The Guardian

Secret bunkers and mountain hideouts: hunting Italy's mafia bosses

The Cacciatori unit searches the rugged landscape of Calabria for fugitives who have dug themselves deep into the earth
The Squadrone Carabinieri Eliportato or ‘Cacciatori Calabria’ during a night mission to a bunker house where a most-wanted fugitive was able to escape in 2004 and captured in June 2016. Photograph: Alessio Mamo/The Guardian

On the slopes of the Aspromonte mountains, Pasquale Marando, a man known as the Pablo Escobar of the Calabrian mafia, the feared ’Ndrangheta, built a secret bunker whose entrance was the mouth of a pizza oven.

Less than 10 miles away, Ernesto Fazzalari, who allegedly enjoyed trap shooting with the heads of his decapitated victims, lived in a 10 square-metre hideout in the formidable southern Italian range. When authorities came for him in 2004, Fazzalari, then the second most-wanted mafia boss after Matteo Messina Denaro of the Sicilian Cosa Nostra, had already escaped through a secret tunnel under the kitchen sink.

The Commander Milo Aveni, photographed at the Carabinieri barracks in Vibo Valentia.
The Commander Milo Aveni, photographed at the Carabinieri barracks in Vibo Valentia.

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