-
WHO chief lands in Ebola-hit DR Congo
-
Osaka says possible Serena Williams return would be 'entertaining'
-
Israel strikes near Beirut, widening Lebanon offensive
-
US, Iran agree deal but need Trump approval: sources
-
WHO chief heads to Ebola-hit DR Congo
-
Trump's face could appear on US $250 bill
-
Mistral says would not interfere if its AI is used by defence customers
-
Canada PM backs 'fortress North America' ahead of US trade talks
-
Flooding in north and east Syria as Euphrates level rises
-
Defending champion Gauff reaches French Open third round
-
Musk defends AI ambitions as IPO reveals trouble
-
Five things to know about heatwaves in Europe
-
Israel freezes out UN chief over sexual violence blacklist
-
US, Iran agree deal framework but need Trump sign-off: sources
-
Italy on red alert as France, Portugal beat hottest May day record
-
Oil advances, stocks drift on fresh US-Iran strikes
-
'Terrorist' knife attack wounds 3 at Swiss train station: official
-
'You are not alone' in Ebola fight, vows DR Congo-bound WHO chief
-
Sinner 'hits wall' as French Open bid collapses
-
France's Magnier sprints to Giro 18th stage win, Vingegaard in pink
-
Top EU economies vow to speed up financial integration
-
Israeli strike near Beirut as Lebanon says raids kill 14
-
Mosquitoes can learn to love common repellent, scientists find
-
US revises first quarter growth down while inflation climbs
-
Italy on red alert as Portugal beats record for hottest May day
-
Latvia gets new centre-right govt after row over stray Ukraine drones
-
France's Kouame, 17, youngest man into Slam third round since Nadal
-
Netflix criticises German plan to make streamers invest more locally
-
'Dizzy' Sinner wilts in French Open heat, out in second round
-
Ailing Sinner crashes out of French Open, Sabalenka waits
-
Italy on red alert as heatwave bakes Europe
-
UK risks a 'lost generation' of jobless young people
-
Attacker wounds three at Swiss train station with 'bladed weapon'
-
Neymar a doubt for Brazil's World Cup opener due to injury
-
Norway's Queen leaves hospital amidst mounting fears over princess
-
US, Iran accuse each other of violating truce after attacks
-
France inches towards symbolic repealing of slavery legislation
-
Oil climbs, stocks drop on fresh US-Iran strikes
-
Scotland boss Clarke signs new four-year contract
-
Italian police seize $232 mn in late mafia boss's assets
-
EU fines Temu 200 mn euros over illegal products
-
Fire in Kenya girls' school dorm kills 16
-
French AI firm Mistral announces deals with BMW, Airbus
-
US, Iran trade strikes in most serious clash since truce began
-
'Immense' leverage: why AI chip workers are demanding more
-
Online horror phenomenon turns movie blockbuster with 'Backrooms'
-
Latvia to get new govt after row over stray drones
-
Oil rises and Asia stocks slide after new US strikes on Iran
-
France moves towards symbolic repealing of slavery legislation
-
'Six machine' Sooryavanshi, 15, stakes India claim with new stunning knock
Italy marks 30-year anniversary of murder of anti-mafia judge Falcone
Thirty years ago, the Sicilian mafia killed judge Giovanni Falcone with a bomb so powerful it was registered by experts monitoring volcanic tremors from Etna on the other side of the island.
The explosion, which ripped through a stretch of motorway near Palermo at 5:56 pm on May 23, 1992 sent shockwaves across Italy, but also signalled the start of the mafia's decline.
Anti-mafia prosecuting magistrate Falcone, his wife, and three members of his police escort were killed.
The mob used a skateboard to place a 500-kilogramme (1,100-pound) charge of TNT and ammonium nitrate in a tunnel under the motorway which linked the airport to the centre of Palermo.
Falcone, driving a white Fiat Croma, was returning from Rome for the weekend.
At a look-out point on the hill above, a mobster nicknamed "The Pig" pressed the remote control button as the judge's three-car convoy passed.
The blast ripped through the asphalt, shredding bodies and metal, and flinging the lead car several hundred metres.
The three policemen on board were killed instantly.
Falcone, whose wife was sitting beside him, had slowed seconds before the explosion and the car slammed into a concrete guard rail.
His chauffeur, who was sitting in the back, survived, as did the three agents in the convoy's rear.
A "garden of memory" now stands on the site of the attack. Oil from olive trees that grow there is used by Sicilian churches for anointing children during baptisms and confirmations.
- 'Mafia massacre' -
Falcone posed a real threat to the Cosa Nostra, an organised crime group made famous by "The Godfather" trilogy and which boasted access to the highest levels of Italian power.
It was he who gathered evidence from the first mafia informants for a groundbreaking trial in which hundreds of mobsters were convicted in 1987.
And at the time of the attack, he headed the justice ministry's criminal affairs department in Rome and was working on a package of anti-mafia laws.
His murder woke the nation up. The Repubblica daily attacked the "mafia massacre" in its headline the next day, with a photo of the famous mustachioed magistrate, while thousands of people in Palermo protested in the streets.
All eyes turned to fellow anti-mafia magistrate Paolo Borsellino, Falcone's close friend and colleague, who gave an interview at the start of July saying the "extreme danger" he was in would not stop him doing his job.
On July 19, just 57 days after his friend, Borsellino was also killed in a car bomb attack, along with five members of his escort. Only his driver survived.
Amid national outrage, the state threw everything it had at hunting down Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore (Toto) Riina, who was involved in dozens of murders during a reign of terror lasting over 20 years.
Riina was arrested on January 15, 1993, in a car in Palermo.
- The truth? -
The murders of Falcone and Borsellino "in the long term turned out to be a very bad business for Cosa Nostra, whose management team was decapitated by arrests and informants' confessions", Vincenzo Ceruso, author of several books on the mafia, told AFP.
Dozens of people have been convicted for their roles in the assassinations.
But Roberto di Bella, now an anti-mafia judge at the Catania juvenile court in Sicily, said that while "the majority of the perpetrators have been tried and convicted", there remained "a part that is still not clear".
Survivors insist there are still bits of the puzzle missing and point to Falcone's belief there could be "possible points of convergence between the leaders of Cosa Nostra and the shadowy centres of power".
"We still don't have the truth about who really ordered the murder of Giovanni Falcone, because I don't believe that ignorant people like Toto Riina could have organised an attack as sophisticated as that in Capaci," Angelo Corbo, one of the surviving bodyguards, said in a documentary.
He said he was not alone in believing there were "men in suits and ties" among the mobsters.
However, an investigation into possible "hidden orchestrators" of the Capaci attack was thrown out in 2013.
"There is no evidence of the existence of external backers. There is no doubt that these are mafia acts," author Ceruso said.
W.Mansour--SF-PST