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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World

Mafia godfather who visited Britain protected at high level, says prosecutor

Italian prosecutor Maria Teresa Principato at a press conference in Palermo, Italy, on Monday.
Italian prosecutor Maria Teresa Principato at a press conference in Palermo, Italy, on Monday. Photograph: Alessandro Fucarini/AP

An Italian prosecutor who has been hunting the fugitive head of the Sicilian mafia for the past 10 years says he has eluded capture because he is “protected at a very high level”.

Matteo Messina Denaro, who has been on the run since 1993, leaves Sicily often and with apparent ease, Maria Teresa Principato told the Il Fatto Quotidiano daily in an interview published on Tuesday, a day after 11 of his henchmen were arrested by Italian police.

“We have confirmation of his presence in Brazil, Spain, Britain, Austria. He travels for extremely high-level business, and his return to Sicily is irregular and increasingly infrequent,” she said.

The Palermo prosecutor said the fact that Denaro was still at large “means he benefits from protection at a very high level”. But she would not elaborate on whether he was helped by the mafia, politicians or institutions, as “very confidential investigations are currently under way”.

An undated image provided by the Italian police shows a police surveillance photo of a meeting between Vito Gondola, left, 77, and Michele Gucciardi, 62, near Sicily. Eleven members of the Sicilian mafia have been arrested by Italian police.
An undated image provided by the Italian police shows a police surveillance photo of a meeting between Vito Gondola, left, 77, and Michele Gucciardi, 62, near Sicily. Eleven members of the Sicilian mafia have been arrested by Italian police. Photograph: Palermo police/EPA

Denaro – once a trigger man who reportedly boasted he could “fill a cemetery” with his victims – had been communicating with his men via the age-old method of “pizzini”, bits of paper containing messages, left under a rock at a farm in Sicily.

At the height of his power he had a reputation as a flashy, ruthless womaniser who ruled over at least 900 men with an iron fist.

The police sting on Monday which caught both mobsters and those ferrying the messages behind bars was cheered by the Italian prime minister, Matteo Renzi, but Principato said Denaro’s interests were largely beyond the Sicilian coastline.

“The billionaire deals are done outside of Sicily. Here there’s the economic crisis ... There’s no money any more.”

However, a glimmer of hope for catching Denaro, the successor to godfathers Toto Riina and Bernardo Provenzano, comes from the crisis.

“Let’s not forget there’s a bounty on his head, which in hard times can tempt a lot of people,” Principato said.

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