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Italy uncovers plot to create new Nazi party

Group had forged links with fellow extremists in UK, investigators say

Jon Sharman
Thursday 28 November 2019 13:21 EST
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Some of the extreme-right paraphernalia seized but police also found pistols, rifles and crossbows
Some of the extreme-right paraphernalia seized but police also found pistols, rifles and crossbows (EPA)

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Police in Italy have foiled a plot by extremists to form a new Nazi party, seizing a hoard of weapons that included sniper rifles and swords.

Images released by investigators showed a cache of guns, body armour, knives and even a Wolverine-style claw weapon taken from raids up and down the country.

Officers in 16 towns and cities – from Sicily to the Alps – were involved in the two-year probe, which also found that the extremist group had links with like-minded people in the UK.

On Thursday police revealed they had disrupted a “huge and varied array of subjects, residents in different places, united by the same ideological fanaticism and willing to create an openly pro-Nazi, xenophobic and antisemitic movement”.

Investigators did not say how many people joined the group or how many were arrested.

“Defence of fascism” and efforts to revive fascist parties are criminal offences in Italy.

The new party was called the Italian National Socialist Party of Workers and police showed off a range of Nazi paraphernalia, including swastikas and pictures of Adolf Hitler, seized during searches of 19 properties.

They also found a large number of weapons, including pistols, hunting rifles and crossbows.

The group had forged links with extremist groups abroad, including in Portugal, Britain and France, police said.

In July police found a huge stash of weapons including an air-to-air missile that they linked to far-right extremists while, in November, two men connected to another group of Nazi sympathisers were arrested on suspicion of planning to attack a mosque.

Additional reporting by Reuters

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