Nicola Mancino

Nicola Mancino (born 15 October 1931) is an Italian politician. He was President of the Senate of the Republic from 1996 to 2001. He was also president of Campania's regional parliament from 1965 to 1971, governor of Campania from 1971 to 1972 and Minister of the Interior from 1992 to 1994.

Nicola Mancino
President of the Senate
In office
9 May 1996  29 May 2001
Preceded byCarlo Scognamiglio Pasini
Succeeded byMarcello Pera
Acting President of Italy
In office
15 May 1999  18 May 1999
Prime MinisterMassimo D'Alema
Preceded byOscar Luigi Scalfaro
Succeeded byCarlo Azeglio Ciampi
Minister of the Interior
In office
28 June 1992  10 May 1994
Prime MinisterGiuliano Amato
Carlo Azeglio Ciampi
Preceded byVincenzo Scotti
Succeeded byRoberto Maroni
Vice-President of the Superior Council of Magistracy
In office
1 August 2006  2 August 2010
PresidentGiorgio Napolitano
Preceded byVirginio Rognoni
Succeeded byMichele Vietti
Member of the Senate of the Republic
In office
5 July 1976  24 July 2006
President of Campania
In office
1975–1976
Preceded byVittorio Cascetta
Succeeded byGaspare Russo
In office
21 April 1971  12 May 1972
Preceded byCarlo Leone
Succeeded byAlberto Servidio
Personal details
Born (1931-10-15) 15 October 1931
Montefalcione, Italy
Political partyPD (since 2007)
Other political
affiliations
DC (1976–1994)
PPI (1994–2002)
DL (2002–2007)

Early life

Mancino was born in Montefalcione, province of Avellino (Campania). He became first provincial and then regional secretary of Democrazia Cristiana (Italy's Christian Democratic Party), being elected for the first time in the Italian Senate in 1976. So far he had been reconfirmed in all subsequent elections.

Minister of the Interior

He was Minister of the Interior from 1992 to 1994. On 1 July 1992, magistrate Paolo Borsellino had a meeting with Mancino, who at the time had just been named as Minister; Borsellino would be killed just over two weeks later with a car bomb, on 19 July. Mancino however always denied that he had met Borsellino.[1] In a television interview of 24 July 2009, judge Giuseppe Ayala said that:

Mancino himself told me that he had met Borsellino on 1 July 1992. More: Mancino showed me his meeting agenda with the name of Borsellino on it[1]

However, later Ayala refuted these words in an interview to magazine Sette. A personal agenda in possess of Borsellino's family, has an annotation by the judge saying: "1 July h 19:30 : Mancino".[2] Vittorio Aliquò, the other magistrate who was interviewing Mutolo at the time of ministry's phone call, later declared that he had accompanied Borsellino "up to the threshold of the minister's office".[3] In 2007 a letter from Paolo Borsellino's brother, Salvatore, was published. Entitled 19 luglio 1992: Una strage di stato ("19 July 1992: A state massacre"), the letter supports the hypothesis that Minister of Interiors Nicola Mancino knew the causes of the magistrate's assassination. Borsellino's brother wrote:

I ask Mancino, of whom I remembered, of the years after 1992, a hardly pushed down drop in the commemorations of Paolo in Palermo, to squeeze his memory to tell us what they talked about in the meeting with Paolo in the days immediately before his death. Or to explain us why, after calling my brother to meet him when he was interrogating Gaspare Mutolo, just 48 hours before the massacre, he had him meet the Head of Police Parisi and Bruno Contrada, a meeting from which Paolo got out shattered, at the point that he was seen holding two cigarettes at the same time... In that meeting is surely the key to his death and the Massacre of Via D'Amelio.[4]

A law enacted and signed by Mancino in 1993 during his tenure as Interior Minister permits the prosecution of those involved in racial, ethnic and religious discrimination and the incitement of hate crime. This law is commonly called the "Mancino law".[5][6]

Later career

In 1994, after the dissolution of Democrazia Cristiana, Mancino adhered to the Italian People's Party (PPI), collaborating with its secretary, Mino Martinazzoli. In July of the same year, he opposed the alliance with the right-wing coalition led by Silvio Berlusconi, and also opposed the election of Rocco Buttiglione as PPI secretary.

Later, he became a member of La Margherita (The Daisy) coalition of parties born out of the left wing of the PPI. After the victory of the center-left coalition led by Romano Prodi in the 1996 elections, Mancino was elected President of the Italian Senate, and served from 9 May 1996 until 29 May 2001.

On 24 July 2006, he left the Senate and became deputy-president of the Consiglio Superiore della Magistratura, Italy's senior council of justice. In July 2012, prosecutors in Palermo ordered Mancino to stand trial for withholding evidence about the alleged talks between the Italian state and the Mafia during the latter's bombing campaign in 1992 that assassinated, among others, the judges Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino.[7] On 20 April 2018, he was acquitted.[8]

References

  1. Borsellino, Salvatore (27 September 2010). "Le domande che non avrei voluto fare". Il Fatto Quotidiano. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  2. Borsellino, Salvatore. "LA REPLICA DI SALVATORE BORSELLINO AL SEN.MANCINO". Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  3. Alfano, Chicco. "Quell'agenda rossa di Paolo Borsellino..." Archived from the original on 12 June 2009. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  4. "Il fratello di Borsellino: "Mancino ora sveli perché incontrò Paolo"". Il Giornale. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  5. "Criminal Code (1993) (excerpts)". LegislatiOnline. Archived from the original on 12 October 2020. Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  6. "Furore as family minister moots scrapping anti-fascist Mancino law". ANSA on Politics. 3 August 2018.
  7. Italy: Ex-interior minister implicated in mafia negotiations, Adnkronos, 25 July 2012
  8. "Trattativa Stato-mafia, condannati Mori, De Donno, Dell'Utri e Bagarella. Assolto Mancino". La Repubblica (in Italian). 20 April 2018.
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