Italian Ex-militant To Face Justice After Decades On The Run
Sumaira FH Published January 14, 2019 | 05:57 PM
Former communist militant Cesare Battisti, wanted in Italy for four murders in the 1970s, was expected in Rome Monday after an international police squad tracked him down and arrested him in Bolivia
Jailed in 1979 for belonging to an armed revolutionary group outlawed in Italy, Battisti escaped from prison two years later, and has spent nearly four decades on the run.
Italy had repeatedly sought the extradition of the activist, who lived in Brazil for years under the protection of former leftist president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, himself now in prison for corruption.
Battisti was seized late Saturday in the Bolivian city of Santa Cruz de la Sierra in an operation carried out by a joint team of Italian and Bolivian officers, Italian state police said.
He was expected to arrive at Rome's Ciampino airport on an Italian-flagged Falcon 900 around 11.30am (1030 GMT).
A photograph released by Italian police showed him sitting calmly in the small plane, apparently without handcuffs.
Italy's Interior Minister Matteo Salvini was set to meet him at the airport and escort him straight to Rome's Rebibbia jail, where according to media reports he will begin life behind bars with six months solitary confinement.
- 'Rot in jail' - The 64-year-old fugitive could be seen walking casually about Santa Cruz in sunglasses and a blue T-shirt, in surveillance footage taken hours before his capture. He gave up without a struggle, according to Italian government sources.
"We've got him. And now he'll have to rot in jail. He's a Communist terrorist. A killer. A coward," said far-right Salvini.
Battisti was sentenced to life imprisonment for having killed two Italian policemen, taking part in the murder of a butcher and helping plan the slaying of a jeweller who died in a shootout that left his teenage son in a wheelchair.
"It's over, now the victims can rest in peace," said Alberto Torregiani, the son of the slain jeweller.
"It should have happened years ago." Battisti has admitted to being part of the Armed Proletarians for Communism, a radical group which staged a string of robberies and attacks, but has always denied responsibility for any deaths, painting himself as a political refugee.
However Rome remains determined to punish one of the last figures from Italy's so-called Years of Lead, a decade of violent turmoil which began in the late 1960s and saw dozens of deadly attacks by hardline leftwing and rightwing groups.
Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said in a Facebook post that he had expressed gratitude to Brazil's recently inaugurated President Jair Bolsonaro in a telephone call.
During his presidential campaign the far-right Bolsonaro -- who took office on January 1 -- vowed that if elected he would "immediately" send Battisti back to Italy.
Battisti had filed for asylum without receiving any response from authorities, Bolivia's ombudsman said in an article published in the local El Deber de Santa Cruz newspaper.
He had been hoping to find favour with Bolivia's left-wing President Evo Morales after saying in his asylum request that he'd been forced to quit Brazil due to "the ominous coincidence" that Italy and Brazil were both now run by "far-right" governments.
- 'Little gift' - Salvini thanked the Italian and foreign police who captured "a delinquent who did not deserve the comfortable life on the beach, and who should spend the rest of his days in prison".
Bolsonaro's son, Brazilian lawmaker Eduardo Bolsonaro, tweeted in Italian with a picture of Battisti: "Brazil is no longer the land of bandits. Matteo Salvini, the 'little gift' is on its way." Since his jailbreak Battisti had reinvented himself as an author, writing a string of noir novels. In 2004, he skipped bail in France, where he had taken refuge. He then went to live clandestinely in Brazil until he was arrested in 2007 in Rio de Janeiro.
After years in custody, then-president Lula issued a decree -- later upheld by Brazil's Supreme Court -- in 2010 refusing Battisti's extradition to Italy, and he was freed, angering Rome.
Battisti, who has a five-year-old Brazilian son, last year told AFP he faced "torture" and death if he were ever to be sent back to Italy.
Related Topics
Recent Stories
Nazish Jahangir denies viral screenshots, calls it fake
Govt likely to hike electricity price once again
Bismah Maroof announces immediate retirement from international cricket
Malala expresses unwavering support for Gaza people
Selection committee dissolved over Pakistan women cricket team's poor performanc ..
Punjab CM Maryam Nawaz in police uniform at Chung police center
Currency Rate In Pakistan - Dollar, Euro, Pound, Riyal Rates On 25 April 2024
Today Gold Rate in Pakistan 25 April 2024
Mired in crisis, Boeing reports another loss
Session Awarding Ceremony 2024 held at Cadet College Muzaffarabad
Austrian ski great Hirscher to make comeback under Dutch flag
Pakistan, Japan agrees to convene 'Economic Policy Dialogue'
More Stories From World
-
US announces sweeping cuts to power sector carbon emissions
16 minutes ago -
US to give Micron $6.1 bn for American chip factories
16 minutes ago -
Venice launches five-euro entry fee
26 minutes ago -
New Godzilla x Kong film continues to lead Chinese box office
26 minutes ago -
2024 Zhongguancun Forum opens in Beijing to focus on cutting-edge technologies
26 minutes ago -
Philippines grapples with measles, pertussis outbreaks: UNICEF
46 minutes ago
-
450,000 stimulant tablets seized in Myanmar's Yangon
46 minutes ago -
Mining giant Anglo American shares jump on BHP bid
46 minutes ago -
Cambodia's rubber export up 5.1 pct in Q1
46 minutes ago -
Zimbabwean president reshuffles cabinet
46 minutes ago -
Football: Italian Cup result
46 minutes ago -
Sugar futures close lower
56 minutes ago