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Bologna massacre

The Bologna massacre (Italian: strage di Bologna) was a terrorist bombing of the Bologna Centrale railway station in Bologna, Italy, on the morning of 2 August 1980, which killed 85 people and wounded over 200.[1] Several members of the neo-fascist terrorist organization Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari (NAR, Armed Revolutionary Nuclei) were sentenced for the bombing,[2] although the group denied involvement.

Bologna massacre
Part of the Years of Lead
Ruins of the Bologna station west wing after the bombing
LocationBologna Centrale railway station, Italy
Date2 August 1980
10:25 (UTC+1)
Attack type
Bombing
WeaponTime bomb
Deaths85
InjuredOver 200
PerpetratorsLuigi Ciavardini, Valerio Fioravanti, and Francesca Mambro (members of the Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari)

Events edit

 
Bystanders assisting the rescue operation
 
Rescuers carrying a victim

At 10:25 CEST, a time bomb hidden in an unattended suitcase detonated in an air-conditioned waiting room at the Bologna station, which was full of people seeking relief from the August heat. The explosion collapsed the roof of the waiting room, destroyed most of the main building, and hit the AnconaChiasso train which was waiting at the first platform.[3]

The station was full of tourists that Saturday, and the city was unprepared for a major disaster. Many passers-by and travelers provided first aid to victims and helped rescue people who were buried under the rubble.

Due to the large number of casualties and an insufficient number of emergency vehicles available to transport the injured to hospitals, firefighters used buses, private cars, and taxis. Some doctors and hospital staff returned early from vacation to care for the victims, and hospital departments which were closed for the summer holidays were reopened to accommodate the casualties.

After the attack, large demonstrations were held in Piazza Maggiore (Bologna's central square). Harsh criticism was directed at government representatives who attended the 6 August funerals of the victims in the Basilica San Petronio. The only applause was reserved for President Sandro Pertini, who arrived by helicopter in Bologna at 5:30 pm the day of the massacre and tearfully said: "I have no words; we are facing the most criminal enterprise that has ever taken place in Italy."[4]

The #37 bus (used to transport victims) and the clock (stopped at 10:25) were symbols of the massacre. The attack was the worst atrocity in Italy since World War II.[5]

Investigation edit

The government, led by Christian Democratic Prime Minister Francesco Cossiga, first assumed that the incident was due to an accidental explosion of an old boiler in the station's basement. Evidence, however, soon pointed to terrorism.[6] L'Unità, the Italian Communist Party (PCI) newspaper, attributed responsibility for the attack to neo-fascists on 3 August. Later, in a special session of the Senate, Cossiga also supported the theory that neo-fascists were behind the attack: "Unlike leftist terrorism, which strikes at the heart of the state through its representatives, right-wing terrorism prefers acts such as massacres because acts of extreme violence promote panic and impulsive reactions."[7][8] The bomb was later found to be composed of 23 kilograms (51 lb) of explosives: 5 kilograms (11 lb) of TNT and Composition B and 18 kilograms (40 lb) of T4 (nitroglycerin for civil use).[9]

False leads edit

Generals Pietro Musumeci, a member of Propaganda Due (P2), and Belmonte of SISMI had a police sergeant put a suitcase full of explosives on a train in Bologna. The suitcase also contained personal items belonging to two right-wing extremists, a Frenchman, and a German. Musumeci also produced a phony dossier, entitled "Terror on trains". He was charged with falsifying evidence to incriminate Roberto Fiore and Gabriele Adinolfi, two leaders of the far-right Terza Posizione who had fled to London.[10] Both Terza Posizione leaders said that Musumeci was trying to divert attention from P2 head Licio Gelli.[10]

Prosecution edit

The attack has been attributed to the NAR (Armed Revolutionary Nuclei), a neo-fascist terrorist organization. A long, controversial court case began after the bombing. Francesca Mambro and Valerio Fioravanti were initially sentenced to life imprisonment.

The Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Luigi Ciavardini, an NAR member with close ties to Terza Posizione, in April 2007. Ciavardini received a 30-year prison sentence for his role in the attack.[11] He had been arrested after the armed robbery of the Banca Unicredito di Roma on 15 September 2005.[12][13] Ciavardini was also charged with the assassinations of Francesco Evangelista on 28 May 1980 and Judge Mario Amato on 23 June 1980.[13]

On 26 August 1980, the prosecutor of Bologna issued twenty-eight arrest warrants for far-right militants of the NAR and Terza Posizione. Among those arrested were Massimo Morsello (future founder of the neo-fascist organization and political party Forza Nuova), Francesca Mambro, Aldo Semerari, Maurizio Neri, and Paolo Signorelli. They were interrogated in Ferrara, Rome, Padua, and Parma. All were released from prison in 1981.[14] Semerari was murdered by the Camorra a year later.[15]

The first trial began in Bologna on 9 March 1987. Massimiliano Fachini, Valerio Fioravanti, Francesca Mambro, Sergio Picciafuoco, Roberto Rinani and Paolo Signorelli were charged with murder. Gilberto Cavallini, Fachini, Fioravanti, Egidio Giuliani, Marcello Iannilli, Mambro, Giovanni Melioli, Picciafuoco, Roberto Raho, Rinani and Signorelli were charged with forming an armed gang. Marco Ballan, Giuseppe Belmonte, Fabio De Felice, Stefano Delle Chiaie, Fachini, Licio Gelli, Maurizio Giorgi, Pietro Musumeci, Francesco Pazienza, Signorelli and Adriano Tilgher were charged with subversive association. Belmonte, Gelli, Musumeci and Pazienza were charged with defamation.[16][page needed]

On 11 July 1988, Fachini, Fioravanti, Mambro and Picciafuoco were sentenced to life imprisonment for murder; Rinani and Signorelli were acquitted. Cavallini, Fachini, Fioravanti, Giuliani, Mambro, Picciafuoco, Rinani and Signorelli were convicted of forming an armed gang; Iannilli, Melioli and Raho were acquitted. Ballan, Belmonte, Felice, Delle Chiaie, Fachini, Gelli, Giorgi, Musumeci, Pazienza, Signorelli and Tilgher were acquitted of subversive association. Belmonte, Gelli, Musumeci and Pazienza were convicted of defamation.[16][page needed] The appeal process began on 25 October 1989.[16][page needed]

On appeal, Fachini, Fioravanti, Mambro, Picciafuoco, Rinani and Signorelli were acquitted of murder on 18 July 1990. Cavallini, Fioravanti, Mambro and Giuliani were convicted of forming an armed gang. Belmonte and Musumeci were convicted of defamation, and the other defendants were acquitted.[16][page needed]

On 12 February 1992, the Supreme Court of Cassation acquitted Rinani and Signorelli of murder; Signorelli was also acquitted of forming an armed gang and subversive association. The court also acquitted other defendants, canceled the judgment and ordered a new trial because the sentences were "illogical, incoherent, not assessing proofs and evidence in good terms, not taking into account the facts preceding and following the event, unmotivated or poorly motivated, in some parts the judges supporting unlikely arguments that not even the defense had argued".[17][page needed]

The new trial began on 11 October 1993. Massimiliano Fachini, Valerio Fioravanti, Francesca Mambro, and Sergio Picciafuoco were charged with murder; Gilberto Cavallini, Massimiliano Fachini, Egidio Giuliani, Valerio Fioravanti, Francesca Mambro, Sergio Picciafuoco and Roberto Rinani were charged with forming an armed gang, and Giuseppe Belmonte, Licio Gelli, Pietro Musumeci, and Francesco Pazienza were charged with defamation. On 16 May 1994, Fioravanti, Mambro and Picciafuoco were sentenced to life imprisonment; Fachini was acquitted. Cavallini, Fioravanti, Giuliani, Mambro and Picciafuoco were also convicted of forming an armed gang; Fachini and Rinani were acquitted. Belmonte, Gelli, Musumeci and Pazienza were convicted of defamation.[citation needed]

On 23 November 1995, the Supreme Court upheld the convictions of Fioravanti, Mambro, Gelli, Pazienza, Musumeci and Belmonte, ordering a new trial for Picciafuoco (who was acquitted by the Appeals Court in Florence on 18 June 1996, a verdict upheld by the Supreme Court on 15 April 1997). In April 1998, Mambro was given home confinement and allowed to leave prison during the day.[18]

In June 2000, Massimo Carminati (NAR member), Ivano Bongiovanni (far-right sympathizer) and Federigo Manucci Benincasa (SISMI officer) were convicted of obstruction. Carminati and Manucci Benincasa were acquitted for lack of evidence in December 2001, and Bongiovanni's conviction was upheld.[19] On 30 January 2003, the Court of Cassation finally acquitted Carminati and Manucci Benincasa.[citation needed]

In an article written by Alfio Bernabei for the British anti-fascist Searchlight magazine in April 2022, it was reported that "In a significant step in search for the truth behind the bombing at Bologna railway station that killed 85 people and wounded 200 on 2 August 1980 the far-right militant Paolo Bellini has been found guilty of direct involvement in the massacre. He has been sentenced to life imprisonment. The hearings at Bologna law Court began in April 2021 presided over by Judge Francesco Caruso with a number of lawyers acting on behalf of the Association of the Families of the Victims. Bellini, now 69-year-old, belonged to the far-right organisation Avanguardia Nazionale on whose instigation he killed a young left wing militant, Alceste Campanile, in 1975. In 1999, he confessed to this killing adding that he had also killed a number of people on behalf of mafia bosses. But he denied any involvement in the Bologna massacre."[20]

Alternative theories edit

 
Funerals of the victims

As a result of protracted legal procedures and false leads, a number of theories were proposed during the years after the attack. Involvement by Italian Secret Service officials was suggested.[21]

Between 1999 and 2006, during sessions of the parliamentary commission established to probe terrorism in Italy and the failure to identify those responsible for the massacre and a commission investigating the Mitrokhin dossier and Italian intelligence activity, new information emerged on international terrorist networks and Italian intelligence in the former Soviet bloc and Arab countries such as Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Yemen and Iraq. Secret agreements with the Palestinian leadership tied to arms trafficking between the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and Italy and a warning to the Italian anti-terrorist secret service three weeks before the massacre were discovered. Thomas Kram, member of a German terrorist group linked to Carlos the Jackal and the Palestinians, was in Bologna on the day of the massacre. On 17 November 2005, the Bologna prosecutor opened a case (Dossier 7823/2005 RG) against unknown persons.[22] According to media reports in 2004 and 2007,[23] Francesco Cossiga suggested Palestinian involvement in a letter to Enzo Fragalà of the Mitrokhin Commission.[24]

In 2005, Carlos the Jackal said that "the Mitrokhin Commission attempts to falsify history" and "they were the CIA and the Mossad to hit in Bologna" with the intent to punish Italy for its relationship with the PLO.[25]

After the 2006 arrest of former Argentine Triple A member Rodolfo Almirón, Spanish lawyer José Angel Pérez Nievas declared that it was "probable that Almirón participated—along with Stefano Delle Chiaie and Augusto Cauchi—in the 1980 bombing in Bologna's train station". In 1998, the Supreme Court of Argentina refused to extradite Cauchi to Italy.[26]

In May 2007, Massimo Sparti's son said: "My father has always lied about the Bologna investigation".[27]

During a 2008 BBC interview, former Italian president Francesco Cossiga reaffirmed his belief that the massacre was attributable to Palestinian resistance groups operating in Italy (rather than fascist right-wing terrorism) and in the innocence of Francesca Mambro and Valerio Fioravanti.[28][29] The PFLP has always denied responsibility.[30] On 19 August 2011, the Bologna prosecutor began an investigation of two German terrorists: Thomas Kram and Christa Margot Fröhlich, both linked to Carlos the Jackal's group and in Bologna on the day of the attack.[31]

Legacy edit

Relatives of the victims formed the Associazione dei familiari delle vittime della strage alla stazione di Bologna del 2 agosto 1980 on 1 June 1981 to raise and maintain awareness of the bombing. The group, which began with 44 members, grew to 300. On 6 April 1983, the association and victims' associations of victims of the Piazza Fontana, Piazza della Loggia and Italicus Express bombings formed the Union of Relatives of Victims to Massacres (Unione dei Familiari delle Vittime per Stragi) in Milan.[32]

 
Plaque at the Bologna Central Station
 
The clock at Bologna Centrale railway station was permanently fixed at 10:25 to commemorate the massacre.

Bologna and the Associazione tra i familiari delle vittime della strage alla stazione di Bologna del 2 agosto 1980 sponsor an annual international composition competition which ends with a concert in Piazza Maggiore on 2 August, a national memorial day for all terrorist massacres. Although the damaged part of the station has been mostly reconstructed, the original floor tile pierced by the detonation has been left in place and a deep crack (covered by a glass panel) has been left in the reconstructed main wall. The explosion caused the station clock to stop at the time of the incident (10:25). Images of the stopped clock quickly became a visual symbol of the tragedy. The clock was initially repaired but in 1996 , the authorities decided to permanently fix the clock at 10:25, as a commemoration.[33]

In February[34] and July 2020,[35] the Italian weekly L'Espresso published a reportage claiming the couple Licio Gelli-Umberto Ortolani financed the terrorists of the bombing and subsequently took care of the necessary red herrings thanks to the support of Federico Umberto D'Amato.[36]

In popular culture edit

Robert Hellenga's 1998 novel The Fall of a Sparrow focuses on how the aftermath of the bombing affects a (fictional) American family. The protagonist becomes caught up in the prosecution of the perpetrators and life in Bologna.[37] The bombing is the backdrop of a chapter of Laurent Binet's The Seventh Function of Language [fr]. The 2017 French novel, which satirizes late-20th-century Parisian intellectual and political life,[38] involves two detectives investigating what they assume to be the murder of the philosopher Roland Barthes. The detectives, who travel to Bologna to interview Umberto Eco, narrowly escape injury in the attack.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Rai Storia. 19 December 2017. Archived from the original on 19 December 2017. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
  2. ^ Tassinari, Ugo Maria (2008). Fascisteria (in Italian). Milano: Sperling & Kupfer. ISBN 978-88-200-4449-7. OCLC 209335674. p. 626.
  3. ^ "1980: Bologna blast leaves dozens dead". BBC News. 2 August 1980.
  4. ^ La storia d'Italia, Vol. 23, Dagli anni di piombo agli anni 80, Torino, 2005, pag. 587
  5. ^ Davies, Peter, Jackson, Paul (2008). The far right in Europe: an encyclopedia. Greenwood World Press, p. 238. ISBN 1846450039
  6. ^ "'95 Percent Sure' Station Blast Was Terror Bomb". Associated Press. 3 August 1980.
  7. ^ "Police search starts for Bologna bombers". The Globe and Mail. 5 August 1980.
  8. ^ "Neo-Fascists 'Prefer Massacre'". Reuters. 6 August 1980.
  9. ^ Carlo Lucarelli, Blu notte La strage di Bologna (in Italian).
  10. ^ a b René Monzat, Enquêtes sur la droite extrême, Le Monde-éditions, 1992, p. 89.
  11. ^ "Bologna bomber's 30-year jail term confirmed". Associated Press. 11 April 2007.
  12. ^ "Strage di Bologna, 30 anni a Ciavardini—Cassazione conferma la condanna all'ex Nar", la Repubblica, 11 April 2007 (in Italian).
  13. ^ a b "Arrestato l'estremista nero Ciavardini per una rapina a mano armata", la Repubblica, 10 October 2006 (in Italian).
  14. ^ "Bombing Suspect Freed", The Guardian, 11 April 1981, p. 6. (in English)
  15. ^ Jill Smolowe, Carolyn Friday and Lin Widmann, "The Case of the Beheaded Body", Newsweek, 12 April 1982, p. 25. (in English)
  16. ^ a b c d Sergio Zavoli, La notte della Repubblica, Nuova Eri, 1992 (in Italian).
  17. ^ Lucarelli, Carlo (2004). Nuovi misteri d'Italia: i casi di Blu notte. Einaudi. OCLC 654184049.
  18. ^ Anne Hanley, "Bologna bomber slips back into society", The Independent, 16 April 1998. on-line (in English)
  19. ^ "Bologna, due assoluzioni in appello Per la strage non-ci fu depistaggio". la Repubblica. 22 December 2001.
  20. ^ ""Fifth Man" Paolo Bellini Found Guilty of the 1980 Bologna Massacre". Searchlight Magazine. 7 April 2022.
  21. ^ "The Massacre of Bologna... 30 Years Later". iItaly.org. 21 November 2010.
  22. ^ Dossier.
  23. ^ "Il giallo della strage di Bologna. Ecco le prove della pista araba", il Giornale, 22 October 2007 (in Italian).
  24. ^ "Strage Bologna: Cossiga, forse atto del terrorismo arabo". 7 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  25. ^ "A Bologna a colpire furono Cia e Mossad. Carlos: utilizzati giovani neofascisti, però per me Mambro e Fioravanti sono innocenti", Corriere della Sera, 23 November 2005 (in Italian).
  26. ^ "Denuncian que Almirón también participó en la ultraderecha española". 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Telam Argentine news agency, 6 January 2007 (in Spanish).
  27. ^ "Strage di Bologna. Parla il figlio di Sparti, testimone chiave dell'accusa: 'Mio padre ha sempre mentito', Il Sole 24 Ore, 24 May 2007 (in Italian).
  28. ^ "La strage di Bologna, fu un incidente della resistenza palestinese", Corriere della Sera, 8 July 2008 (in Italian).
  29. ^ "Our World: The convenient war against the Jews". 12 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, The Jerusalem Post, 6 October 2008.
  30. ^ "Former Italian Prime Minister fabricates lies against the Palestinian people". 8 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
  31. ^ "Svolta sulla strage del Due Agosto Indagati due terroristi tedeschi", la Repubblica, 19 August 2011 (in Italian).
  32. ^ The Association was responsible, together with other associations of victims of massacres the publication of the book entitled Il terrorismo e le sue maschere published by Pendragon in Bologna
  33. ^ "The Stopped Clock of Bologna". Alternate Memories. 2 August 2017.
  34. ^ Abbate, Lirio; Biondani, Paolo (25 February 2020). "La strage di Bologna fu organizzata e finanziata dai capi della loggia P2". L'Espresso (in Italian). Archived from the original on 12 March 2020.
  35. ^ Paolo Biondani (22 July 2020). "Esclusivo - Strage di Bologna, ecco le carte segrete di Licio Gelli". L'Espresso (in Italian). Archived from the original on 7 September 2020. (Part I of 2)
  36. ^ Ferrari, Antonio (2 July 2020). "Strage di Bologna, dalla P2 di Gelli milioni di dollari per finanziare i terroristi neofascisti". Il Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Archived from the original on 29 July 2020.
  37. ^ Hellenga, Robert (1999). The Fall of a Sparrow. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-684-85026-5.
  38. ^ Elkin, Lauren (12 May 2017). "The 7th Function of Language by Laurent Binet review – who killed Roland Barthes?". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 29 December 2017.

Further reading edit

  • La strage. L'atto d'accusa dei giudici di Bologna, dir. Giuseppe de Lutiis, Editori Riuniti, Rome, 1986
  • La versione di K. Sessant'anni di controstoria, Francesco Cossiga, Rizzoli, Milan, 2009, ISBN 978-88-17-03592-7
  • Stragi e mandanti: sono veramente ignoti gli ispiratori dell'eccidio del 2 agosto 1980 alla stazione di Bologna?, Paolo Bolognesi and Roberto Scardova, Aliberti, 2012, ISBN 978-88-7424-932-9
  • Il patto tradito, Marino Valentini, Chiaredizioni, 2019, ISBN 978-88-85561-19-9

External links edit

  • stragi.it, official website of the association of the relatives of the victims (Italian only)
  • BBC Overview of the events
  • Bologna Central Station
  • . Time. 18 August 1980.
  • A Massacre to Remember — The Bologna Train Station Bombing Twenty-Five Years Later
  • , a committee for claiming the innocence of Luigi Ciavardini and to reveal dark spots of the court case (Italian only)
  • La strage di Bologna nel contesto internazionale della guerra fredda e le “relazioni pericolose” nazionali ed internazionali del Lodo Moro, notes from the Conference "I segreti di Bologna", Rome 21 October 2016 (Italian only)
  • Presentazione del libro "I segreti di Bologna" di Valerio Cutonilli e Rosario Priore (Ed. Chiarelettere), Conference at Radio Radicale on the Bologna Massacre, Rome, October 2016 (Italian only)

44°30′22″N 11°20′32″E / 44.50611°N 11.34222°E / 44.50611; 11.34222

bologna, massacre, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bologna massacre news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Bologna massacre Italian strage di Bologna was a terrorist bombing of the Bologna Centrale railway station in Bologna Italy on the morning of 2 August 1980 which killed 85 people and wounded over 200 1 Several members of the neo fascist terrorist organization Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari NAR Armed Revolutionary Nuclei were sentenced for the bombing 2 although the group denied involvement Bologna massacrePart of the Years of LeadRuins of the Bologna station west wing after the bombingLocationBologna Centrale railway station ItalyDate2 August 1980 10 25 UTC 1 Attack typeBombingWeaponTime bombDeaths85InjuredOver 200PerpetratorsLuigi Ciavardini Valerio Fioravanti and Francesca Mambro members of the Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari Contents 1 Events 2 Investigation 2 1 False leads 3 Prosecution 4 Alternative theories 5 Legacy 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEvents edit nbsp Bystanders assisting the rescue operation nbsp Rescuers carrying a victimAt 10 25 CEST a time bomb hidden in an unattended suitcase detonated in an air conditioned waiting room at the Bologna station which was full of people seeking relief from the August heat The explosion collapsed the roof of the waiting room destroyed most of the main building and hit the Ancona Chiasso train which was waiting at the first platform 3 The station was full of tourists that Saturday and the city was unprepared for a major disaster Many passers by and travelers provided first aid to victims and helped rescue people who were buried under the rubble Due to the large number of casualties and an insufficient number of emergency vehicles available to transport the injured to hospitals firefighters used buses private cars and taxis Some doctors and hospital staff returned early from vacation to care for the victims and hospital departments which were closed for the summer holidays were reopened to accommodate the casualties After the attack large demonstrations were held in Piazza Maggiore Bologna s central square Harsh criticism was directed at government representatives who attended the 6 August funerals of the victims in the Basilica San Petronio The only applause was reserved for President Sandro Pertini who arrived by helicopter in Bologna at 5 30 pm the day of the massacre and tearfully said I have no words we are facing the most criminal enterprise that has ever taken place in Italy 4 The 37 bus used to transport victims and the clock stopped at 10 25 were symbols of the massacre The attack was the worst atrocity in Italy since World War II 5 Investigation editThe government led by Christian Democratic Prime Minister Francesco Cossiga first assumed that the incident was due to an accidental explosion of an old boiler in the station s basement Evidence however soon pointed to terrorism 6 L Unita the Italian Communist Party PCI newspaper attributed responsibility for the attack to neo fascists on 3 August Later in a special session of the Senate Cossiga also supported the theory that neo fascists were behind the attack Unlike leftist terrorism which strikes at the heart of the state through its representatives right wing terrorism prefers acts such as massacres because acts of extreme violence promote panic and impulsive reactions 7 8 The bomb was later found to be composed of 23 kilograms 51 lb of explosives 5 kilograms 11 lb of TNT and Composition B and 18 kilograms 40 lb of T4 nitroglycerin for civil use 9 False leads edit Generals Pietro Musumeci a member of Propaganda Due P2 and Belmonte of SISMI had a police sergeant put a suitcase full of explosives on a train in Bologna The suitcase also contained personal items belonging to two right wing extremists a Frenchman and a German Musumeci also produced a phony dossier entitled Terror on trains He was charged with falsifying evidence to incriminate Roberto Fiore and Gabriele Adinolfi two leaders of the far right Terza Posizione who had fled to London 10 Both Terza Posizione leaders said that Musumeci was trying to divert attention from P2 head Licio Gelli 10 Prosecution editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The attack has been attributed to the NAR Armed Revolutionary Nuclei a neo fascist terrorist organization A long controversial court case began after the bombing Francesca Mambro and Valerio Fioravanti were initially sentenced to life imprisonment The Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Luigi Ciavardini an NAR member with close ties to Terza Posizione in April 2007 Ciavardini received a 30 year prison sentence for his role in the attack 11 He had been arrested after the armed robbery of the Banca Unicredito di Roma on 15 September 2005 12 13 Ciavardini was also charged with the assassinations of Francesco Evangelista on 28 May 1980 and Judge Mario Amato on 23 June 1980 13 On 26 August 1980 the prosecutor of Bologna issued twenty eight arrest warrants for far right militants of the NAR and Terza Posizione Among those arrested were Massimo Morsello future founder of the neo fascist organization and political party Forza Nuova Francesca Mambro Aldo Semerari Maurizio Neri and Paolo Signorelli They were interrogated in Ferrara Rome Padua and Parma All were released from prison in 1981 14 Semerari was murdered by the Camorra a year later 15 The first trial began in Bologna on 9 March 1987 Massimiliano Fachini Valerio Fioravanti Francesca Mambro Sergio Picciafuoco Roberto Rinani and Paolo Signorelli were charged with murder Gilberto Cavallini Fachini Fioravanti Egidio Giuliani Marcello Iannilli Mambro Giovanni Melioli Picciafuoco Roberto Raho Rinani and Signorelli were charged with forming an armed gang Marco Ballan Giuseppe Belmonte Fabio De Felice Stefano Delle Chiaie Fachini Licio Gelli Maurizio Giorgi Pietro Musumeci Francesco Pazienza Signorelli and Adriano Tilgher were charged with subversive association Belmonte Gelli Musumeci and Pazienza were charged with defamation 16 page needed On 11 July 1988 Fachini Fioravanti Mambro and Picciafuoco were sentenced to life imprisonment for murder Rinani and Signorelli were acquitted Cavallini Fachini Fioravanti Giuliani Mambro Picciafuoco Rinani and Signorelli were convicted of forming an armed gang Iannilli Melioli and Raho were acquitted Ballan Belmonte Felice Delle Chiaie Fachini Gelli Giorgi Musumeci Pazienza Signorelli and Tilgher were acquitted of subversive association Belmonte Gelli Musumeci and Pazienza were convicted of defamation 16 page needed The appeal process began on 25 October 1989 16 page needed On appeal Fachini Fioravanti Mambro Picciafuoco Rinani and Signorelli were acquitted of murder on 18 July 1990 Cavallini Fioravanti Mambro and Giuliani were convicted of forming an armed gang Belmonte and Musumeci were convicted of defamation and the other defendants were acquitted 16 page needed On 12 February 1992 the Supreme Court of Cassation acquitted Rinani and Signorelli of murder Signorelli was also acquitted of forming an armed gang and subversive association The court also acquitted other defendants canceled the judgment and ordered a new trial because the sentences were illogical incoherent not assessing proofs and evidence in good terms not taking into account the facts preceding and following the event unmotivated or poorly motivated in some parts the judges supporting unlikely arguments that not even the defense had argued 17 page needed The new trial began on 11 October 1993 Massimiliano Fachini Valerio Fioravanti Francesca Mambro and Sergio Picciafuoco were charged with murder Gilberto Cavallini Massimiliano Fachini Egidio Giuliani Valerio Fioravanti Francesca Mambro Sergio Picciafuoco and Roberto Rinani were charged with forming an armed gang and Giuseppe Belmonte Licio Gelli Pietro Musumeci and Francesco Pazienza were charged with defamation On 16 May 1994 Fioravanti Mambro and Picciafuoco were sentenced to life imprisonment Fachini was acquitted Cavallini Fioravanti Giuliani Mambro and Picciafuoco were also convicted of forming an armed gang Fachini and Rinani were acquitted Belmonte Gelli Musumeci and Pazienza were convicted of defamation citation needed On 23 November 1995 the Supreme Court upheld the convictions of Fioravanti Mambro Gelli Pazienza Musumeci and Belmonte ordering a new trial for Picciafuoco who was acquitted by the Appeals Court in Florence on 18 June 1996 a verdict upheld by the Supreme Court on 15 April 1997 In April 1998 Mambro was given home confinement and allowed to leave prison during the day 18 In June 2000 Massimo Carminati NAR member Ivano Bongiovanni far right sympathizer and Federigo Manucci Benincasa SISMI officer were convicted of obstruction Carminati and Manucci Benincasa were acquitted for lack of evidence in December 2001 and Bongiovanni s conviction was upheld 19 On 30 January 2003 the Court of Cassation finally acquitted Carminati and Manucci Benincasa citation needed In an article written by Alfio Bernabei for the British anti fascist Searchlight magazine in April 2022 it was reported that In a significant step in search for the truth behind the bombing at Bologna railway station that killed 85 people and wounded 200 on 2 August 1980 the far right militant Paolo Bellini has been found guilty of direct involvement in the massacre He has been sentenced to life imprisonment The hearings at Bologna law Court began in April 2021 presided over by Judge Francesco Caruso with a number of lawyers acting on behalf of the Association of the Families of the Victims Bellini now 69 year old belonged to the far right organisation Avanguardia Nazionale on whose instigation he killed a young left wing militant Alceste Campanile in 1975 In 1999 he confessed to this killing adding that he had also killed a number of people on behalf of mafia bosses But he denied any involvement in the Bologna massacre 20 Alternative theories edit nbsp Funerals of the victimsAs a result of protracted legal procedures and false leads a number of theories were proposed during the years after the attack Involvement by Italian Secret Service officials was suggested 21 Between 1999 and 2006 during sessions of the parliamentary commission established to probe terrorism in Italy and the failure to identify those responsible for the massacre and a commission investigating the Mitrokhin dossier and Italian intelligence activity new information emerged on international terrorist networks and Italian intelligence in the former Soviet bloc and Arab countries such as Syria Lebanon Libya Yemen and Iraq Secret agreements with the Palestinian leadership tied to arms trafficking between the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and Italy and a warning to the Italian anti terrorist secret service three weeks before the massacre were discovered Thomas Kram member of a German terrorist group linked to Carlos the Jackal and the Palestinians was in Bologna on the day of the massacre On 17 November 2005 the Bologna prosecutor opened a case Dossier 7823 2005 RG against unknown persons 22 According to media reports in 2004 and 2007 23 Francesco Cossiga suggested Palestinian involvement in a letter to Enzo Fragala of the Mitrokhin Commission 24 In 2005 Carlos the Jackal said that the Mitrokhin Commission attempts to falsify history and they were the CIA and the Mossad to hit in Bologna with the intent to punish Italy for its relationship with the PLO 25 After the 2006 arrest of former Argentine Triple A member Rodolfo Almiron Spanish lawyer Jose Angel Perez Nievas declared that it was probable that Almiron participated along with Stefano Delle Chiaie and Augusto Cauchi in the 1980 bombing in Bologna s train station In 1998 the Supreme Court of Argentina refused to extradite Cauchi to Italy 26 In May 2007 Massimo Sparti s son said My father has always lied about the Bologna investigation 27 During a 2008 BBC interview former Italian president Francesco Cossiga reaffirmed his belief that the massacre was attributable to Palestinian resistance groups operating in Italy rather than fascist right wing terrorism and in the innocence of Francesca Mambro and Valerio Fioravanti 28 29 The PFLP has always denied responsibility 30 On 19 August 2011 the Bologna prosecutor began an investigation of two German terrorists Thomas Kram and Christa Margot Frohlich both linked to Carlos the Jackal s group and in Bologna on the day of the attack 31 Legacy editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Relatives of the victims formed the Associazione dei familiari delle vittime della strage alla stazione di Bologna del 2 agosto 1980 on 1 June 1981 to raise and maintain awareness of the bombing The group which began with 44 members grew to 300 On 6 April 1983 the association and victims associations of victims of the Piazza Fontana Piazza della Loggia and Italicus Express bombings formed the Union of Relatives of Victims to Massacres Unione dei Familiari delle Vittime per Stragi in Milan 32 nbsp Plaque at the Bologna Central Station nbsp The clock at Bologna Centrale railway station was permanently fixed at 10 25 to commemorate the massacre Bologna and the Associazione tra i familiari delle vittime della strage alla stazione di Bologna del 2 agosto 1980 sponsor an annual international composition competition which ends with a concert in Piazza Maggiore on 2 August a national memorial day for all terrorist massacres Although the damaged part of the station has been mostly reconstructed the original floor tile pierced by the detonation has been left in place and a deep crack covered by a glass panel has been left in the reconstructed main wall The explosion caused the station clock to stop at the time of the incident 10 25 Images of the stopped clock quickly became a visual symbol of the tragedy The clock was initially repaired but in 1996 the authorities decided to permanently fix the clock at 10 25 as a commemoration 33 In February 34 and July 2020 35 the Italian weekly L Espresso published a reportage claiming the couple Licio Gelli Umberto Ortolani financed the terrorists of the bombing and subsequently took care of the necessary red herrings thanks to the support of Federico Umberto D Amato 36 In popular culture editRobert Hellenga s 1998 novel The Fall of a Sparrow focuses on how the aftermath of the bombing affects a fictional American family The protagonist becomes caught up in the prosecution of the perpetrators and life in Bologna 37 The bombing is the backdrop of a chapter of Laurent Binet s The Seventh Function of Language fr The 2017 French novel which satirizes late 20th century Parisian intellectual and political life 38 involves two detectives investigating what they assume to be the murder of the philosopher Roland Barthes The detectives who travel to Bologna to interview Umberto Eco narrowly escape injury in the attack citation needed See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Neofascist bombing at Bologna 1980 Banda della Magliana a mafia gang with links to the fascist aligned NAR False flag operations False memory List of terrorist incidents Itavia Flight 870 La notte della Repubblica TV programme List of massacres in Italy Piazza Fontana bombing Strategy of tension Games of the XXII Olympiad Moscow Propaganda Due P2 lodge Carlos the Jackal Terrorism in EuropeReferences edit Strage di Bologna Rai Storia 19 December 2017 Archived from the original on 19 December 2017 Retrieved 5 April 2022 Tassinari Ugo Maria 2008 Fascisteria in Italian Milano Sperling amp Kupfer ISBN 978 88 200 4449 7 OCLC 209335674 p 626 1980 Bologna blast leaves dozens dead BBC News 2 August 1980 La storia d Italia Vol 23 Dagli anni di piombo agli anni 80 Torino 2005 pag 587 Davies Peter Jackson Paul 2008 The far right in Europe an encyclopedia Greenwood World Press p 238 ISBN 1846450039 95 Percent Sure Station Blast Was Terror Bomb Associated Press 3 August 1980 Police search starts for Bologna bombers The Globe and Mail 5 August 1980 Neo Fascists Prefer Massacre Reuters 6 August 1980 Carlo Lucarelli Blu notte La strage di Bologna in Italian a b Rene Monzat Enquetes sur la droite extreme Le Monde editions 1992 p 89 Bologna bomber s 30 year jail term confirmed Associated Press 11 April 2007 Strage di Bologna 30 anni a Ciavardini Cassazione conferma la condanna all ex Nar la Repubblica 11 April 2007 in Italian a b Arrestato l estremista nero Ciavardini per una rapina a mano armata la Repubblica 10 October 2006 in Italian Bombing Suspect Freed The Guardian 11 April 1981 p 6 in English Jill Smolowe Carolyn Friday and Lin Widmann The Case of the Beheaded Body Newsweek 12 April 1982 p 25 in English a b c d Sergio Zavoli La notte della Repubblica Nuova Eri 1992 in Italian Lucarelli Carlo 2004 Nuovi misteri d Italia i casi di Blu notte Einaudi OCLC 654184049 Anne Hanley Bologna bomber slips back into society The Independent 16 April 1998 on line in English Bologna due assoluzioni in appello Per la strage non ci fu depistaggio la Repubblica 22 December 2001 Fifth Man Paolo Bellini Found Guilty of the 1980 Bologna Massacre Searchlight Magazine 7 April 2022 The Massacre of Bologna 30 Years Later iItaly org 21 November 2010 Dossier Il giallo della strage di Bologna Ecco le prove della pista araba il Giornale 22 October 2007 in Italian Strage Bologna Cossiga forse atto del terrorismo arabo Archived 7 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine A Bologna a colpire furono Cia e Mossad Carlos utilizzati giovani neofascisti pero per me Mambro e Fioravanti sono innocenti Corriere della Sera 23 November 2005 in Italian Denuncian que Almiron tambien participo en la ultraderecha espanola Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Telam Argentine news agency 6 January 2007 in Spanish Strage di Bologna Parla il figlio di Sparti testimone chiave dell accusa Mio padre ha sempre mentito Il Sole 24 Ore 24 May 2007 in Italian La strage di Bologna fu un incidente della resistenza palestinese Corriere della Sera 8 July 2008 in Italian Our World The convenient war against the Jews Archived 12 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Jerusalem Post 6 October 2008 Former Italian Prime Minister fabricates lies against the Palestinian people Archived 8 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine Svolta sulla strage del Due Agosto Indagati due terroristi tedeschi la Repubblica 19 August 2011 in Italian The Association was responsible together with other associations of victims of massacres the publication of the book entitled Il terrorismo e le sue maschere published by Pendragon in Bologna The Stopped Clock of Bologna Alternate Memories 2 August 2017 Abbate Lirio Biondani Paolo 25 February 2020 La strage di Bologna fu organizzata e finanziata dai capi della loggia P2 L Espresso in Italian Archived from the original on 12 March 2020 Paolo Biondani 22 July 2020 Esclusivo Strage di Bologna ecco le carte segrete di Licio Gelli L Espresso in Italian Archived from the original on 7 September 2020 Part I of 2 Ferrari Antonio 2 July 2020 Strage di Bologna dalla P2 di Gelli milioni di dollari per finanziare i terroristi neofascisti Il Corriere della Sera in Italian Archived from the original on 29 July 2020 Hellenga Robert 1999 The Fall of a Sparrow New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 0 684 85026 5 Elkin Lauren 12 May 2017 The 7th Function of Language by Laurent Binet review who killed Roland Barthes The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 29 December 2017 Further reading editLa strage L atto d accusa dei giudici di Bologna dir Giuseppe de Lutiis Editori Riuniti Rome 1986 La versione di K Sessant anni di controstoria Francesco Cossiga Rizzoli Milan 2009 ISBN 978 88 17 03592 7 Stragi e mandanti sono veramente ignoti gli ispiratori dell eccidio del 2 agosto 1980 alla stazione di Bologna Paolo Bolognesi and Roberto Scardova Aliberti 2012 ISBN 978 88 7424 932 9 Il patto tradito Marino Valentini Chiaredizioni 2019 ISBN 978 88 85561 19 9External links editstragi it official website of the association of the relatives of the victims Italian only BBC Overview of the events 2 Agosto international composing competition Bologna Central Station Bologna s Grief Time 18 August 1980 A Massacre to Remember The Bologna Train Station Bombing Twenty Five Years Later L ora della verita a committee for claiming the innocence of Luigi Ciavardini and to reveal dark spots of the court case Italian only La strage di Bologna nel contesto internazionale della guerra fredda e le relazioni pericolose nazionali ed internazionali del Lodo Moro notes from the Conference I segreti di Bologna Rome 21 October 2016 Italian only Presentazione del libro I segreti di Bologna di Valerio Cutonilli e Rosario Priore Ed Chiarelettere Conference at Radio Radicale on the Bologna Massacre Rome October 2016 Italian only 44 30 22 N 11 20 32 E 44 50611 N 11 34222 E 44 50611 11 34222 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bologna massacre amp oldid 1199923463, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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