Sicilian Mafia: Anger as 'people slayer' Giovanni Brusca freed
Sicilian Mafia boss Giovanni Brusca, whose grisly crimes include having a child's body dissolved in acid, has been released from prison.
Dubbed the "people slayer", Brusca has confessed
to his role in over 100 killings, including the assassination of Italy's top
anti-Mafia prosecutor Giovanni Falcone.
But Brusca became an informant, helping prosecutors hunt
down fellow mobsters.
His release after 25 years in jail has outraged his victims'
relatives.
He will now be on parole for four years.
Who is Giovanni Brusca?
Brusca, now 64, was a key figure within the Cosa Nostra, the
Sicilian Mafia group.
In 1992, he detonated the bomb that killed Italy's leading
anti-Mafia investigator, judge Giovanni Falcone, in one of the country's most
infamous murder cases.
Mr Falcone's wife and three bodyguards were also killed in
the attack, when Brusca set off half a tonne of explosives under the road near
Palermo they were driving along.
The attack, followed two months later by the killing of Mr
Falcone's colleague Paolo Borsellino, rocked Italy and resulted in tough new
anti-Mafia laws.
Brusca has confessed to his role in more than 100 murders.
One of the most gruesome was the killing of Giuseppe Di
Matteo, the 11-year-old son of another mafioso who had betrayed him. Brusca had
the boy kidnapped and tortured before he was strangled and his body dissolved
in acid - as a result, the child's family couldn't bury him.
After his arrest in 1996, he turned state witness in order
to reduce his sentence. He helped investigators track down the gangsters
responsible for several Mafia attacks in the 1980s and 1990s.
What has the reaction been?
Brusca's release has prompted grief and anger among
relatives of some of his victims.
The wife of one of the bodyguards killed, Tina Montinaro,
told the Repubblica newspaper she was "indignant".
"The state is against us - after 29 years we still
don't know the truth about the massacre and Giovanni Brusca, the man who
destroyed my family, is free," Ms Montinaro said.
Maria Falcone, the sister of the judge, said she was
"saddened" by the news but that the law gave Brusca the right to
leave prison.
Several Italian politicians condemned Brusca's release.
"After 25 years in prison, the mafia boss Giovanni
Brusca is a free man. This is not the 'justice' that Italians deserve,"
said Matteo Salvini, leader of the right-wing League party.
"It is a punch in the stomach that leaves you
breathless," Enrico Letta, the leader of the centre-left Democratic party,
told radio station Rtl 102.5 on Tuesday.
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