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 | | Posted by admin on Wednesday, April 12, 2006 - 07:51 AM |
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 |  | Over 42 years, "Boss of Bosses" Bernardo Provenzano became a legend
in the Italian imagination; a fugitive who time after time escaped the
police net, both at home and abroad.
But on 11 April 2006, his luck suddenly ran out. He is
said to have been captured by police in a Sicilian farmhouse, wearing
jeans and a pullover, now an old man of 73.
Provenzano has been convicted in absentia of a string of
murders, including the 1992 killings of two judges, Giovanni Falcone
and Paolo Borsellino, for which he was sentenced to life in jail. He is
known as U Tratturi (The Tractor) - because, as an informant put it,
"he mows people down".
But the Sicilian was also a careful operator, who took
few overt risks and under whose leadership the Mafia became a less
bloodthirsty, more efficient machine, commentators say. For these
reasons, he was also dubbed The Accountant.
Child of Corleone
Bernardo Provenzano was born on 31 January 1933 in
Corleone, a Sicilian town synonymous with mafia activity (and which
gave its name to the fictional family in the Godfather films).
He is said to have joined the mafia in his late teens, after World War II.
With his friend Toto Riina, Provenzano is said to have
become muscle for ambitious rising mafioso Luciano Liggio - who
reportedly once said Provenzano had "the brains of a chicken but shoots
like an angel".
Hooded men lead Provenzano into a police building in Palermo
Rivalry between Liggio and Corleone clan head Michele
Navarra erupted into all-out war in the 1950s, and in 1958 Provenzano
is alleged to have helped Liggio murder Navarra, leaving Liggio as head
of the Family.
In 1963 Provenzano went on the run after an arrest
warrant was issued against him for the murder of one of Navarro's men.
In 1974, Liggio went to prison, leaving Toto Riina in charge with
Provenzano his right-hand man.
Riina was captured in 1993 and sentenced to life in
prison. Provenzano took the helm. Riina had overseen a vicious
internecine power struggle in the early 1980s which had left hundreds
of mafiosi dead. But under Provenzano the organisation shifted course.
He reportedly tried to arbitrate between rival mafia
factions competing for business, and steered away from the attacks on
high-profile figures that were hardening public opinion against the
Mafia and provoking police to respond.
Luck runs out
Meanwhile, Provenzano adopted an almost feline caution,
shunning the telephone and issuing orders through small, hand-delivered
notes - "pizzini" - and revealing his whereabouts to only a handful of
associates.
Provenzano was hiding in this hut near Corleone
Since taking the leadership, he is even said to have
communicated with his wife and two sons in Corleone via pizzini -
avoiding the dangerous holiday visits risked by other mafiosi.
During this time, there were persistent rumours that he had died - a claim repeated by his lawyer only last month.
But anti-Mafia prosecutors insisted he was still alive -
and pointed to DNA evidence they say they uncovered after Provenzano
visited a French clinic for treatment in 2003.
Provenzano's aura of invulnerability is now dashed. The old untouchable now faces the rest of his life in jail.
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