Italians are furious about the killing of Italian negotiator Nicola Calipari
and the wounding of journalist Giuliana Sgrena and a second intelligence
officer Friday by US forces in Iraq.
The three were shot at by US forces as their car approached Baghdad airport
shortly after Calipari secured Sgrena's release from kidnappers, who had held
the journalist captive for a month.
"Nicola Calipari is becoming a hero in Italy overnight," ITN Rome
Correspondent, Fabio Sermonti told the Laura Flanders Show on Air America Radio, Saturday
night.
Calipari, said Sermonti, "Was a very experienced member of the anti-mafia
police. He was very experienced in the area of hostage-taking, and a very
valuable officer."
Crowds gathered to greet Calipari's coffin as it traveled from the Rome
airport to the morgue. At the San Remo Music Festival which attracts huge audiences
every spring, the music was stopped for first time in years, to broadcast a
live, video link to the Rome airport when Nicola touched down.
"There was a standing ovation and tears. It is a really big thing here.
Everyone is involved." Sermonti told the Laura Flanders Show.
"Italians want an explanation that's a little bit more serious than the kind
of joke we've got that these people were speeding. In that car were some of
the most experienced officers in Iraq who know how to deal with a roadblock."
While US military spokespeople allege that Calipari's car was speeding,
unidentified, towards an Army checkpoint, Sgrena's life-partner, Pier Scolari, told
Italian media that Calipari's car was a few hundred meters from the airport
and already past all US checkpoints when the attack began.
Sermonti, who spoke with Scolari, says, further, that "Calipari was speaking
in English with someone in the airport telling them to get ready [for Sgrena's
arrival] when, just as they reached the airport, without any warning, the [US
forces] opened fire."
"They're talking about 300 bullets from different weapons," said Sermonti. US
military spokespeople say soldiers fired at the car's engine block. "With
heavy weapons, bullets fly all over," responds Sermonti. "From the reconstruction
of the events, it's a miracle everyone isn't dead."
In addition to the shrapnel in her shoulder, Sermonti told Air America Radio
that Sgrena also sustained an injury to her lung.
According to Scolari, says Sermonti, Giuliana had been warned by her captives
that "the Americans didn't want her to get out of Iraq."
At the time of her abduction, Giuliana was heading to an area of Baghdad
where witnesses from Fallujah are staying to interview Fallujah refugees about the
US assault on their city last year. Says Sermonti:
"She had some information about the use of illegal weapons by US forces in
Fallujah that was very sensitive. A very hot topic. There were rumors of some
use of chemicals and a number of weapons that are not legal -- like [napalm] and
phosphorus."
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has been a staunch ally of the US on
Iraq. He defied widespread public opposition to the invasion and sent 3,000
Italian troops. Now, faced with an irate populace, Berlusconi has taken the
rare step of summoning US ambassador Mel Sembler to his office. According to
reports, he demanded that the US 'leave no stone unturned' in investigating the
incident and the US President, in a phone call, promised exactly that.
On the US front, pressure for a serious inquiry has yet to build, and the
deadly attack on Sgrena's car grabbed little attention on the Sunday morning
political talk shows on TV. President Bush made no mention of the Nicola killing
in his weekly radio address to the nation. His first response was to dispatch
an acting undersecretary of State to express condolences to Italy's Ambassador.
Laura Flanders is host of The Laura Flanders Show on Air America Radio.`
© 2005 Laura Flanders
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