Violence in Italy as extremists clash
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Police across Italy were braced for violence as
extremists marked rival WWII anniversaries
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April 25, 2001Web posted at: 3:12 PM EDT
(1912 GMT)
MILAN, Italy -- At least three people were injured and
several arrested when
left and right-wing groups clashed on the anniversary
of Italy's liberation
from Nazi forces near the end of World War II.
Two of the injured were attacked as they tried to lay
a wreath in Milan's
Loreto Square, where the dead bodies of wartime
dictator Benito Mussolini
and his mistress were strung up in 1943, police said.
In Rome, a left-wing supporter was stabbed during a
march to celebrate
Italy's liberation by the allied forces, witnesses
said.
Allessandro Dane, a 24-year-old member of the
Communist Refoundation Party,
was stabbed during a march organised by the "National
Association of
Partisans" -- a group of left-wing parties and
unionists.
His party said there was no doubt the attack was
political.
Witnesses said Dane was attacked by three people, who
ran off before his
friends could intervene. He was rushed to hospital,
but was not thought to
be in danger.
In a separate incident, police clashed with several
dozen left-wing youths
trying to disrupt a right-wing service in the Verano
cemetery, in Rome.
Witnesses said at one point leftists tossed homemade
bombs.
A neo-fascists service in the ceremony was led by
Guido Mussolini, a
grandson of fascist dictator Benito Mussolini and
candidate of a tiny
right-wing party for mayor of Rome.
"We are here to commemorate the fascists who died,"
Guido Mussolini told
reporters at the cemetery.
"Everyone thinks that fascists aren't worth anything,
but we are here to
commemorate them."
Police across Italy had been on the alert for violence
as emotions ran high
ahead of general elections on May 13.
The centre right, led by media mogul Silvio
Berlusconi, is widely expected
to oust the ruling centre-left coalition.
The extreme right-wing Forza Nuova party had been
forbidden to march through
Milan to commemorate Mussolini's death.
Instead, it held a news conference, saying "Liberation
Day" should be a day
of remembrance for everybody.
Forza Nuova's Secretary Roberto Fiore said his party
planned a petition of
50,000 people after the election, demanding Communist
parties be banned.

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