First 'Ndrangheta war

First 'Ndrangheta war

Traditional 'Ndrangheta boss Antonio Macrì, who was killed on January 20, 1975
Date 1974–1976
Location Calabria, Italy
Causes Killing Giovanni De Stefano and wounding his brother Giorgio De Stefano on 24 November 1974 in the Roof Garden bar, an infamous 'Ndrangheta haunt in Reggio Calabria.
Goals Struggle over public contracts and restructuring of the 'Ndrangheta
Result Rise of the De Stefano 'ndrina and consolidation of Piromalli 'ndrina
Parties to the civil conflict
Lead figures
Casualties
Death(s) 233 people were killed on both sides[1]

The First 'Ndrangheta war was an internal struggle in the 'Ndrangheta, a Mafia-type criminal organisation in Calabria (southern Italy). The conflict raged from 1974-1976 and would result in approximately 233 deaths.[1] The war broke the equilibrium in the triumvirate, made up of Antonio Macrì, Domenico Tripodo and Girolamo Piromalli, that had ruled the 'Ndrangheta for 15 years, and facilitated the rise of a new generation 'Ndranghetisti, in particular the De Stefano 'ndrina, who wanted to open the doors of the 'Ndrangheta in new, more lucrative criminal activities (especially drug trafficking).

Background

Traditional 'Ndrangheta bosses like Domenico Tripodo and Antonio Macrì, opposed to new developments in the organisation such as the entry into kidnapping and drug trafficking,[2] as well as the formation of the Santa, a secret society within the 'Ndrangheta established in the early 1970s to maximize the power and invisibility of the most important bosses.[3][4]

In contrast, their fellow boss in the triumvirate that had ruled the 'Ndrangheta for 15 years, Girolamo Piromalli favoured La Santa and was eager to modify the traditional rules of the 'Ndrangheta through the formation of covert Masonic lodges in which the 'Ndrangheta bosses were able to contact law enforcement authorities, judges and politicians that were necessary to access to public work contracts in the state development of the Reggio Calabria area (a railroad stump, a steelwork center, and the port in Gioia Tauro).[5][6][7]

At a meeting in September 1974 in Gioia Tauro hosted by Piromalli to discuss an offer of a 3 percent kick back by the major construction companies for the Goia Tauro steelworks (which the 'Ndrangheta bosses rejected), tensions reached a boiling point. Tripodi and his former underling Giorgio De Stefano exchanged insults that almost escalated in a violent confrontation, just only prevented by peacemaker Macrì.[8] Matters detoriated when Tripodi, fearing an ambush, failed to show up at a wedding of a close ally of Piromalli.[8]

The conflict

Tripodo tried to strike first, killing Giovanni De Stefano and wounding his brother Giorgio De Stefano on 24 November 1974 in the Roof Garden bar, an infamous 'Ndrangheta haunt in Reggio Calabria.[1][9] The conflict was now inevitable. In retaliation, on 20 January 1975, Macrì was killed in his hometown Siderno while his right hand man Francesco Commisso was severly wounded. According to a state witness, a young Pasquale Condello, an ally of the De Stefano's, was one of his 'executioners'.[10] Macrì was killed with the help of the Cataldo and Mazzaferro clans.[2]

Tripodo was arrested on 21 February 1975, and incarcerated in the Poggioreale prison in Naples. On 26 August 26, 1976, he was stabbed to death in prison on the request of the De Stefano’s with the help of Camorra boss Raffaele Cutolo, the boss of the Nuova Camorra Organizzata (NCO) who worked with the De Stefano’s in drug trafficking.[7]

With the killing of Tripodo the conflict withered to its end. However, the final stage was the killing of Giorgio De Stefano on 7 November 1977 in Santo Stefano in the Aspromonte. He was killed by Giuseppe Suraci, a minor 'Ndrangehta soldier, apparently out of personal vengeance, but in reality on the orders of Piromalli, who feared the rise of the De Stefano's.[8] By extorting a bribe of a building contractor already under the protection of the Piromalli's, De Stefano had committed a sgarro (insulting the honour and authority of a crime boss). The Piromalli's had Suraci killed and offered his head on a silver platter to Giorgio's brother Paolo De Stefano, to show their allegiance, but in reality to prevent Suraci to reveal the real reason of the killing.[8]

Casualties

The casualties of the war rose to 233 in three years.[1] Apart from the main war, local feuds erupted in various towns such as Cittanova, Seminara, Ciminà and Taurianova. Victims were sometimes fed to the pigs to have the bodies disappear.[11]

Aftermath

The De Stefano clan moved from being simple 'Ndranghetisti to being the new “lords” of Reggio Calabria.[12] They won a monopoly of construction work in northern Reggio Calabria, moving the rival Tripodo group out of the market of public work contracts with the support of the Piromalli and Mammoliti cosche.[13] There dominant position would be challenged in the Second 'Ndrangheta war (1985-1991).

The real victor, however, was the Piromalli 'ndrina who redirected the 'Ndrangheta clan from its rural base to an entrepreneurial criminal organisation assuming dominance over several public works in the Gioia Tauro area, particularly in the construction and operation of the new container seaport.[14]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Dickie, Mafia Republic: Italy's Criminal Curse, p. 138
  2. 1 2 (Italian) Gratteri & Nicaso, Fratelli di Sangue, p.58
  3. (Italian) L’atteggiarsi delle associazioni mafiose sulla base delle esperienze processuali acquisite: la ’ndrangheta, by Salvatore Boemi, in I delitti di criminalità organizzata, Quaderni del Consiglio Superiore della Magistratura N. 99
  4. (Italian) La criminalità organizzata dalle origini ai giorni nostri, Polizia Moderna, May 2008
  5. Paoli, Mafia Brotherhoods, p. 115
  6. (Italian) Guarino, Poteri segreti e criminalità, pp. 14-15
  7. 1 2 (Italian) 'Ndrangheta 2005 at the Wayback Machine (archived September 29, 2007), Nisio Palmieri, Dossier della Fondazione Cesar e dell’Associazione Sicurstrada per conto della Consulta Nazionale dei Consigli Regionali Unipol Assicurazioni
  8. 1 2 3 4 Dickie, Mafia Republic: Italy's Criminal Curse, pp. 137-40
  9. (Italian) Gratteri & Nicaso, Fratelli di Sangue, pp. 60-62
  10. Godfather's arrest fuels fear of bloody conflict, The Observer, February 24, 2008
  11. Dickie, Mafia Republic: Italy's Criminal Curse, p. 140
  12. Paoli, Mafia Brotherhoods, pp. 50-51
  13. Arlacchi, Mafia Business, p. 156
  14. (Italian) Gioia Tauro: boss Giuseppe Piromalli, 84 anni, muore agli arresti, Giornale di Calabria, February 21, 2005
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