THE HAGUE: Italy and Austria have broken up an international arms trafficking ring that supplied the Camorra organised crime group with 800 guns including "weapons of war", officials said on Tuesday.
Authorities arrested 22 people including a father and son team of Austrian gunsmiths who illegally supplied the Naples-based syndicate with weapons that had their serial numbers removed.
"This clan armed itself to start a war with other clans," Naples prosecutor Ivana Fulco told a news conference at the EU judicial agency Eurojust, in The Hague. The year-long Italian investigation involved the arrests of several Camorra couriers, with the trail eventually leading to the two Austrian gunsmiths, she said.
The Austrians are known to have sold more than 800 new pistols to the Italian mafia group as well as 50 Kalashnikov assault rifles and 10 ‘Scorpion’ submachine guns, worth a total of 500,000 euros ($565,000).
Nearly 100 further weapons and a "huge" quantity of ammunition were found hidden in several premises in Austria, Eurojust said. "Some of these are weapons of war," said Filippo Spiezia, the national member for Italy at Eurojust.
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That compares with 3,770 for the same period last year and 4,162 for 2022, the previous record high