Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, known for his hardline anti-migration stance, was previously involved in a war of words with French President Emmanuel Macron over denying entry to a vessel stranded in international waters with hundreds of migrants onboard.
Matteo Salvini has called on French President Emmanuel Macron to detain and hand over dozens of Italian fugitive militants who are believed to have been hiding in France for decades.
“I think it is time to write to the French president to ask him to stop allowing terrorists who have killed Italians to go around free and drink champagne in France”, Salvini said.
Fifty Italian militants are thought to have taken refuge in France to avoid convictions for murders and bombings.
The Italian Interior Minister’s remark followed the extradition of Cesare Battisti, who arrived in Rome on 14 January after almost forty years on the run.
Battisti, a former militant wanted by the Italian authorities for four murders committed in the late 1970s, was arrested in the Bolivian city of Santa Cruz de la Sierra over the weekend, and is now expected to serve a life sentence in Italy.
Battisti spent almost twenty years on the run in Mexico and France, where he was protected by the 1985 Mitterrand doctrine, a policy established by French President François Mitterand that offered asylum to former Italian guerrillas on the condition that they renounce their past crimes.
In 2004, Battisti skipped bail in France and eventually moved to Brazil, where he lived for three years until he was detained in 2007 in Rio de Janiero. Four years later, Brazil’s outgoing president, Luis Inácio Lula da Silva, issued a decree refusing to extradite Battisti to Italy, and he was freed.
Shortly after Jair Bolsonaro was elected Brazil’s president in October 2018, he promised Salvini to extradite Battisti to serve his prison term. A Brazilian court ordered his arrest last month, and he was eventually found in Bolivia.