Nicholas Whithorn  Profile picture
Jan 6, 2022 23 tweets 7 min read Read on X
6 January 1980, the mafia murders Piersanti Mattarella, President of the Sicilian Regional Government, in Palermo. This iconic photo by Letizia Battaglia shows current President of Italy, Sergio Mattarella, holding his dead brother in his arms >> 1
Piersanti Mattarella is one of those rare beasts in Sicily, an honest & principled Christian Democrat politician, at a time when his party in the region is dominated by figures such as Salvo Lima (left) & Vito Ciancimino, Mayor of Palermo (right), colluding with the mafia >> 2
Just 10 months earlier, another Christian Democrat politician, Michele Reina, Party Secretary for Province of Palermo, was killed by Cosa Nostra because of his refusal to compromise on legality & his moves to find agreement on reforms with the opposition Communist Party >> 3
Piersanti Mattarella goes one step further by gaining active backing for his anti-corruption campaign & institutional reforms from the Communist Party, which supports Mattarella's administration in Assembly votes, although it does not actually take up government posts >> 4
Mattarella's reform initiative also draws attention at national level. In November 1979 President Sandro Pertini (photo with Mattarella), arguably the first President to enjoy widespread popularity among Italians, visits Palermo for a special session of the Regional Assembly >> 5
This support from the Communist Party & national institutions makes it even more imperative for mafia & their proxies in the Christian Democrats to neutralise this dangerous 'loose cannon' in some way. However, this does not automatically mean killing him >> 6
The mafia has always preferred more subtle methods that work on all but the most determined & politicians are rarely killed. Indeed, Michele Reina (murdered in 1979) is the first leading politician to be killed by Cosa Nostra since Mayor Emanuele Notarbartolo (photo) in 1893 >> 7
However, Mattarella's rise to power coincides with that of Totò Riina (photo), who has taken over Cosa Nostra in Palermo with his ruthless 'Corleonesi' faction. Their political proxy in Palermo is Vito Ciancimino & their link to Rome is Salvo Lima, Andreotti's man in Sicily >> 8
Since the Corleonesi by this point have control of the 'Commission' or 'Cupola' in Palermo, which authorises such high level killings, the most ruthless option is chosen, as will happen in many cases over the following years, while Riina wages his war against the state >> 9
On 6 January 1980, a public holiday for Epiphany, Piersanti Mattarella leaves his building in via Libertà in Palermo with his wife, his two children & his mother-in-law. They get into the family's Fiat 132 to drive to church >> 10
There is no police escort. Mattarella always refuses escort on public holidays so that the officers can spend time with their families. He does not even have time to start the engine. At least two gunmen run up to the car & Mattarella is hit by multiple gunshots >> 11
Among the first to arrive on the scene is Piersanti's younger brother Sergio, the outgoing President of Italy. At the time of the murder, he teaches public law at Palermo University & it is this event that leads him to go into politics, to continue his brother's work >> 12
In 1995 Totò Riina, Michele Greco, Bernardo Brusca, Bernardo Provenzano, Pippo Calò, Francesco Madonia & Nenè Geraci are sentenced to life imprisonment for constituting the 'Commission' that ordered the murder but we still do not know who materially killed Mattarella >> 13
According to Francesco Marino Mannoia, who turned state's evidence in the trial of Giulio Andreotti, the killers were the mafiosi Salvatore Federico, Francesco Davì, Santo Inzerillo & Antonino Rotolo. However, Marino Mannoia proved to be an unreliable witness in many cases >> 14
Giovanni Falcone's investigation leads to the surprising conclusion that the gunmen who shot Mattarella are Giuseppe Valerio Fioravanti (photo, left) & Gilberto Cavallini (photo, right), members of neo-fascist terrorist group 'Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari' (NAR), not mafiosi >> 15
NAR are responsible later the same year for the worst terrorist attack in postwar Italian history when they plant a bomb that explodes in the waiting room at Bologna Station on 2 August 1980 killing 85 people & wounding 200 (see thread below) >> 16
Both Fioravanti & Cavallini were convicted for involvement in the Bologna bombing. But why would neo-fascists help the mafia? Their common desire to destabilise the state. Proof emerges in the case of the bombing of a train in 1984 (see thread below) >> 17
Despite Falcone's acumen & perspicacity, in this case the link is not proved. Falcone suspects Fioravanti & Cavallini stayed near Palermo at the home of fellow neo-fascist Ciccio Mangiameli (photo). Fioravanti also visits Mangiameli just days before the Bologna bomb >> 18
Mangiameli is killed by Fioravanti, Francesca Mambro (photo) & Fioravanti's brother, Cristiano, near Rome on 9 September 1980 & his body thrown into a lake. The motive is partly a question of money & partly Mangiameli's desire to disassociate himself from the Bologna bomb >> 19
When he is arrested in 1986, Cristiano Fioravanti (photo) recounts that Valerio wanted to travel to Sicily to kill Mangiameli's wife & daughter before the body was found. When Cristiano asks why, Valerio tells him they "killed a Sicilian politician" in return for favours >> 20
Fioravanti & Cavallini are tried for the murder of Piersanti Mattarella in 1995. Although Fioravanti's presence in Palermo on 6 January is ascertained & Mattarella's wife identifies him as one of the gunmen, he & Cavallini are found 'not guilty' due to insufficient evidence >> 21
In 2018, Prosecutors in Palermo reopen the case. Some hope that Fioravanti (now free) or Cavallini (serving 9 life sentences) may reveal the truth as, under the law of double jeapordy, they cannot be retried, but the names of those who pulled the trigger remain unknown >> 22
Piersanti Mattarella
b. Castellammare del Golfo, 24/05/1935
d. Palermo, 06/01/1980

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More from @NickWhithorn

Apr 24
To celebrate 25 April, this is a slightly revised version of my thread from a few years ago, recounting events surrounding the flight, capture & execution of Mussolini (Photo: last known photo of Mussolini alive, as he leaves Milan on the evening of 25 April 1945) [Thread] >> 1 Image
Around 4 p.m. on 25 April 1945, a meeting is organised between heads of the Fascist 'Repubblica Sociale Italiana" (RSI) & representatives of partisans of the Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale (CLN), with the Archbishop of Milan, Ildefonso Schuster (photo), as mediator >> 2 Image
At this point German forces in Italy are negotiating their surrender to the Allies, who have never dealt directly with Mussolini & the RSI, so the CLN, from a strong position, demands an unconditional surrender from the fascist government >> 3
Read 98 tweets
Apr 4
4April 1945, Italian partisan & Red Cross nurse Cecilia Deganutti (codename 'Joan of Arc') is burnt alive in the crematorium at the Risiera di San Sabba concentration camp in Trieste [Thread] >> 1 Image
Cecilia Deganutti is a nurse working with the Red Cross in her home city of Udine. After Italy's surrender in September 1943, she is assigned to the Red Cross unit at the city's railway station >> 2
Trains carrying Italian soldiers, political prisoners and Jews being deported to German concentration camps pass through this station and Cecilia is often required to provide medical assistance. Whenever possible, she tries to help deportees escape >> 3
Read 16 tweets
Feb 11
On 11 February 2004, Attilio Manca, a 34 year old urologist from Barcellona Pozzo di Gotto (Sicily), dies in his flat in Viterbo in mysterious circumstances. It is suspected he unknowingly operated Bernardo Provenzano & was killed because he recognised his patient [Thread] >> 1
Investigators have ascertained that Bernardo Provenzano underwent a prostrate operation in a private clinic near Marseilles in October 2003. In the same period Attilio Manca tells his family he is in the Marseilles area to examine a patient in preparation for surgery >> 2
Despite his young age, Manca is considered a leader in his field (laparoscopic prostrate surgery). His body is found in his flat on 12 February. The ambulance crew that attends reports that his nose is broken, his face covered in blood and his body heavily bruised all over >> 3
Read 12 tweets
Jan 18
18 January 1994, Democrazia Cristiana, the governing party in Italy for 50 years, is dissolved, Berlusconi founds his party Forza Italia & 'ndrangheta murders two Carabinieri on the A3 motorway, near Scilla in Calabria. These 3 events are closely tied [Thread] >> 1
Most of the information in this thread has been established in the judgment handed down by the Reggio Calabria Corte d'Assise in July 2020, sentencing Giuseppe Graviano (photo) & Rocco Santo Filippone to life imprisonment for ordering the murders & other attacks >> 2 Image
This judgment has been confirmed by the Reggio Calabria Court of Appeal (25 March 1993). Judgment of the Supreme Court of Cassation is pending. Other information has been confirmed by other court judgments. Anything not established by court judgments is indicated as such >> 3
Read 80 tweets
Dec 28, 2023
5.20 a.m. Monday 28 December 1908, the prosperous Sicilian port city of Messina is mostly asleep. The evening before saw the inauguration of the city's new public lighting system & a Christmas performance of Verdi's "Aida" at the Vittorio Emanuele Theatre (photo) [Thread] >> 1 Image
The port is crowded with ships, as usual, in the early morning of 28 December. Along the port stands the imposing Palazzata (photo), rebuilt after the destructive earthquake of 1783, along with most other buildings in the city >> 2 Image
At 5:20:27 an earthquake measuring 7.1 on the Richter scale strikes Messina and the city of Reggio Calabria on the other side of the Strait. It lasts 37 interminable seconds. When it ends, hardly a building is standing intact in either city >> 3
Read 40 tweets
Dec 12, 2023
12 December 1985, at 8p.m. in the Sicilian town of Villafranca Tirrena, near Messina, 17-year-old Graziella Campagna leaves the "Regina" laundry, where she works to help support her parents & 7 siblings, to take a bus home to the village of Saponara. She never arrives [Thread] >> Image
Investigators quickly establish that Graziella didn't board the bus, as neither the driver nor any of the passengers remember seeing her, even though she is a regular user of the service and known to many of them >> 1
A hairdresser, Maria Bisazia, who works in a salon adjacent to the bus stop, reports hearing a scream around the time of Graziella's disappearance but, when she looks out onto the street, she sees nothing, just passing cars >> 2
Read 25 tweets

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