Contact Us

Italian communist militant Cesare Battisti captured in Bolivia

Compiled from wire services WORLD
Published January 13,2019
Subscribe
In this file photo taken on October 20, 2017 Italian ultra-leftist militant Cesare Battisti gestures during an interview with AFP in Cananeia, Sao Paulo state, Brazil. (AFP Photo)

Italian former communist guerrilla Cesare Battisti, convicted of murder in his home country, has been arrested in Bolivia and will be extradited to Italy, a Brazilian official said.

"He will soon arrive in Brazil and from here will be transferred to Italy to serve a life sentence," Filipe G. Martins, a senior aide on international affairs to President Jair Bolsonaro, tweeted.

Battisti, long sought by Italy, faces life in prison in his home country, where he was convicted of four murders committed in the 1970s.

He escaped from prison in 1981 and lived in France before fleeing to Brazil to avoid being extradited.

He spent years in Brazil as a refugee, backed by former left-wing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. However, Bolsonaro, who took office on 1 January, pledged to send him back to Italy and a Brazilian Supreme Court judge ordered his arrest in December.

Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte said a government aircraft was heading to Bolivia and would bring captured fugitive militant Cesare Battisti back home.

In a statement Sunday, Conte praised Bolivian and Brazilian authorities for the overnight capture of the fugitive after Battisti has been on the run for nearly four decades. He said Battisti will begin serving his life prison sentences as soon as he returns to Italian soil.

Italian deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini thanked the police and all those involved in the capture of Battisti.

"I thank with all my heart the president Jair Bolsonaro and the new Brazilian government for the changed political climate," he said.

The Italian ambassador in Brazil Antonio Bernardini tweeted "Battisti has been captured! Democracy is stronger than terrorism".

Conte said a government aircraft was heading to Bolivia and would bring captured militant back home.