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A LONDRA SI TORNA A PARLARE
DEL CASO CALVI
(Un'inchiesta firmata da Keith Dovkants, giornalista
dell'EVENING STANDARD di Londra, che ha intervistato Giuseppe Ferrara
e Carlo Calvi in merito alla riapertura del caso da parte della magistratura
britannica).
Un grazie speciale a Keith, con il quale ho avuto un prezioso
scambio d'idee in merito alla questione.
A son's quest for truth
By Keith Dovkants, Evening Standard
7 October 2003
There is an unexpected softness in Carlo Calvi's voice when he speaks
of the men who murdered his father. He describes with impressive calm
how they strangled him, stuffed bricks into his pockets and hung his
body from scaffolding beneath Blackfriars Bridge. He reels off dates,
places and incidents filled with the names of Mafia assassins and internationally
known politicians. The tone is level, controlled. He has spent 21 years
and millions of pounds on a personal crusade to get to the bottom of
his father's death and he is not about to give in to anger now. But
this is an emotional time. Police in London have re-opened their investigation
into the Calvi affair and his son believes now, at last, the truth will
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The death of Roberto Calvi prompted one of the most baffling - and potentially
explosive - mysteries of the age. He earned the sobriquet God's Banker
through his financial dealings for the Vatican and he had a close relationship
with trusted lieutenants of the Pope. But, while he lunched with cardinals,
he also supped with the Devil. He was linked to a clandestine freemasons-style
group known as P2, which has been condemned in Italy as a corrupt "state
within a state", a club of politicians, criminals and powerful business
figures united in their hunger for wealth and power. An inquest soon
after his death in June 1982 found Roberto Calvi had committed suicide
but this verdict was swiftly discredited. A second inquest recorded
an open verdict. Carlo Calvi says he never doubted his father was murdered.
Four men, one of them a convicted Mafia paymaster, have now been named
as suspects in the killing and they are expected to face a preliminary
court hearing soon in Rome. Carlo Calvi is planning to fly to London
to meet the officer appointed to handle the case here, Detective Chief
Superintendent Trevor Smith. It could be a profitable encounter for
Mr Smith. Mr Calvi's own inquiries have found answers to many of the
questions that, so far, have eluded official investigators. From his
home in Montreal, Canada - where the basement houses 60 boxes of documents
on the affair, all meticulously filed - Mr Calvi revealed that private
detectives and experts hired by his family have built a compelling case
in which Italy's political establishment, the Vatican and the underworld
have significant roles. The motive, he maintains, was to stop his father
revealing secrets that would shock the world. As Carlo Calvi disclosed
to me the findings of his long and arduous investigation, he said: "Individuals
involved in the murder are still around. My expectations have always
been limited and I don't think I'll walk out of a court and say 'justice
has been done'. But it should be possible to identify the guilty." Roberto
Calvi was a frightened man when he fled Italy in the summer of 1982.
He was 62 years old, the bank of which he was chief executive, Banco
Ambrosiano, was on the verge of collapse with ÃÂã800 million in debts,
and he was due to defend himself at an appeal hearing on alleged currency
violations. He knew his life was in danger and he changed his identity,
acquired a false passport and fled to London, putting his trust in a
long-term associate, Sardinian business tycoon Flavio Carboni. Mr Carboni
is one of the four people officially named as suspects in Calvi's murder.
"My father was lured to London to be murdered," Carlo Calvi said. "The
assassins were there, waiting for him." Mr Calvi's investigation indicates
that his father was strangled, before his body was weighted and suspended
underneath Blackfriars Bridge, probably by people who were in a small
boat. The choice of bridge may have been significant: the P2 members
referred to themselves as "frati neri" - black friars. In a move to
allay possible concern over their new investigation, City of London
police have stated that neither Chief Superintendent Smith, nor any
of the other senior officers involved, have masonic links. Mr Carboni,
a wealthy and influential business figure in Italy, has been questioned
a number of times about Roberto Calvi's death. He has vehemently denied
any involvement and recently took legal action against the makers of
a feature film on which Carlo Calvi acted as consultant. The film, God's
Bankers, was made by the respected Italian director Giuseppe Ferrara
and it portrays Mr Carboni as the organiser of Mr Calvi's murder. Days
after it opened in Italian cinemas it was taken off, after Mr Carboni
started legal action for slander. "I won that court case but the film
has been blocked," Mr Ferrara said. "Strong political pressure has been
put on me and my movie. No one will screen it. You can find it on video
and the television rights have been bought but its future is uncertain."
That may change if the the prosecutor's legal moves in Rome result in
convictions. Apart from Mr Carboni, three others have been named as
suspects: Manuela Kleinszig, Carboni's Austrian mistress; Ernesto Diotavelli,
a Rome businessman; and Giuseppe "Pippo" Calò, a high-ranking
Mafia paymaster currently serving a long prison term. According to a
Mafia supergrass, Calò engaged an assassin called Francesco di
Carlo to carry out the murder. Di Carlo - known among his peers as Frankie
the Strangler - was a well-known Mafia figure in London in the early
Eighties. But the allegation against Di Carlo may well be an attempt
to divert attention away from the true culprits. Mr Calvi is convinced
the murder was committed by members of a gang called La Banda della
Magliana, an organisation with a history of carrying out politically
motivated crimes and proven connections to P2. "A number of individuals
from this gang were in London at the time," he said. "They were mixed
in with Mafiosi, people from the Camorra - it was a whole stratum of
the Italian underworld based in London." His evidence for this comes
from painstaking inquiries undertaken by Kroll Associates, the international
detective agency. Mr Calvi, his mother Clara and sister Anna, decided
after his father's death that they would do all they could to get at
the truth. Roberto Calvi built up considerable assets during what had
been a successful banking career. But his son said that when a $5million
life insurance policy was paid out, half of it went to creditors. "We
have spent about $4million (ÃÂã2.5 million) on private detectives and
another $20 million (ÃÂã12.5 million) on lawyers, professional experts
and representation in numerous legal hearings. The family had resources
but I have to say they have been considerably reduced." In 1996, they
settled all outstanding claims against his father's interests. After
the murder, Carlo Calvi abandoned his own career in banking to manage
the complex legal and accountancy affairs and his own investigation
which, in conversation, he calls "our matter". So far, Mr Calvi, married
with two children, has devoted most of his adult life to it. "My father
was part of me and my mother - the family," he said. "We owe it to him
not to rest until this is finally finished." He hopes the new investigation
will precisely identify those responsible for carrying out the murder.
New forensic techniques, not available in the Eighties, will be employed,
he said, and he will be arranging for the scaffolding on which his father
was found to be made available to the police. It is now in the care
of an expert retained by his family, he said. Identifying the murderers
would not, of itself, solve one of the most puzzling aspects of the
case - the motive for the killing. Nor would it necessarily pinpoint
the people who ordered it to be carried out. Intriguingly, Mr Calvi
says he already knows most of the names and why the killing was ordered.
If his father had returned to Italy to face the appeal hearing on currency
charges, he would have been forced to speak out to defend himself, Mr
Calvi said. "He would have revealed the details of a scandal that involved
the Vatican and the highest level of government," he said. "He was murdered
to guarantee his silence. It has been suggested that he was killed by
the Mafia because he had lost money that the bank had been given for
laundering. That has been advanced as a convenient theory. Yes, there
was Mafia money, but that was incidental to what happened." Mr Calvi
said his father had been moving money for the Vatican's own bank, the
Institute for Religious Works, into companies set up across the world.
The diversion of funds, he said, was to allow the Vatican to pursue
political aims in countries where the Catholic Church had an interest.
"They were paying off politicians in places like Argentina, Peru," he
said. "It was something the Vatican did not want revealed." He believes
the crucial decisions were made by members of P2, in which his father
had been involved. "In this group we see the overlapping of politicians,
big business, the Vatican and the Mafia," he said. "It was supposed
to have been disbanded but many of the people concerned are there to
this day. Some of the men responsible for my father's death have died.
But others are still around, some are still powerful." Shortly before
his death Roberto Calvi pleaded with contacts inside the Vatican for
help. He wrote two letters to the Pope. Whatever decisions were made
behind the walls of Vatican City have not been revealed, so far. But
Carlo Calvi has a considerable amount of hard evidence, he says - among
it, alleged proof linking one of the named murder suspects to a high-ranking
Italian statesman. At the time of Roberto Calvi's murder, the suspect
made a number of phone calls from his London hotel to Italy. The number
he dialled implicates the statesman, an internationally known figure.
"That man," Mr Calvi said, naming a politician the Evening Standard
cannot identify for legal reasons, "is the one who ordered my father's
death." The public exposure of this individual, the naming of the assassins
and all those who took part in the crime, have always been the Calvi
family's aims. Roberto Calvi's widow, now 81, lives in a nursing home
in Montreal. His daughter, Carlo's sister, lives in Europe. They have
never considered abandoning what they believe is a struggle for justice.
"It has been long and hard and costly," Mr Calvi said. "But now I really
believe the end may be in sight."