Friday, November 14, 2003
Sicilian Farmers produce Pasta on Confiscated Mafia Land
The ANNOTICO Report
Thanks to Lou Blasiotti

Personally, if I'm given the choice, I'm going to buy Libera Pasta.
Libera Terra deserves to be supported!!!!! Locals are reluctant to buy Libera
Pasta for fear of retribution. We, on the other hand are safe here.
=========================================
SICILIANS DISH UP ANTI MAFIA PASTA

BBC News

A group of Sicilian farmers dedicated to battling Italy's Mafia is about to produce its first "anti-Mafia pasta" made from wheat grown on land confiscated from the mob. Italy adopted laws allowing authorities to seize property and assets from the Mafia in 1982.

Libera - a group of anti-Mafia organisations and school - then pressured the government into allowing seized land to be put to use. In 1995 they got their wish and now the farmers, calling themselves Libera Terra - or Free Land - have been growing wheat on land taken from former Mafia "boss of bosses", Toto Riina.

Libera Terra are hoping to sell their anti-Mafia pasta both at home and abroad under the brand name Libera. "We have finally overcome all of the problems, we have won the support of neighbours, and we hope to have our anti-Mafia pasta on the shelves in August," Gianluca Faraone, president of the Libera Terra farmers, told Reuters news agency on Monday.

Until his arrest in 1993 Salvatore "Toto" Riina was a leading Mafia don. He is now serving multiple life sentences for a number of crimes, including ordering the car-bombings that killed anti-Mob magistrates Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino. Riina's assets, including a country villa and estate were eventually seized. The villa has been turned into a country hotel and the estate into the farming co-operative.

And Terra Libera's work does not stop there - they also produce olive oil on an estate which belonged to Bernardo Provenzano, a leading Mafia boss who has been on the run for almost 40 years.

But the change of ownership has not been without problems as locals, fearful of Mafia retribution, were unwilling to have anything to do with the group or the seized land. "More than outright threats from the Mafia we had to overcome people's reluctance to have anything to do with land that was seized from Riina," Mr Faraone explained. "But we've finally won their confidence and we're producing," he added.

BBC NEWS | World | Europe | Sicilians dish up anti-Mafia pasta
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/2116458.stm