Italy-Mafia dealing topic for president

ROME — Italy’s president testified privately for three hours Tuesday in a Mafia trial over purported negotiations between the state and organized crime to stop terror attacks in the 1990s.

The office of President Giorgio Napolitano said the 89-year-old president responded to all questions put to him, including those he could have refused to answer. Some questions came from the lawyer of Italy’s most notorious mob boss, Salvatore “Toto” Riina.

Prosecutors were seeking Napolitano’s testimony in connection with the trial of a former government official accused of giving false testimony in the investigation over purported state-Mafia negotiations. Napolitano has not been accused of any wrongdoing and was called as a witness.

Magistrates traveled from Palermo to Rome to question Napolitano about communications he had with a now-deceased aide whose dealings with the main suspect, former Interior Minister Nicola Mancino, are being investigated.

Mancino is on trial on allegations that he gave false testimony about purported negotiations between the state and the Mafia after the 1993 bombings of churches in Rome, the Uffizi museum in Florence, and a Milan park. Mancino has denied any negotiations.

Prosecutors allege that after the bombings on the mainland, government officials sought to cut a deal with Mafia bosses, promising more lenient prison conditions in exchange for calling off the bombing campaign.

Napolitano, who was president of Italy’s lower chamber of deputies at the time, had said he had nothing useful to tell the court. But he agreed to testify.

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