Our South like former East Germany
We already wrote this in 1995. Why not learn from the example set by Germany in recent years? Why, if .
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Our South like former East Germany (Di martedì 27 aprile 2021)
We already wrote this in 1995. Why not learn from the example set by
Germany in recent years? Why, if our German friends have succeeded in making the
former GDR’s unification process the cornerstone of all economic and social policy, can’t we do the same for
Southern Italy? Is it unreasonable to believe that investing resources, ideas, and energies in the
South will benefit the entire country in the long run?
The history of mafias is the history of Italy Interview with Isaia Sales
Different opinions have been expressed on the study and analysis of mafias for some time now. After .
Segnalato da : (Di martedì 2 marzo 2021)
Different opinions have been expressed on the study and analysis of
mafias for some time now. After years of silence and often denial of the criminal phenomena, the opposite extreme has been reached: a wide range of “words in freedom” that have little to do
with a reasoned study,
with field analysis made by crossing economic data and also the results of the investigations of the judiciary, but there is more than this. The attention on an investigation is mainly at the first headline in the newspapers and then everything is forgotten, because a trial takes years. Because not all operations attract interest, the more complex ones that affect the territories are the first to be forgotten.
Raffaele Cutolo zemřel: Mafiána z Camorry našli mrtvého v cele blesk.cz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from blesk.cz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Last modified on Fri 19 Feb 2021 00.33 EST
Raffaele “the Professor” Cutolo, one of the most feared and powerful bosses of the Neapolitan Camorra, spent most of his adult life in jail. And it was in a prison bed on Wednesday that he was found dead, aged 79.
His imprisonment didn’t deter him from ordering murders, forging criminal ties and sparking a war that left several hundred people dead in the early 1980s. Cutolo, whose life inspired films and songs, transformed his prison cell into his criminal office, from where he recruited thousands of members into the Camorra who, once freed, committed murders on his orders.