Riot after Africans shot in Italy
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/europe/7626099.stm Version 0 of 1. Immigrants in a southern Italian town have rioted after six Africans were killed in a suspected mafia attack outside a shop. People smashed windows and threw rocks in Castelvolturno, north-west of the city of Naples. The six men from Ghana, Liberia and Togo were shot dead late on Thursday. Police say the attack may be linked to a row between the Casalesi clan of the regional Camorra mafia and immigrants involved in drug-trafficking. Two other men were injured in the shooting. Television footage showed men wielding metal bars and forcing traffic to stop on Friday. In a separate incident in Castelvolturno, a man, believed to be an Italian national, was gunned down near a local games hall. Police are now investigating if the two shootings were linked. They say the murders may be connected to drugs-trafficking in the town, where African immigrants have recently begun dealing autonomously, the Italian news agency Ansa says. The Casalesi clan - one of the most feared groups in the Camorra - is believed to control drug-trafficking and prostitution in the region. |