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Italian police raid Muslim areas
by 
Wednesday 13 July 2005 12:43 PM GMT 

  
Silvio Berlusconi has boosted anti-terrorism measures  

Hundreds of police have swept into Muslim communities across Italy, 
raiding dozens of homes and seizing material in several cities.


This comes a day after the government announced a series of measures 
aimed at cracking down on "extremism". 

Police and Carabinieri officers backed by Italy's special anti-
terrorism unit, the DIGOS, searched homes and buildings in Turin, 
Florence, Bologna, Rome, Naples and other cities from early morning 
on Wednesday. 

Hundreds of people underwent identity checks, and documents and 
computer equipment were seized for analysis. 

Searches also took place in North African communities in Siracusa and 
Ragusa on Sicily's east coast. 

The authorities had not announced any arrests several hours into the 
operation, which was still ongoing at midday. 

However, the operation was clearly aimed at verifying the movements 
of suspected extremists and sweeping Muslim communities for 
information and material which may prove useful as Italy upgrades its 
effort to prevent a London-style attack. 

'Firing line'

In the aftermath of the attacks, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi 
said Italy was in "the firing line" of terrorism in Europe because of 
its support for the US-led operation in Iraq. 

 
Under new measures, suspects
can be held without charge
 
The measures announced on Tuesday in parliament by Interior Minister 
Giuseppe Pisanu include closer monitoring of suspects, doubling from 
12 to 24 hours the length of time a suspect can be held without being 
charged, questioning of terrorism suspects without the presence of 
lawyers and easier access to mobile phone and Internet records. 

Surveillance is also expected to be stepped up around mosques. 

Police are expected to provide details of the ongoing search 
operation later on Wednesday. 

Rome mayor Walter Veltroni said he shared the interior minister's 
concern over the threat of terrorism. 
 
"I have said before, after the attacks in New York and Madrid, that 
nobody should underestimate the threat faced by all European 
countries," Veltroni said. 

Terrorism convictions

In keeping with the heightened sense of threat in Italy, which has 
already doubled security patrols in and around its main airports and 
railway stations, the head of the military security intelligence 
service SISMI, Nicolo Pollari, is to address parliament's security 
committee on Thursday on the intelligence services' response. 

In a separate development, a court in the northern city of Brescia on 
Wednesday jailed two North African men suspected of being members of 
a terrorist cell in Cremona outside Milan. 

An imam who preached at the Cremona mosque, Muhammad Rafiq, was 
sentenced to four years and eight months. The second man, Kamal 
Hamroui, was sentenced to three years and four months. 

A third man, Najib Rouass, was sentenced to one year and four months 
in jail on a minor charge. 

The convictions were the first in Italy under charges of 
international terrorism, a law introduced in the wake of the 11 
September 2001 attacks on the United States.


Agencies
By 

You can find this article at:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/90990465-E516-456A-811B-
EF1552168FC6.htm 
 
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