http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,466841,00.html


Officials Brace for More Left-Wing Violence


After 19 suspected members of a left-wing terrorist group were arrested in
Italy this week, police and politicians fear that sympathizers may seek
revenge at a demonstration on Saturday.

 
<http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,grossbild-803980-466841,00.html>
A number of suspected left-wing terrorists were arrested in Italy this week.

 
<http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,grossbild-803980-466841,00.html>
<http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,grossbild-803980-466841,00.html>
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<http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,grossbild-803980-466841,00.html>


DPA

A number of suspected left-wing terrorists were arrested in Italy this week.

The city of Vicenza in northern Italy is bracing itself for a potentially
explosive weekend: Schools will be sealed off, shops will be shut and
restaurants will roll down their shutters. The town just south of the Alps
is expecting unpredictable guests: 100,000 demonstrators, 5,000 security
forces -- and an unknown number of left-wing extremists. 

Left-wing terrorism has recently had a revival in Italy. This week, police
arrested 19 people linked to a radical offspring of the notorious "Red
Brigades" group which terrorized the country in the 1970s and 1980s. A
high-profile raid in Milan, Turin and Padua on Monday led to the arrest of
15 suspects, on Thursday four more people were rounded up for posting
propaganda posters.

The seizures highlight the continuing existence of left-wing terror cells
and their readiness for violence. According to the Italian government, the
group -- which calls itself the "Second Position" -- was planning a series
of attacks on two company managers, a trade union leader and a right-wing
newspaper on Easter. Further potential targets included the home of former
Italian president Silvio Berlusconi.

"We decided to intervene because some plans were about to be put into
practice," Milan prosecutor Ilda Boccassini told reporters on Thursday.
Police also found large amounts of weapons as well as fake documents and
disguises in Turin and Padua.

The suspected ideological leader of the "The New Red Brigades" is 50-year
old former fugitive Alfredo Davanzo. He is refusing to cooperate with police
in the investigation and considers himself a political prisoner. But
officials suspect the group was planning activities aimed at financing
itself. According to Boccassini, the militants were divided between two
courses of action: kidnapping people for ransom or kneecapping victims to
force them to hand over their money.

The Red Brigades carried out a number of attacks in the 1970s and 80s
including the 1978 abduction and murder of former Prime Minister Aldo Moro.
More recently, its modern reincarnation killed two government advisors in
1999 and 2002.

The events come as a wake-up call to the country. "The one (group) we broke
up, we know, isn't the last," said interior minister Guiliano Amato. The
newspaper La Republica added that Italy was unique among European countries
in having a second generation of left-wing terrorists. "The Red Brigades
have returned and they're ready to attack," it said. 

Now politicians and police fear that sympathizers of "The New Brigades" may
seek revenge at the demonstration in Vicenza this Saturday. The Süddeutsche
Zeitung reports that the group issued warnings via pamphlets and messages
scrawled on walls. "Nothing will go unpunished," one of the messages read.

The demonstration planned for this weekend in Vicenza was called by
pacifists, greens and leftists who oppose the planned extension of the local
US military base. Up to 100,000 people are expected to join the protest. In
order to prevent left-wing riots, 5,000 policemen, specialists from all over
the country and hundreds of additional security forces have been called in.

The Vicenza base has caused deep divisions within the Prodi administration.
The prime minister's approval of the base extension was met with harsh
criticism from his left-wing coalition partners, sparking a debate about
whether government members should be allowed to join the demonstration or
not. "The government cannot protest against itself," said Prodi.



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