The mobile number that rang the death knell

London, May 26 (IANS) The Bulgarian mobile phone number – 0888 888 888 – has been suspended after every person who used it in the past 10 years died. The last man to own it was gunned down outside an Indian restaurant in the Bulgarian capital Sofia.

Vladimir Grashnov, former CEO of Bulgarian mobile phone company Mobitel, was the first user and he died of cancer in 2001. He was 48.

The number was then assigned to Bulgarian mafia boss Konstantin Dimitrov. He was shot dead down in 2003 in the Netherlands. He was 31.

Dimitrov had the mobile phone with him when he was shot while eating out with a model, Daily Mail reported Wednesday.

The exclusive number then passed on to businessman Konstantin Dishliev who was shot dead outside an Indian restaurant in Sofia in 2005. Dishliev had been running a cocaine trafficking operation before he was killed.

The phone number has now been suspended. Callers get to hear the message that the phone is outside network coverage.

A Mobitel spokesperson said: ‘We have no comment to make. We won’t discuss individual numbers.’

Italy arrests 19 accused of helping mafia boss

(Reuters) – Authorities said they had arrested the brother of Italy’s most wanted mafioso on Monday, along with 18 others accused of helping Sicilian boss Matteo Messina Denaro avoid capture.

World | Italy

In operation “Golem 2″, more than 200 police from Palermo and Trapani in Sicily arrested Salvatore Messina Denaro.

He was arrested along with others who authorities said were members of a network surrounding the “boss of bosses” of the Cosa Nostra, who has been on the run since 1993.

The detainees face charges of organizing godfather Messina Denaro’s secret correspondence “in order to help him remain on the run”, said a police statement. Other charges include mafia association, corruption and protection rackets.

Interior Minister Roberto Maroni said the latest arrests were the result of one of the most important police operations of the last decade, greatly increasing the chances of catching Messina Denaro.

“We have dismantled the postal system of the most dangerous boss,” said Maroni in a statement. “The net is closing in on him and I’m optimistic we’ll be able to capture him soon.”

Detectives believe the crime boss is hiding out close to his family home at Castelvetrano, near Trapani, and is moving between safe houses.

Like previous fugitive godfathers, Messina Denaro controls the mob by sending secret “pizzini” — tiny pieces of paper typed on wafer-thin paper and hidden between the messenger’s toes — which are used to communicate between mafia lieutenants.

Police have inflicted major blows on the mafia with the arrests of several top godfathers in recent years, including Bernardo “the Tractor” Provenzano in 2006 and his successor, Salvatore Lo Piccolo, in 2007.

It is not clear if the arrests have had any impact on the business interests of “Mafia Inc”. Small business and retailers’ association Confesercenti — whose members bear the brunt of mafia extortion — says the main crime syndicates bucked the recession last year to raise ‘profits’ by almost 8 percent.

Messina Denaro, nicknamed “Diabolik” after a comic-book character, has a playboy image. He learnt to shoot a gun at 14 and is wanted for the murders of at least 50 people.

He once bragged he had killed enough “to fill a cemetery” and made his reputation by murdering rival boss Vincenzo Milazzo and strangling Milazzo’s three-months pregnant girlfriend.

In May 2002, Messina Denaro was sentenced to life in absentia for his part in the 1993 mafia bombing campaign on “civilian” targets in Milan, Florence and Rome, which left 10 people dead and more than 90 injured.

(Writing by Ella Ide; editing by Stephen Brown)

Labour MPs’ claim Brown as ruthless as a mafia boss

London, July 13 (ANI): Several MPs of the Labour Party have claimed that Prime Minister Gordon Brown is as ruthless and intimidating as a mafia boss.

A senior Labour women has even claimed that Brown sends in brutal hitmen to ‘bump off’ colleagues standing in his way.

“Personally he’s very warm, charming and friendly. But when dealing with his politics he engages with a darker side of himself and he believes the end justifies the means,” The Sun quoted former Environment Minister Jane Kennedy, as saying.

The former minister also agreed upon claims of Brown’s behaviour as a ‘mafia boss’ and said she hated the manner in which fellow party members are undermined.

“He has, and always has had, a group of people around him engaged in undermining Labour people. We want our politics to be about policy and not personalities, but unfortunately we have it constantly thrust in our face,” Kennedy said.

“The way in which people are undermined is usually very personal. It’s a very personal attack and it’s very distasteful,” she added.

Kennedy was among a wave of leading female Labour MPs, who have criticised Brown’s male-dominated domain. (ANI)

Mafia boss Gambino arrives in Italy to face prison time

Rome – Mafia boss Rosario Gambino arrived in Rome Saturday morning to face a long-delayed prison sentence for his role in the illegal smuggle of drugs from Italy to the United States.

Gambino, who was tried in absentia in the 1980s and sentenced to 14 years in prison, had fought his extradition from the United States for years, reported Italian media.

Authorities had expected him to arrive in Rome on Friday, but had to wait one more day after Gambino’s authorities won a new stay, arguing that Gambino’s health would prevent the trip to Italy.

The arrival in Rome coincided with the 15th anniversary of the murder of mafia buster Giovanni Falcone, who issued the first arrest warrant for Gambino, 29 years ago.(dpa)

Serbian mafia boss arrested over killing of Croatian journalist

Belgrade – Belgrade police on Monday arrested Serbia’s most powerful outlaw figure Sreten Jocic on suspicion of murdering Croatian editor and publisher Ivo Pukanic last year, Serbian Interior Minister Ivica Dacic said. Dacic said Jocic, aka Joca Amsterdam, was arrested in a coordinated police action and that he is suspected of participating in the murder of Pukanic.

Jocic’s attorney briefly told journalists that the police were searching though his client’s house but made no other comment.

Belgrade B92 television reported that Jocic, 47, was arrested in the house of the late former president Slobodan Milosevic which he was renting in the upmarket Belgrade neighbourhood of Dedinje.

Pukanic, the editor of Nacional weekly, was a controversial figure in Croatia and had links with figures on both sides of the law. He and his marketing director were killed in a bomb blast in downtown Zagreb last October.

Croatian media reported last week that a witness told local police that the so-called cocaine king of Europe has organized and ordered the murder of Pukanic.

Serbian media are speculating that Jocic was also involved in the killing of two narcotics bosses in Belgrade last Friday when police found two charred bodies in the wreckage of a Jeep. Media reports that one of the men allegedly owed Jocic half a million euros.

In the early 1990s Jocic was a cocaine boss in the Netherlands where he was arrested in 1993, after which he fled to Bulgaria to become the local drug boss.

Bulgaria extradited him in 2002 to the Netherlands but he was released due to lack of evidence. He awaits trial in Serbia over his suspected connection with several murders.

The murder of Pukanic shook the Croatian public and local police promptly arrested several suspects. Serbian media reports say that a former member of the Serbian security forces suspecting of having planted the bomb is still at large.(dpa)

Italy quake toll rises to 250

L’Aquila (Italy), April 8 (DPA) Following a night of cold and further misery in central Italy the death count since Monday’s earthquake has risen to 250, authorities said Wednesday.

Officials said the death toll could rise as workers continued to find people buried under buildings which collapsed during the earthquake that registered between 5.8 and 6.2 on the Richter scale.

Strong aftershocks continued to shake the region, making rescue operations difficult.

Eleven of the bodies pulled from the rubble remain unidentified.

Authorities have asked relatives and friends of missing people to gather at a makeshift mortuary located near a shopping mall in the city of L’Aquila to see if they could identify the loved ones among the dead.

Authorities said they were considering a proposal by the city’s archbishop to hold a state funeral for the victims Friday.

People who abandoned their homes in the wake of the tremor suffered further discomfort Tuesday night as temperatures dipped to below five degrees Celsius.

By Wednesday morning, some 2,000 tents were housing 17,000 people, most of whom relocated from L’Aquila’s city centre and neighbouring towns, including Onna and Paganica, all of which were severely damaged by the earthquake.

Another 3,000 people were staying at hotels in other towns of the Abruzzo region, considered safe from the aftershocks which have caused more buildings to crumble in the worst hit areas.

Police also evacuated the 140 inmates held at a prison in L’Aquila overnight.

Among those transferred to other prisons were several high security detainees serving life sentences, including convicted murderers such as mafia boss Salvatore Madonia and Red Brigades terrorist Nadia Desdemona Lioce, the ANSA news agency reported.