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Crime

France detains seven ex-Red Brigades members

April 28, 2021

Paris says police swooped to arrest seven individuals suspected of having belonged to the Red Brigades. The group terrorized Italy for two decades. Among its crimes was the murder of a former Italian prime minister.

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A police man stands next to a police car
The suspects had been hiding in France for decades to avoid jail time in ItalyImage: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/J. Mattia

The French presidency on Wednesday said it had detained seven former members of the far-left Red Brigades terror group, at the request of Italy.

The Elysee Palace said a search was underway for three other people linked to the group that carried out numerous violent attacks during the 1970s and 1980s.

Among the group's crimes were the abduction and murder of former Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro.

Aldo Moro in der Hand der Roten Brigaden
Former Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro is the highest-profile victim of the Red Brigades, who murdered him in 1978Image: AFP/Getty Images

Italy is said to have urged French President Emmanuel Macron to extradite the extreme-left guerrillas who have been hiding in France for decades to avoid prison sentences in Italy.

Decades-long source of tension 

Former French Socialist President Francois Mitterrandoffered left-wing radicals protection from extraditionprovided that they renounced violence and had not been accused of violent acts.

This "Mitterrand Doctrine" led to tension between France and Italy for decades.

The French presidency said on Wednesday that it still upheld the Mitterrand Doctrine, but that the arrests and extraditions were necessary.

"France, also affected by terrorism, understands the absolute necessity of providing justice for victims," the statement said.

"With this transfer, it is also part of the absolute need to build a Europe of justice in which mutual confidence must be at the center."

Italy praises arrests

Prime Minister Mario Draghi welcomed France's decision to act on Italy's request. He said those arrested were "responsible for very serious terrorist crimes, which have left a wound that is still open."

The memory of their "barbaric acts" remained very much alive in Italy, he added.

Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio commented: "These former Brigade members were accused and convicted in Italy for acts of terrorism related to the bloody events of the 1970s and 1980s."

That they had been picked up now showed "one cannot run away from one's responsibilities, from the pain inflicted, the harm caused," he said.

He tweeted that the operation was the result of French-Italian cooperation.

The Red Brigades' violent past

Almost 50 people died in attacks by the Red Brigades, which carried out sabotage, bank robberies, kidnappings and murders.

Hundreds died in bombings, assassinations, and street warfare by rival far-right and far-left factions in Italy during a period of turmoil from the late 1960s to early 1980s known as the Years of Lead.

kmm, rc/nm (AFP, Reuters)

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