Pubdate: Mon, 06 Nov 2006 Source: International Herald-Tribune (International) Copyright: International Herald Tribune 2006 Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/212 Author: Elisabeth Rosenthal, International Herald Tribune Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) TOO MUCH EVEN BY STANDARDS OF NAPLES Marco L. has a memento of the late summer night when he and two friends were sprayed with gunfire by men on scooters, as the friends chatted near the Gate of San Gennaro in the heart of Naples. A bullet is still lodged near his hip. The ochre walls of the piazza are also scarred, with pockmarks from bullets gone astray. The security grate on the toy shop has 80 bullets holes, the owner estimates. "They must have mistaken us for someone else," said Marco L., a baby- faced 22-year-old in a red sweatshirt and jeans, who spent 15 days in a hospital. He refused to give his surname for fear of retribution. "They fired 12 or 13 shots and all three of us were hit," he said. A wave of mob shootings and stabbings has terrorized Naples in recent months, with nearly a killing a day over the past two weeks. The situation, amplified by an amnesty that freed 2,700 minor criminals from local prisons, is so dire that Prime Minister Romano Prodi visited Naples last week to discuss sending in the army. Living in a city that has long been synonymous with organized crime, Neopolitans are inured to a measure of violence. But lately, changes in the city's homegrown mob, the Camorra, have made the violence more frequent and unpredictable - and more likely to intrude on the lives of ordinary citizens. The Camorra was once a disciplined organization whose wealth was based on extortion and fake cigarettes. But it has devolved into a decentralized collection of warring gangs, whose principal wares are drugs like cocaine. And so, Naples is in the middle of a Los Angeles-type drug war, with fewer kingpins in control and more thugs vying for a piece of the action. "The killings we are witnessing in our piazzas," said Franco Roberti, coordinating prosecutor for anti-Camorra activity in Naples, "are about different Camorristas trying to maintain control of street distribution in the area." The victims are younger, he said, the killing more haphazard. "The organization is no longer vertical, it's horizontal," he said at his office in a fortress-like modern building on the outskirts of town. Indeed, the area where Marco L. was shot is a no man's land that is up for grabs, lying between swaths of Naples where drug distribution rights are firmly held. People who live in this hardscrabble neighborhood of winding streets, where balconies flow with drying laundry, say they live in terror. And if they see crimes being committed, they are too scared to name names. Early last week, Vincenzo Prestigiacomo, the son-in-law of a reputed mobster, was gunned down as he left a coffee bar at 7 p.m., when all the surrounding shops were still open. But on Saturday, the fishmonger just 20 meters away on the Via Della Consolazione denied knowing of the event. The owner of the coffee bar was equally mum, refusing to give his name as he stood at the cash register, insisting that the killing had taken place "far from here, a kilometer away." But Roberti, the prosecutor, said the police were investigating the death and Salvatore Arena, who owns a toy store nearby, remembers very clearly the ring of six shots. "Of course I heard it - that noise is normal here now at night," he said, surrounded by plush stuffed animals, pink bikes and toy cars that are going unsold. His wife, Rosaria Capasso, from an old Naples family, chimed that the current gang members and their victims were often in their teens or early twenties, not much older than the customers at the toy store. They are unemployed and looking for money to buy expensive watches and designer jeans, she said. "They steal for money," she said. "They shoot like it's a video game." The Italian government seems uncertain how to respond to the changing mob and the surge in violence, whose roots people here trace to political miscalculation in Rome, inconsistency in local law enforcement and economic stagnation in Naples. Months ago, the Italian Justice Ministry released several thousand minor criminals from Naples jails in an amnesty to relieve overcrowding, but that repopulated the city for a wave of crime, some locals said. "It was a nice present from the justice minister," said Armando Petrucci, who owns a popular clothing store on the Via Umberto, whose bulletproof glass is cracked from past violence. Others say the success of the police in arresting mobsters has created a vacuum that is being filled by lesser criminals. A crime boss that firmly controlled the area around the Gate of San Gennaro was arrested a year ago, opening a battle for turf, said Arena, the toy store owner. Roberti acknowledges the dilemma: "When the state intervenes and captures a capo, it immediately creates space for a new camorrista." The gangs that step in are always "allying or fighting." But all agree that part of the problem is a local economy that provides few legitimate opportunities for youth, combined with a thriving drug trade that provides opportunity aplenty. Lookouts for Camorra drug deals -- a kind of internship for mob wannabees - are paid €1,500, or about $1,900, a month, Roberti said, which is more than some of his police officers. Giuseppe Starini, a postal supervisor, has 3 children, aged 19, 20 and 21. Although he took pains to make sure they finished school and entered a profession, none can find a job, he said. Prodi said he would not order in troops, but would send thousands of extra police officers to Naples, and would put them on scooters so they could keep up with the new Camorra. Roberti's office has only 18 cars, which are old and often break down, he said. Roberti said an infusion of resources would help, but a true solution also needed social reform. "You need to find a way to offer young people legal jobs," he said. "They may be less profitable, but you have security, you don't have to worry about retribution." Meanwhile, Marco L. is a fugitive in his own neighborhood. "I've learned you can't hang out in one fixed place," he said, "and I don't sit out here at night anymore." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake