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Call made for Italian troops to fight mafia

mafiaWith the numbers of mafia-related murders on the rise, Italy’s interior minister has called for the army to be sent in.

Clans within the Camorra crime syndicate are involved in an upsurge of violence as they fight over drug dealing territory.

The result has been 10 murders in Naples since the year began, with three victims having been gunned down on the streets in just over 24 hours.

Naples and the surrounding region of Campania is the base for the Camorra which is said to be growing in strength. Each year it brings in tens of millions of euros from drug trafficking, extortion, prostitution and the illegal dumping or burning of toxic waste.

“Right now in Naples we need the army,” said Angelino Alfano, the interior minister and deputy prime minister. “We need to silence the guns.”

He said that in Naples the number of murders is rising while elsewhere in the country crimes are decreasing.

Sending troops to Naples would free up the police, allowing more officers to concentrate on fighting the mafia, he added.

His call drew the support of the city’s mayor and its archbishop.

Although dozens of Camorra bosses are already in jail, they are often replaced by younger, and sometimes more violent, members.

The new generation is “attempting, with total unscrupulousness, to occupy the territory through violence,” said Luigi Riello, the chief prosecutor of Naples.

The Camorra is said to be second in wealth and aggression only to the ’Ndrangheta mafia in Calabria.

The demand for drugs is fuelling the violence and bloodshed and has led to the increasing power of the Camorra, despite being composed of some 100 semi-autonomous clans which continuously battle each other.

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Comments  

-6 #1 Ralph Pritchard 2016-02-09 10:16
The Italian problem is common to all Latino societies. If its not your problem then stay out of it. So, even when an individual tasked with 'policing' these criminals feels stirred enough to take action - no-one else has any reason to join them. Putting their head up and get it shot off.

And there is not the absolute distinction of right and wrong found more commonly in 'Protestant' countries. Here there is a 3rd category - Privilege.
I'm special (or I know someone special) so back off.
And the Club Med. Mafia's have had centuries to infiltrate all aspects of their societies.
In Portugal, as we constantly see through ADN; just asking who authorised an apartment block to be built but then never licensed to take in residents; waste to be dumped; a new road going where it is going ... indeed, asking the 'wrong questions' about anything going on around you gets you marked down as 'nosy'. Difficult. Not just by the Local Municipal and Regional Government Ministries but the local Police as well. It is you that must first raise the complaint - your ID, your NIF, your passport number. You alone. To finally get a vague reply (if anything at all) that some committee is already looking into the matter and it is subjudice.

Just a year or so we all heard of a candidate for regional mayor in Italy, not campaigning as socialist or social democrat etc but on an anti-Mafia ticket. How honest is that (!) ... and would it ever work in Portugal?

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