Italy arrests top mafia boss Messina Denaro at Sicilian hospital
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[January 16, 2023]
By Wladimiro Pantaleone
PALERMO, Italy (Reuters) -Italy's most wanted mafia boss, Matteo Messina
Denaro, was arrested by armed police at a private hospital in Sicily on
Monday, where the man who has been on the run since 1993 was being
treated for cancer.
Nicknamed "Diabolik" and "'U Siccu" (The Skinny One), Messina Denaro had
been sentenced in absentia to a life term for his role in the 1992
murders of anti-mafia prosecutors Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino,
crimes that shocked the nation and sparked a crackdown on Cosa Nostra.
Messina Denaro, 60, was led away from Palermo's "La Maddalena" hospital
by two uniformed carabinieri police and bundled into a waiting black
minivan. He was wearing a brown fur-lined jacket, glasses and a brown
and white woolly hat.
Images on social media showed locals applauding and shaking hands with
police in balaclavas as the minivan was driven away from the suburban
hospital to a secret location.
Judicial sources said he was being treated for cancer and had an
operation last year, followed by a series of appointments under a false
name.
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni hailed the arrest as "a great
victory for the state".
Maria Falcone, sister of the murdered judge, echoed that sentiment.
"It proves that mafiosi, despite their delusions of omnipotence, are
ultimately doomed to defeat in the conflict with the democratic state,"
she said.
FAST CARS, FLASHY CLOTHES
Messina Denaro, comes from the small town of Castelvetrano near Trapani
in western Sicily, and is the son of a mafia boss.
Police said last September that he was still able to issue commands
relating to the way the mafia was run in the area around Trapani, his
regional stronghold.
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A screengrab taken from a video shows
Matteo Messina Denaro the country's most wanted mafia boss after he
was arrested in this handout photo obtained by Reuters on January
16, 2023. Carabinieri/Handout via REUTERS
Before he went into hiding, he was known for driving expensive cars
and his taste for wearing finely tailored suits and Rolex watches.
He faces a life sentence for his role in bomb attacks in Florence,
Rome and Milan that killed 10 people in 1993 and is accused by
prosecutors of being solely or jointly responsible for numerous
other murders in the 1990s.
In 1993 he helped organise the kidnapping of a 12-year-old boy,
Giuseppe Di Matteo, in an attempt to dissuade his father from giving
evidence against the mafia, prosecutors say. The boy was held in
captivity for two years before he was strangled and his body
dissolved in acid.
The arrest comes almost 30 years to the day since police arrested
Salvatore "Toto" Riina, the Sicilian Mafia's most powerful boss of
the 20th century. He eventually died in jail in 2017, having never
broken his code of silence.
"It is an extraordinary event, of historic significance," Gian Carlo
Caselli, who was a prosecutor in Palermo at the time of Riina's
arrest.
Experts say that Cosa Nostra has been replaced by the 'Ndrangheta,
the Calabrian mafia, as the most powerful organised crime group in
Italy.
"There is a sense that the Sicilian Mafia is not as strong as it
used to be, especially since the 90s, they have really been unable
to enter the drug market and so they are really second-fiddle to the
‘Ndrangheta on that," said Federico Varese, Professor of Criminology
at Oxford University.
(additional reporting by Angelo Amante, writing by Keith Weir and
Cristina Carlevaro, editing by Gavin Jones, Nick Macfie and Alex
Richardson)
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