An Italian parliament-mandated health survey has confirmed higher-than-normal incidents of death and cancer among residents in and around Naples, thanks to decades of toxic waste dumping by the local Camorra mob.
The report by the Italian National Institute of Health said it was “critical” to address the rates of babies in the provinces of Naples and Caserta who are being hospitalized in the first year of life for “excessive” instances of tumors, especially brain tumors.
The report, which updated an initial one in 2014, blamed the higher-than-usual rates on “ascertained or suspected exposure to a combination of environmental contaminants that can be emitted or released from illegal hazardous waste dump sites and/or the uncontrolled burning of both urban and hazardous waste.”
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Residents have long complained about adverse health effects from the dumping, which has poisoned the underground wells that irrigate the farmland that provides vegetables for much of Italy’s center and south.
In recent years, police have sequestered dozens of fields, because their irrigation wells contained high levels of lead, arsenic and the industrial solvent tetrachloride.
Authorities say the contamination is due to the Camorra’s multibillion-dollar racket in disposing of toxic waste, mainly from industries in Italy’s wealthy north that ask no questions about where the garbage goes as long as it is taken off their hands — for a fraction of the cost of legal disposal.
In recent years, Camorra turncoats have revealed how the mafia racket works, directing police to specific sites where toxic garbage was dumped.
In 2014, parliament passed a law mandating the National Institute of Health, a public institution under the Italian Ministry of Health, to report on the rates of death, hospitalization and cancer in the 55 municipalities in the so-called “Land of Fires.”
The new report, released on Wednesday last week with little fanfare, confirmed what residents have long known, the Reverend Maurizio Patriciello, a priest in the area, wrote on Saturday in Avvenire, the newspaper of the Italian bishops’ conference, which has long advocated on behalf of the area’s residents.
“Can we claim victory? Absolutely not,” he wrote.
“In this shameful, sad and painful story, we have lost everything. The government above all,” Patriciello added.
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