, villaggio aldisio, camaro, santa lucia (messina)
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Re: News from Italy

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Re: News from Italy

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the latest camorra-related hits in the latest days left dead
rodolfo zinco, 46
ciro cortese, 37
armando faucitano, 45
aldo pezone, 41
mario mazzanti, 29
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Re: News from Italy

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How Italy’s Government Enables the Mafia

Italy flag on gun
MARCH 14, 2015 David Howden Emilio Parodi

Beyond nice wines, warm beaches, and sultry women, Italy is well-known for something less savory — the mafia. It is interesting to understand how such a powerful “machine” managed to enter society in such a strong and meaningful way, but more importantly to grasp its role alongside the central government of Italy. On the one hand, it is easy to state that the mafia and the corrupt economic system it functions within are wrong and unproductive for the country. On the other hand its presence may be of help to a country’s economy, something that is especially true in the case of Italy.

In order to understand how corruption infiltrated the highest echelons of Italian society, it is essential to understand the progression of Italy throughout the twentieth century, both politically and economically.

The growing strength of crime organizations such as the “Sicilian mafia,” the “Camorra” (located in the Naples region), and the “Ndrangheta” (from the region of Calabria) have been noted for their relations with the construction industry, typically through a direct channel with the Italian government. These “associations” have grown enormously over the past fifty years creating empires that are clearly visible throughout the major sectors of the economy.

The Italian State: A Reliable Partner for the Mafia

This growth was fueled by the political and economic model present in Italy during the second half of the twentieth century following the Second World War. One major political party (Democrazia Cristiana) ruled the country for almost forty years. The reason for this very partisan approach to politics was the opposition to a strong and growing Communist Party (the largest in Western Europe during the 70s and 80s) that was seen as a major threat as most people feared they were going to be taken over by a Soviet-style central government. This feeling was especially endemic during the height of the Cold War. This period of Italian politics was dominated by one ruling political party and fostered engrained political-business connections that fueled the growth of organized crime.

This latter point in particular was less costly as belligerents were assured that the necessary authorities that needed to be “paid off” to look the other way would remain the same for an extended period. Coupled with a desire to supply goods that were either rationed after the war or taxed heavily (such as cigarettes), the mafia was an outgrowth of the desires of consumers coupled with weak governance structures. The resultant corruption restructured Italy’s economy almost completely.

As was the case during the nineteenth century, these corrupt associations were found in the southern regions of Italy. With the strengthening of this direct channel with the central government the mafia´s rapid growth moved north to more industrialized and much more strongly developed areas of Italy. What was once a contained problem has now entered all major industrial sectors by forming an intricate web between business and politics. (Dwight Eisenhower´s Italian counterpart would likely have warned of this “industrial-political” complex.) Organized crime has spread like a form of cancer that has become untreatable and has progressed to the stage where its removal would likely imperil the already shaky economy. In short, even if the surgery were a complete success, the patient would likely die.

The fact that corruption has been deeply rooted within Italy’s political, social and economic structures makes it even more challenging to perform its obligations within the European Union. It will be very challenging for Italy to exit the recession it is facing with such a corrupt and unhealthy system it possesses. Public debt is currently over 130 percent of Italian GDP. One obligation to remain a part of the Eurozone is to keep public debt under 60 percent of GDP, and the annual public deficit under 3 percent of GDP. Italy is nowhere near fulfilling either of these criteria (though, in its defense, few European countries are). One reason for the difficulty in getting public finances in order is the engrained political-economic order. This is a similar problem to America´s own difficulties in making necessary budget cuts to its own warfare-welfare economy. Too many entrenched interests make balancing the budget all but impossible.

In Italy the problem is accentuated because the relevant parties are inside the government itself. In America, public finances are a shambles mostly because voters don´t want to give up entitlements, or hold politicians accountable for boondoggles spiraling out of control (e.g., the War on Terror, the War on Drugs, etc.). In Italy it is the same politicians drafting the budget who directly use these funds to the benefit of themselves and the people who surround them.

Italy’s economic instability is not only destroying its economy from the inside, but also from the outside. Investors coming from abroad (e.g., other Europeans, Americans, Arabs, Chinese, etc.) do not want to cope with or run afoul of such a corrupt system. This creates instability that is quite visible because there is no real possibility of growth within the country due to government mismanagement and a lack of foreign investment. Italy only managed to attract 1.4 percent of its GDP in foreign direct investment last year, far less than the European average of 3.3 percent.

What Can Be Done?

The Lega Nord party recently proposed that the more productive and prosperous northern regions should separate from the poorer and more stagnant southern regions. The southern regions are where the mafias are most heavily concentrated, however, corruption is country wide. Exiting the euro (another popular proposal) would be rather difficult due to the complexity of the problem, though more to the point, it would be damaging to the country even if successful.

The fact of the matter is that Italy needs the help of Europe. One of the only forces keeping further widespread corruption in check is that it is somewhat “regulated” by a larger system: the European Union. The Stability and Growth Pact that should keep government finances better balanced does create pressures on the Italian government to conform. Throughout the 1970s and ´80s, this unwholesome business-political system had managed to turn Italy into the most heavily indebted country in Europe. External pressure from the EU forced Italian public finances on a more sustainable trajectory. (Between the advent of the euro and the dawn of the financial crisis, Italian government debt to GDP had fallen by a fifth; annual inflation which averaged more than 10 percent during the 1970s and ´80s has been below 3 percent since 2000.)

Aiding this process was the birth of the common currency in 2002. Unable to print new lire to satisfy its spendthrift ways, the Italian government (much like the other inflationary periphery countries) was forced to be held accountable by its tax payers. The ECB may not have shown the most restraint over the past six years, but compared to the central banks of Southern Europe it replaced, it has been a veritable enforcer of a gold standard.

Italy is between a rock and a hard place. The mafia-dominated corruption that entangles the country is so deeply rooted that it is all but impossible to reform (or preferably eliminate). Such reform could today only come about by eliminating the central government. The system that exists today was the result of unchecked political power for an extended period of forty years. (Strangely, this outcome was in response to the fear of unchecked political power in the form of communism.) If this undesirable system cannot be changed, Italians will have to change the one thing they can — where they live. Young Italians, especially skilled and ambitious Italians, have been leaving their beloved country in droves, a trend magnified since the recession began. Leaving their homeland may be a small price to pay to ensure that the failing system in place today dies off so that a better Italy can rise from its ashes.

http://mises.org/library/how-italy%E2%8 ... bles-mafia?
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Re: News from Italy

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Cops bust Palermo drug ring
Ten nabbed for growing, possession, distribution

(ANSA) - Palermo, June 9 - State Police on Tuesday arrested 10 people on charges of growing, producing and possessing with intent to deal marijuana, hashish and cocaine.
"The investigation allowed us to dismantle an entire criminal organization, some of whose components are connected with the Cosa Nostra (Sicilian mafia)," police said.
"We were able to seize significant amounts of drugs".
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Anti-Camorra raid nabs 64 suspects
Suspected of drugs, extortion, using 'kids' to do dirty work

(ANSA) - Naples, June 9 - State Police arrested 64 people Tuesday on suspicion of belonging to Camorra mafia clans operating in the Forcella area of Naples.
The suspects are believed to belong to the Amirante, Brunetto, Giuliano and Sibillo clans. They are accused of mafia association, murder, attempted murder, drug trafficking, possession of illegal weapons, and extortion.
A total of 77 people have been placed under investigation in the probe into a crime syndicate that emerged out of the ashes of the historic Giuliano clan, which took over illicit activities in various parts of the Naples historic city center.
Investigators say the probe has shed light on a series of ambushes motivated by turf wars between rival clans.
Wiretaps also revealed the syndicate used very young affiliates to do their dirty work - whom they called "the kids".
The suspects were arrested on various charges including mafia association, homicide, attempted murder, drug trafficking and illegal weapons possession. Prosecutors are also looking into possible links between the Forcella clans and the 1985 assassination of crusading anti-mafia investigative reporter Giancarlo Siani.
A mobster named Angelo Nuvoletta died in 2013 at the age of 71 while serving a life sentence for ordering the hit on Siani.
Siani had written an article in the Naples newspaper Il Mattino revealing Nuvoletta's betrayal of an another Camorra boss, Valentino Gionta, an ally whom Nuvoletta had had arrested in order to placate an adversary during a bloody, violent rash of reprisals.
Nuvoletta is believed to have ordered Siani's murder to save face, and cover up the fact that he had broken a mafia honor code.
Nuvoletta was arrested in May 2001 after 17 years in hiding.
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Re: News from Italy

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Smuggling tonnes of cocaine through an Italian port
Mobsters with the powerful 'Ndrangheta syndicate develop creative new ways to sneak 'blow' past overwhelmed police.

Gioia Tauro, Italy - In Calabria, one of Italy's poorest regions, the Gioia Tauro port has become known for the massive quantities of cocaine transported by organised crime groups.
"The port was born with an original sin," said Roberto Di Palma, an Italian magistrate and mob researcher, during a conversation with Al Jazeera at his Reggio Calabria office.
The "original sin" Di Palma refers to is the 'Ndrangheta, Europe's most powerful crime syndicate, an organisation that is more dangerous and influential than the Mafia, its better-known Sicilian cousin.
The coastal road leading to the Gioia Tauro port runs past a number of abandoned warehouses and un-farmed plots of land. In Calabria - home to powerful 'Ndrangheta families with global influence - the illegal activities of organised crime dwarf the revenues of the legal economy.

Roberto Di Palma, magistrate on organised crime, in his Reggio Calabria office [Antonella Corigliano/Al Jazeera]
The Gioia Tauro port is one of Europe's largest when it comes to transhipment, the term the shipping industry uses to describe ports used primarily as intermediate destinations.
Every year 3.6 million containers arrive at the Gioia Tauro port, a number that makes it extremely difficult for the companies operating there, as well as the team of 25 policemen supervising it, to control the port's inflows and outflows.
"How can we check everything?" a nearly desperate company manager told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity.
"It's nearly impossible. If we checked every cargo, no ship would stop and the port would die."
Di Palma said "when it comes to drug trafficking, it is always hard to have reliable numbers. What we can say with certainty is that in terms of numbers of drug requisitions by port authorities, Gioia Tauro tops Europe".
90 percent purity
When estimating cocaine volumes, authorities involved in fighting narcotrafficking use what is known as the one-to-10 rule of thumb.
According to this rule, for every police seizure there are about nine drug shipments that freely transit through the port.
According to data published by the DIA, the Italian law enforcement agency dealing with organised crime, between 2011 and 2014 total seizures amounted to 5.5 metric tonnes, implying that almost 50 tonnes of cocaine probably transited through the port over that time period.
Vincenzo Caruso, who is in charge of port security and a lieutenant colonel with the Guardia di Finanza, a police force that deals with financial crimes, said in a phone interview with Al Jazeera that "the cocaine arriving in Gioia Tauro is usually about 90 percent pure, meaning that it can be cut up to four times before being placed on the market".
Given that the average street price of cocaine in Western Europe is somewhere between 60-70 euros ($67-79) a gram, the estimated market value of the cocaine that transited through Gioia Tauro between 2011 and 2014 is somewhere between 30bn-35 billion euros ($34bn-39bn).
Italian police estimate the 'Ndrangheta controls between 60-80 percent of Europe's cocaine market. Narcotrafficking, coupled with other activities including real estate, the illegal arms trade, and hazardous waste management, yield the group an annual revenue of roughly 56 billion euros ($63bn), more than the combined annual revenue of Deutsche Bank and McDonald's.


Data from the UNODC, the UN agency monitoring drug trafficking and consumption, show the volume of seizures have declined. However, Di Palma said these numbers should be taken with caution, since the 'Ndrangheta has recently refined its smuggling techniques, for a time duping port authorities.
Refining techniques

The 'Ndrangheta's new smuggling technique is called "rip-off" and is at the centre of a new book Oro Bianco (White Gold), authored by Nicola Gratteri and Antonio Nicaso, the world's top researchers on the Calabria-based crime syndicate.
A few years ago, cocaine smuggling was mainly carried out by establishing fake cargo companies under the control of the 'Ndrangheta.

But now the group relies on men whom it has placed in key ports along cocaine trafficking routes, a technique it first experimented with in Gioia Tauro, a port where it was able to take more risks thanks to the strong influence it exercises in the region.

The strategy involves a 'Ndrangheta member strategically placed at a port who opens up a container bound for Gioia Tauro, and hides cocaine parcels inside it. His counterpart in Gioia Tauro is then informed of the container's number. When it arrives at the Italian port, the crime syndicate rushes to empty it before customs or police are able to check it.
"It's nearly impossible for authorities to find out what is going on," a port worker in Gioia Tauro told Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity.

"There are just too many containers coming and going, and the 'Ndrangheta's influence is strong despite the work of the authorities."

The recent economic crisis also plays a role. A number of companies operating in Gioia Tauro were hit heavily and at risk of going bankrupt. The 'Ndrangheta loaned money to companies in crisis, allowing them to take them over and operate in the port without anyone noticing.
The new smuggling technique has two benefits, Nicaso and Gratteri told Al Jazeera.

It reduces costs because the criminal organisation no longer has to open up fictitious cargo companies. It also diminishes risk, because cocaine is smuggled in smaller quantities - up to 200kg per shipment. If seized, the loss is not a major setback.

Impossible to halt
This makes it harder for authorities to stop the inflow.
Nevertheless, the Gioa Tauro Guardia di Finanza has been quick to find ways to fight the "rip-off" technique.
Caruso and his men were the first to take notice. As the Guardia di Finanza caught on, it started checking the codes on the cargo container locks to see whether they were tampered with. If the code was different, the cargo probably contained a drug parcel.
This strategy has now been imitated across Europe by other national authorities fighting narcotrafficking.

As authorities discovered more and more containers that had been tampered with, the 'Ndrangheta responded by forging locks with the same numerical code as the original in order to bypass police checks.
This made it once again hard, if not impossible, for Gioia Tauro's authorities to find drug parcels. However, Caruso said "new prevention techniques are being developed, and we are certain we'll soon have positive results".
Di Palma, Gratteri, Nicaso, and Caruso complain that the 'Ndrangheta and its cocaine smuggling are often falsely considered to be a local or national problem; the 'Ndrangheta is an organised crime network that operates on an international scale.

Authorities in Gioia Tauro can put up a fight, they say, but until there is a coordinated effort by international police, it may be nearly impossible to bring to a halt an industry worth billions.

http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/featur ... 47781.html
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Re: News from Italy

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police dismantled a drug ring led by the ndrangheta in italy and france and arrested 17 members of the gang. the leaders of the drug ring are the Magnoli brothers who live in vallauris (france)
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Re: News from Italy

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30 members of the mazzei crime family arrested in catania (sicily) charged with drug trafficking and extortions
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'Ndrangheta-Colombia cocaine ring busted
Drugs transported to Spain on sailing yachts

(ANSA) - Reggio Calabria, June 17 - Italian finance police on Wednesday started carrying out 34 arrest warrants against 34 people suspected of being members of Calabria's 'Ndrangheta mafia syndicate and involved in drugs trafficking from Colombia, ANSA sources said. Suspects were also arrested in Spain.
American investigators and Spain's Guardia Civil paramilitary police force cooperated in the probe. The authorities confiscated around four tonnes of cocaine during the probe. The drugs were transported from Colombia to Spain via sailing yachts, sources said.
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Re: News from Italy

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Police bust major 'Ndrangheta cocaine ring
'Smuggled a ton of pure coke into Italy in five months'

(ANSA) - Turin, June 18 - Finance police on Thursday busted what investigators say is a major 'Ndrangheta mafia drug ring that smuggled a ton of pure cocaine into Italy in just five months.
Police arrested eight suspects and seized 415 kilos of uncut cocaine, worth about 35 million euros.
Seven people were arrested in Italy and one in Portugal as authorities seek another seven suspects, three of them Brazilian.
Police also seized assets worth eight million euros, sources said.
Investigators say the drug rink trafficked cocaine from Brazil and Peru via Portugal and Spain into Italy, where it supplied 'Ndrangheta clans in Calabria, Lombardy and Piedmont.
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Re: News from Italy

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Reports of Ndrangheta political involvement in Australia. Full report on Australia's ABC network this evening (Local time).

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-06-29/i ... ns/6579076

http://www.smh.com.au/national/gladhand ... 628-ghydu8
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Re: News from Italy

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Ecomafia crimes up 7 bn to 22 bn euros

(ANSA) - Rome, June 30 - The amount of crimes against the Italian environment committed by organised crime groups, or Ecomafia offences, grew seven billion euros last year to 22 billion euros, according to the latest report on the phenomenon from green group Legambiente.

Last year there were 29,293 ecocrimes, or 80 a day, the report said, with a 26% rise in the waste sector and a 4.3% gain in the cement sector, "mainly fuelled by corruption". Puglia is the top region per number of crimes while Lazio is top in central Italy and Lombardy leads the way for corruption-linked ecocrimes, said the report.

More than half the crimes, 14,736, took place in the four regions where Italy's mafias are based: Puglia, Sicily, Campania and Calabria.

Crimes affecting the agri-food sector amounted to 7,985, for a value of 4.3 billion euros, and the illicit animal racket notched up 7,846 crimes.

http://www.ansa.it/english/news/2015/06 ... 4750e.html
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Re: News from Italy

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Ten arrested in 'Ndrangheta San Ferdinando operation
Investigations confirm mafia infiltration of local town council

(ANSA) - Reggio Calabria, July 2 - Ten people have been arrested on suspicion of mafia crimes as part of investigations into Calabria's 'Ndrangheta crime syndicate, sources said Thursday.
The operation, carried out on Wednesday night, targeted the Bellocco-Cimato and Pesce-Pantano clans operating in San Ferdinando on the Gioia Tauro plain.
It was the continuation of a 2013 probe that shed light on their activities in the area.
The 10 suspects were arrested on mafia, weapons and drugs-related charges and for damage.
They included former local councillor Giovanni Pantano, who was arrested within the context of the 2013 probe and subsequently released. Investigations also confirmed the infiltration by the local 'Ndrangheta in the San Ferdinando municipality where mayor Domenico Madafferi and his deputy Santo Cieli were arrested last October

http://www.ansa.it/english/news/2015/07 ... cd220.html
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Re: News from Italy

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Anyone know more about Roberto Settineri and this guy Christian Fiorenza who came over from Sicily with Settineri?

The owner of a South Florida-based prostitution ring with links to the Scott Rothstein scandal was sentenced to more than three years in federal prison Thursday..

Christian Fiorenza, 51, of Pompano Beach, admitted earlier this year that he ran a "high-end adult escort agency" that provided hookers for wealthy clients in South Florida and other cities around the U.S.

Read More: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/local/browa ... story.html



Rothstein went undercover to help feds nab reputed Sicilian mafia figure

Scott Rothstein went to work undercover with federal investigators to bring down a reputed Sicilian Mafia figure.

Almost as soon as he returned from Morocco in early November, Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein clandestinely went to work with federal investigators to bring down a high-value target — a reputed Sicilian Mafioso.

Read more: http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/news/ ... ted/nL6Nh/
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