Thursday, January 13, 2011

Camorra import food with bacteria and poisons "The new revelation in a file of 2008 U.S.

ROME - The site continues to hit Assange. Following the new revelations published yesterday on Italy, ranging from the mafia to threaten some provinces of Afghanistan under Italian control, today, it's the Camorra. The file posted by WikiLeaks back what was said by the U.S. Consulate General in Naples, J.

Patrick Truhn in June 2008 in Campania the Camorra does business with "cheap imports" which are "full of apples from the halls of pesticides in Moldova Morocco infested with E. coli, the dangerous E. coli, with" labels made in Campania ". In the telegram, the diplomat cited the statements of a "commander of the Carabinieri in Naples.

There is also talk of the bakeries in the hands of the Camorra, where you cook the bread with toxic materials. In the paragraph that deals with the economic and environmental interests of the Camorra in Campania, the diplomat who writes about "two thirds" of the bakeries in the region are in the hands of the crime, and cook the bread with toxic materials.

And in Caserta "factories that make illegal use powdered milk mozzarella Bolivia." In the telegram, Roberto Saviano quotes the diplomat: "He told us that industries save 80%" entrusting the management of toxic waste to the Camorra. Most of these industries is to the north, he told us. " In the same file to the console trace a picture of the Calabria region be defined as a "weak" as well as a drain on the Italian economy "with a population" and that lack of optimism that saw local politicians as corrupt or ineffective.

" An area "in the hands of extortionists and drug dealers." In that year the consul J. Patrick Truhn stopped about four days in the region during a trip along the peninsula: "Calabria will continue to be a burden for the country until the national government does not devote attention and resources needed to solve thorny problems," he said on his return.

For Trunh, in addition to the "contribution (so far modest) success in law enforcement, we need a revolution in the way they see themselves in the Calabrian organized crime, corruption and civil society." There are "few positive signs, rooted above all" young people ". But more generally, during the trip, "we have always heard the same complaints," reads the file of the diplomat.

At Vibo Valentia, for example, the prefect of the province Ennio Sodano to admit that "the whole society is involved in the Calabrian perpetuate this situation. The company is irrelevant." In Crotone, according to "the local president of Confindustria", "regional president of Confindustria, Umberto de Rose, did not lead a strong opposition against members who pay the extortionists because it considers them victims who need help." Tourism, continues the dispatch, "remains one of hope, despite the inadequate facilities (the Salerno-Reggio Calabria is under construction for decades, and rail connections, beyond the Tyrrhenian coast, are terrible), environmental degradation and organized crime.

" And the year before, said Truhn, when the consul, "suggested to the President of the Province of Reggio Calabria to talk with U.S. tour operator of the cruise industry" to take tourists beyond the Straits of Messina, including a day and Reggio perhaps a visit to the excavations at Locri, "the President's answer was:" What is a tour operator? ".

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