Sunday 8 September 2013

Italian mafia hurt by asset seizures but still a problem


Carlo Hermann | AFP | Getty Images
Police inspect luxury cars seized during a crackdown on the Camorra mafia in southern Italy
Syringes litter the floor of an abandoned school in the crime-plagued Scampia district of northern Naples, alongside tin foil used for crack cocaine, a filthy mattress and piles of clothing.
What was once a classroom is smeared with human waste and Coca Cola bottles filled with urine are stacked in one corner, alongside an abandoned children's toy.
For years desperate addicts lived in the school, where the local mafia or Camorra sold hard drugs from a counter.
Now the building is part of a nationwide campaign to use confiscated gang assets to persuade youths from sink estates like Scampia that there is an alternative to drugs and working for the mob.
But while the program by the organization Libera has scored some notable successes and saved young lives, it will never be enough on its own to turn the tide against the enormous power of organized crime, which has flourished during Italy's worst post-war recession as the legal economy withered.
(Read more: Organized crime: World's most lucrative criminal activities)Naples magistrate Antonello Ardituro told Reuters the confiscation of assets was a vital weapon, "more important even than the arrest and conviction of bosses," because of its visible impact in challenging mafia power.

But he added: "Naturally this is not a problem that is on the way to being solved. The mafia is very deeply rooted in society through its infiltration of the economy and political institutions."
While thousands of medium and small companies, the heart of the economy, go under in the recession, the mafia's big problem, investigators say, is laundering a sea of cash generated by drugs, extortion, gambling and illegal disposal of toxic waste.
In a credit crunch the mob makes even more money, lending at extortionate rates to desperate small companies which cannot get finance any other way and then taking them over when the owners are unable to keep up the payments.
"The crisis to us means lack of liquidity, which the Camorra and other criminal organizations have in plenty. So it is a great ally for them," said Paolo Romani, director of Avviso Pubblico, a group of anti-mafia local governments.
Wrecked school
Libera is trying to reclaim the school in Scampia, an area of 80,000 residents said to be Europe's biggest drug market, as a refuge for teenagers that will eventually host a theatre, cinema and restaurant where chefs and waiters will train.
When it took possession a few months ago, the extensive two-storey building was like a vision from hell, says local Libera leader Ciro Corona, 32. The clean-up will take at least a year.
"There was a 5 cm (2 inch) carpet of needles on the ground, vomit, excrement, blood everywhere. There was a terrible stench, there were buckets of needles where children played," he says.
Addicts tore out aluminum windows and destroyed walls, ceilings and bathrooms to get at copper cables and water pipes to sell for drugs. They used classrooms as open toilets.
On the walls are reminders of a happier time before pupils stopped enrolling because of drug dealing. Photos show sports days and social events. A sign reads "End of Year Party".
A few kms (miles) away, Corona's group trains Scampia youths and young offenders as agricultural workers in a 15 hectare (34 acre) peach orchard and wine estate confiscated from a Camorra clan with links to Sicily's Cosa Nostra.
(Read more: Gartman on Cyprus: 'Don't Mess With Russian Mafia')"They used to dissolve bodies in acid here and plan killings," he says.
Investigators believe the confiscation program, which has seized 6,500 mafia assets since a law allowing it was passed in 1996, has a powerful impact on organized crime.
"Taking away the assets that allowed the exhibition of prestige and maintenance of power is fundamental to defeating the mafia," says Geppino Fiorenza, a leader of Libera in the Campania region heartland of the Camorra. "It shows that they are not invincible."
But even the most optimistic mafia fighters harbor few illusions that this is enough on its own to defeat the mob.
Franco Roberti, Italy's new national anti-mafia prosecutor, has said the country does not have the political will, or adequate police and judicial resources to fight the mob.
The euro zone debt crisis has pushed issues like crime into a back seat as governments fight to turn around the bloc's third biggest economy and cut one of the world's highest public debts.
Current premier Enrico Letta's fractious left-right coalition struggles to do even that, let alone tackle a criminal network which the Bank of Italy says has an annual turnover worth 11 percent of GDP or around 170 billion euros.
Last year, 25 local councils in southern Italy were disbanded because of mafia infiltration, the highest number since 1993, as the mob used its wealth and muscle to corrupt politicians.
"The mafia is now more dangerous because it has been absorbed into the economic and political system," Romani said.
Of Italy's three main mafias, including Sicily's Cosa Nostra and Calabria's 'Ndrangheta, the Camorra has been particularly skilful at transforming itself into a giant business with many links to legitimate activity.
"It would be mistaken to think of today's mafiosi as simply people who intimidate," says Romani.
"The Camorristi of today are the sons and nephews of bosses who are frequently highly educated and have the job of handling and investing the great capital made with drug trafficking."
"They are like armed entrepreneurs," says Egilio Giordano, 29, a Libera colleague of Corona. "Often the gunman is the one dying of hunger but he is the tip of an iceberg."
The Camorra is particularly prone to clan warfare because it lacks the hierarchical structure of its Calabrian and Sicilian cousins. Scampia was the center of a feud which killed at least 70 people in the four years up to 2008. Another territorial war started a year ago.
"I don't have any of my childhood friends any more. Eighty percent are in jail, or dead or ran away," says Corona.
Bleak blocks
The area, dominated by bleak apartment blocks known as the "sails" because of their triangular shape, underlines the size of the task in fighting the Camorra.
With youth unemployment as high as 75 percent in Scampia, luring teenagers away from the Camorra is an uphill battle for Corona and his group.
(Read more: Corruption Is Seen as a Drain on Italy's South)"They can earn 150-200 euros for quarter of an hour's work as a lookout for drug dealers," he said.
Scampia is one of the biggest victims of a century of neglect in southern Italy, which saw a 47 percent decline in industrial investment between 2008 and 2012 alone.
Creating jobs is seen as the only way to break the stranglehold of rich mafia clans who dominate many areas as the prime provider not just of work, albeit illegal, but also health care and other social services.
"Nobody wants to be in the Camorra. The state is absent so somebody else is present. If those kids and other people didn't break the law they wouldn't eat," says single mother Monica Cecchi, 43, an out-of-work cleaner.
Scampia's "sail" apartment blocks, built without any infrastructure or shops nearby, are an example of how flawed public housing projects can foment crime. Some of the blocks have now been demolished and others are largely uninhabited, replaced by brighter, more attractive apartments.
But the area remains scarred by crime and the sign outside its graffiti-daubed railway station seems almost ironic. "If you believe in Scampia, you will find a sea of love," it reads.


Miss World opens in Indonesia after protests


The 63rd Miss World Pageant contestants wear Indonesian's traditional dress during opening ceremony in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia on Sunday, Sept. 8, 2013. (AP Photo/Firdia Lisnawati)
BALI, Indonesia (AP) — The 63rd edition of the Miss World pageant opened Sunday after protests by Muslim hard-liners confined the event to Indonesia's predominantly Hindu resort island of Bali.
The opening ceremony, which was televised to 186 countries, featured Bali's Kecak dance and a parade of all 131 contestants.
Following days of protests by Indonesian hard-line Muslim groups and the rejection of the contest by a leading clerics' organization, the government announced Saturday that it was moving the Sept. 28 final round to Bali. It was initially set to be held in Sentul, on the outskirts of the capital, Jakarta.
Bali is the only Hindu-dominated province in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim country.
Controversy over the pageant has been mounting in Indonesia, which has a reputation as a tolerant, pluralist society that respects freedom of expression.
The Indonesia Ulema Council, the country's most influential clerics' organization, and the hard-line groups Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia and Front for Islamic Defenders have urged the government to cancel the event. They have argued that the exposure of skin by women in a competition violates Muslim teachings, even after organizers agreed to cut the bikini competition and instead outfit contestants in more conservative sarongs.
The chairwoman of the Miss World Organization, Julia Morley, has promised that none of the contestants will wear a bikini. The pageant began in the 1950s, and the first winner was crowned in a two-piece bathing suit.
"We only want to try to find the best way of working together," Morley told a news conference Saturday in Bali.
Most Muslims in Indonesia, a secular country of 240 million people, are moderate, but a small extremist fringe has become more vocal in recent years.
Lady Gaga was forced to cancel her sold-out concert in Indonesia in May following threats by Islamic hard-liners who called her a "devil worshipper." Jennifer Lopez toned down her sexy outfits and dance moves during a show in Jakarta last December.
Traditional Balinese Kecak dance is performed during the opening of the Miss World Pageant ceremony in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia on Sunday, Sept. 8, 2013. (AP Photo/Firdia Lisnawati)Miss Spain Elena Ibarbia Jimenez, and Miss Puerto Rico Nadyalee Torres walk on stage during the opening of the 63rd Miss World Pageant ceremony in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia on Sunday, Sept. 8, 2013. (AP Photo/Firdia Lisnawati)Miss Austria Ena Kadic, Miss Bahamas De'Andra Bannister and Miss Barbados Regina Ramjit walk on stage during opening of the 63rd Miss World Pageant ceremony in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia on Sunday, Sept. 8, 2013. (AP Photo/Firdia Lisnawati)Miss United States Olivia Jordan and Miss US Virgin Island Petra Cabrera Badia walk on stage during opening of the 63rd Miss World Pageant ceremony in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia on Sunday, Sept. 8, 2013. (AP Photo/Firdia Lisnawati)

Ahli Silap Mata Diiktiraf Malaysia Book Of Records


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KUALA LUMPUR, 9 Sept - Ahli silap mata dan pembaca fikiran terkemuka antarabangsa Kabir Khan Mohamad Reaz menerima dua sijil Malaysia Book of Records bagi pencapaian cemerlang beliau sebagai rakyat Malaysia pertama melakukan 21 persembahan berterusan di Hollywood, Amerika Syarikat pada 2011 dan London, England, Julai lepas.

Kabir Khan, 28, yang berasal dari Pulau Pinang, mula membuat persembahan pada usia enam tahun dan beraksi dalam lebih 500 pertunjukan di peringkat antarabangsa sejak 2008, berkata pengiktirafan itu akan membantu beliau memberi inspirasi kepada belia lain dalam menggapai impian yang dianggap mustahil.

"Ini merupakan satu pencapaian besar kepada saya dan saya berharap untuk membuka sebuah sekolah silap mata tidak lama lagi, mungkin pada tahun depan," katanya kepada media selepas menerima sijil berkenaan hari Sabtu.

Terdahulu, anak Perdana Menteri Nazifuddin Najib Tun Razak melancarkan penampilan sulung beliau di negara ini yang dinamakan sebagai 'Kabir Khan: The Arrival'.

Turut hadir Ketua Pegawai Eksekutif Business Magic Worldwide (M) Sdn Bhd Datuk Wong Yew Kai dan Pengarah Urusan Malaysia Book of Records Datuk Danny Ooi.

Bercakap tentang penampilan sulung beliau pada 20 Sept, 5 dan 12 Okt ini di Hotel Majestic di sini, Khabir Khan berkata pertunjukan itu adalah untuk khalayak dewasa yang bakal memaparkan pembacaan fikiran secara psikik serta ramalan masa depan.

"Datanglah dengan fikiran terbuka dan bersedialah untuk dipukau," katanya.

Harga tiket ialah RM100, RM150 dan RM200.

Sejak kebelakangan ini, Kabir Khan terbabit dalam pertunjukan berprofil tinggi seperti beraksi di depan keluarga diraja di Dubai, diundang pihak berkuasa pelancongan Abu Dhabi serta dipilih Kementerian Pelancongan Malaysia mewakili negara di venue berprestij.

Kabir Khan juga adalah anggota Academy of Magical Arts Magic Castle Amerika Syarikat dan graduan Manual Dexterity and Prestidigitation dari Chaves Studio of Magic Los Angeles serta McBride School of Magic and Mystery di Las Vegas, sekali gus menjadikan beliau seorang daripada hanya beberapa ahli silap mata di dunia yang memiliki sijil.

Helmet Motorsikal Berbentuk Wajah Predator



Topi keledar motosikal eye-catching ini direka untuk orang yang ingin kelihatan  aneh dan menarik perhatian di jalanan. Dibuat oleh syarikat Rusia, Nitrinos helm unik ini menawarkan perlindungan sempurna untuk kepala anda, dibuat dari hasil  tangan dari bahan komposit dan serat karbon. Diilhamkan oleh rupa makhluk ikonik dari filem Predator. Helmet Predator tersedia dalam pelbagai warna dan reka bentuk, bahagian rambut  boleh tanggal.












Memburu Labah-Labah Tarantula Untuk Dimakan.


 Tidak seperti selebriti yang menunjukkan ITV yang berjuang untuk makan crawlies menyeramkan di dalam hutan,kanak-kanak muda di Kemboja mereka  memburu labah-labah tarantula berbahaya dan makan mereka.

Mereka berebut labah-labah antara jari kecil mereka, meletakkan mereka dalam botol air, kemudian lemas dan membersihkan mereka sebelum mereka dimasak dalam mentega atau minyak panas. di petik dari Dailymail.










Katak Baracun Punca Buaya Semakin Pupus


SYDNEY - Spesies kodok tebu kini mengancam populasi buaya pigmi di Australia, kata sepasukan penyelidik semalam.

Kehadiran haiwan beracun itu dibimbangi boleh menyebabkan spesies buaya unik itu pupus pada masa akan datang.

Pasukan penyelidik Universiti Charles Darwin memberitahu, keadaan itu berlaku ekoran buaya pigmi memakan kodok tebu kerana kekurangan sumber makanan lain.

Ketua penyelidik berkenaan, Adam Britton berkata, terdapat 28 ekor buaya pigmi di kawasan kajian berkenaan di Victoria dan Bullo, dalam Wilayah Utara, sebelum kedatangan kodok tebu.

Namun, angka itu menurun kepada 10 ekor selepas pencerobohan habitat berlaku.

"Sejumlah bangkai buaya mati dan penemuan kodok tebu di dalam perut haiwan itu membuktikan reptilia itu pupus disebabkan kehadiran kodok tebu," menurut keputusan kajian.

Buaya pigmi boleh membesar sepanjang 1.7 meter atau 0.7 meter untuk buaya betina iaitu separuh saiz buaya air tawar lain.

Kodok tebu mempunyai kantung racun di kepalanya yang boleh membunuh buaya dan ular. Spesies amfibia itu dibawa ke Australia dari Hawaii untuk mengawal populasi kumbang perosak pada 1930.

Namun, kodok tebu membiak dengan cepat dengan ia pula dianggap sebagai makhluk perosak.

Dijalankan dari 2007 hingga 2008, kajian tersebut disiarkan dalam edisi terbaharu jurnal saintifik, Wildlife Research. - AFP 

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