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Mafia at a crossroads as Nigerian gangsters hit S #885307
06/13/16 06:43 AM
06/13/16 06:43 AM
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Strax Offline OP
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Mafia at a crossroads as Nigerian gangsters hit Sicily's shores
Prosecutors in the Sicilian capital of Palermo are warning that a new alliance between the mafia and Nigerian criminal gangs moving in from Libya could herald a new era of organised crime.

“Even the Sicilian mafia has to deal with the wave of migration from Africa,” said Leonardo Agueci, Palermo’s deputy chief prosecutor. “The neighbourhoods under mafia control have changed profoundly in recent years due to the growing presence of foreigners, especially Nigerians coming on boats. Among them, there [are a small number] of people who want to transfer their illegal trafficking, linked to prostitution and drug dealing, to Sicily. And the mafia was quite happy to integrate them into their criminal business.”

In Ballarò, a mafia stronghold market area in the historic centre of the city, a whistle is traditionally used by drug dealers to attract customers, who are offered hashish, marijuana and cocaine. In the past this signal was only used by Italian dealers working for Cosa Nostra, the Sicilian mafia. About two years ago, when Nigerians adopted the whistle, offering drugs at a discount, it was clear that a new criminal organisation had set foot in the city.

State prosecutors in Palermo say the mafia brings in drugs and the Nigerians distribute them among both Italian and African clients.

“It is clear there is a subordinate relationship between Cosa Nostra and the Nigerian clans, with the former controlling the latter,” said Agueci. “If a Nigerian boss tried to rebel against Cosa Nostra, he would probably end up incaprettato [tied up and killed] in the countryside.”

In Ballarò, profits from pizzo – the tax levied on merchants by the Sicilian mafia – are reinvested to buy drugs for resale to Nigerian clans and their dealers. To have better control of their new African partners, Cosa Nostra seems to have made another rule clear: no guns.

“We have reason to assume,” said Agueci, “that the mafia prohibits Nigerians from owning firearms. So when Nigerians have to settle accounts within their community, they do it with axes and machetes.”

Prostitution is thought to be one of the most profitable businesses for the Nigerian clans. According to police data, 90% of prostitutes in Palermo come from Nigeria. Traditionally, Cosa Nostra is reluctant to directly manage this business – according to the old mafia codes of honour, prostitution is considered a shameful activity.

Recent months have seen a spike in violence linked to Nigerian gangs.

In the state court of Palermo a trial against an alleged Nigerian gangster, Austin Ewosa, 32, is under way. His street name is John Bull and he was arrested in September 2014, in a local bar in Ballarò. He stands accused of assault, intimidation, criminal association and attempted murder, charges that could see him jailed for 10 years.

According to the prosecution, Ewosa is the head of the feared Nigerian clan Black Axe, a criminal organisation born as a sort of student fraternity in the 1970s at the University of Benin City.

On the night of 27 January 2014, Ewosa and his thugs allegedly dragged a 27-year-old man called Don Emeka down Via del Bosco, not far from Piazza Ballarò, where they brutally disfigured him with axe and machete blows. Emeka was allegedly one of dozens of Ewosa’s victims and was punished for not having submitted to his power.

The risk of Nigerian criminals operating in Europe was revealed in a letter sent to the Italian prosecutors from the Nigerian ambassador to Rome in 2011.

“I would like to draw your attention to the new criminal activity of a group of Nigerians belonging to secret societies, forbidden by the government because of violent acts,” wrote the diplomat. “Unfortunately, former members of these sects were able to get into Italy where they re-established their criminal organisations.”

According to the prosecutors, some of the Black Axe members, including Ewosa, and also his victims, arrived in Sicily by boat. Most of them were temporarily hosted in the immigration camp at Caltanissetta, in the centre of the island.

Legal and well established Nigerians in Sicily are paying the price for this new criminal alliance between the gangs and the mafia. “Many honest Nigerians live in Palermo,” says Osas Egbon, 35, vice-president of Women of Benin City, an association that tries to take Nigerian prostitutes off the streets. “They work hard and live in fear. These families are victims on two fronts. They are victims of both Sicilian and Nigerian criminality.”

For now, Nigerians and Sicilians live in peace with the Abuja clans at the service of Cosa Nostra. But the equilibrium may not last.

“At the moment,” says Agueci, “it is hard to imagine Nigerians taking over the Sicilians. Cosa Nostra is too strong and can’t be compared to the Nigerian clans.’’

But the old Palermo godfathers have been replaced by young mafiosi who don’t seem to carry the same authority as their predecessors. Meanwhile, the Nigerian gangs are getting stronger.

Source: http://www.theguardian.com/global-develo...t-sicily-shores


"A fish with his mouth closed never get's caught"
Re: Mafia at a crossroads as Nigerian gangsters hit S [Re: Strax] #885310
06/13/16 07:09 AM
06/13/16 07:09 AM
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carminezazzi Offline
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AHAAHA fucken classic, LCN dosnt let them have guns, basically bitch boys for them by the looks of it.

Re: Mafia at a crossroads as Nigerian gangsters hit S [Re: Strax] #885315
06/13/16 10:39 AM
06/13/16 10:39 AM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 7,237
naples,italy
furio_from_naples Offline
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naples,italy
The sicilian mob can easly kill them,once they will try to raise the head the siggies will cut it.

Last edited by furio_from_naples; 06/13/16 10:39 AM.
Re: Mafia at a crossroads as Nigerian gangsters hit S [Re: Strax] #885319
06/13/16 11:07 AM
06/13/16 11:07 AM
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BlackFamily Offline
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Sicilians don't allow them to have guns and a subordinate relatio.relationship. I think this reporting is slightly bias.

Nigerian syndicates are known to work with various crime groups and limit the use of violence to avoid drawing attention to themselves. They're eventually going to network with their own to move around relying on the Sicilians for trafficking . They will still be paying street tax overall.


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Re: Mafia at a crossroads as Nigerian gangsters hit S [Re: furio_from_naples] #885391
06/14/16 03:34 AM
06/14/16 03:34 AM
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Originally Posted By: furio_from_naples
The sicilian mob can easly kill them,once they will try to raise the head the siggies will cut it.


Nigerians work with the Camorra in Naples for years.


"A fish with his mouth closed never get's caught"
Re: Mafia at a crossroads as Nigerian gangsters hit S [Re: Strax] #885392
06/14/16 04:32 AM
06/14/16 04:32 AM
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Posts: 1,650
Chicago
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CabriniGreen Offline
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^^^^^This


I was going to make this point myself, they even showed this in the gommorah movie.

I've made previous post about how a lot of Naples gangs drug operations, the day to day aspects are not usually clan "Members" , more like just employees.

So what you have here is the Sicilians, adopting the methods of the Naples gangs. I've been saying this for awhile, but this is the model that is most prevalent around the world right now. Family clans running drug operations. Lots of the work " sub-contracted" out so to speak. This isn't even an Italian thing, the Wire is like 10-15 years old now, and it was the SAME model there as well. Like THIS IS HOW YOU RUN OPEN AIR DRUG MARKETS. YOU DONT HAVE ONE GUY WITH ALL THE MONEY, AND DRUGS, AND A FUCKIN GUN AT THE SAME TIME IN THE SAME PLACE..

Colombians imported immigrants to move coke, or used Cubans. The Italians under Vito were poised to use the Puerto Ricans. The Mexicans started as mules for the Colombians. Same deal right now with Haiti. As West Afica gets opened up as a landing point for narcotics, see what effects this will have on the criminal landscape over there..

Last edited by CabriniGreen; 06/14/16 04:34 AM.
Re: Mafia at a crossroads as Nigerian gangsters hit S [Re: CabriniGreen] #899061
11/20/16 08:41 AM
11/20/16 08:41 AM
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Hollander Offline
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Black Axe mafia gang suspects arrested in police raids across Italy
The police swoop comes after a syndicate member turned informer and named the kingpins of the criminal outfit.
15:04, UK, Saturday 19 November 2016

More than 20 alleged members of a feared Nigerian mafia gang called the Black Axe have been rounded up during raids in Italy.

The suspects are accused of being involved in a catalogue of criminal activities, from prostitution and protection rackets through to drug dealing and human trafficking.

The nationwide operation was co-ordinated by the anti-mafia squad in Palermo, Sicily.

The arrests come after a member of the Black Axe turned informer and revealed the workings of the secretive criminal network, including the identifies of senior members.

Among those detained in the latest raids was the head of the group's Italian operation in Padua.

In recent months there have also been arrests in Torino and Milan.

The rise of the Black Axe has been linked to the wave of migrants making the crossing from North Africa.

It has been reported the criminal syndicate has forged links with the Italian mafia, the Cosa Nostra.

According to the authorities, the Italian gangsters import drugs, which are then distributed by the Nigerians.

However, as part of the subordinate relationship, it is understood the Nigerian gang are banned by their Italian counterparts from carrying guns and so settle their differences using axes and machetes.

http://news.sky.com/story/black-axe-mafi...italy-10663022?


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