05 December 2018, North Rhine-Westphalia, Duisburg: Policemen are standing in an ice cream parlour in the Citypalais in downtown Duisburg. Investigators in Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Belgium have raided members of the Italian mafia organisation 'Ndrangheta. Photo: Christoph Reichwein/dpa (Photo by Christoph Reichwein/picture alliance via Getty Images)
Dozens held in anti-mafia raids across Europe
01:04 - Source: CNN
Rome CNN  — 

Ninety people have been arrested in a series of operations targeting suspected ‘Ndrangheta members across Europe and in Suriname, South America, officials said Wednesday.

Raids are taking place across Europe in Italy, Germany, Netherlands and Belgium, an Italian police statement said. Charges include international drugs trafficking, Mafia associations, money laundering and real estate fraud.

The operation was taking place one day after the alleged head, or “godfather,” of the Sicilian Mafia, Cosa Nostra, was arrested with 46 other people in the Palermo region of Italy on Mafia charges, according to Italian police and anti-Mafia prosecutors in Palermo.

Settimo Mineo, center, jeweller and alleged new head of the Sicilian Mafia, Cosa Nostra, is escorted out of a police station after his arrest in Palermo on Tuesday.

‘Ndrangheta has its roots in Calabria, southern Italy, but over the decades has developed into a powerful international criminal organization.

Wednesday’s operation is being coordinated by the EU agency Eurojust, which supports judicial coordination between EU member states.

In a statement, Eurojust said the multi-national operation was the “biggest of its kind to date in Europe,” involving several hundred police police officers and intense joint investigative efforts since 2016.

“This aggressive, mafia-style organised criminal group is one of the most powerful criminal networks in the world, and controls much of Europe’s cocaine trade, combined with systematic money laundering, bribery and violent acts,” it said.

Almost 4,000 kilograms of cocaine and hundreds of kilos of other drugs have been detected across Europe during the course of the investigation, it said, and an estimated 2 million euros in criminal assets are expected to be seized.

Suspects include high-ranking members of the Mafia network, Eurojust added. Seventy people were arrested in Italy and 14 in Germany. It’s not yet been announced where the other six arrests took place.

Filippo Spiezia, vice-president of Eurojust and national member for Italy, said: “Today, we send a clear message to organised crime groups across Europe. They are not the only ones able to operate across borders; so are Europe’s judiciary and law enforcement communities.”

Antonio Tajani, President of the European Parliament, added his congratulations to all the law enforcement agencies involved in the operation.

“Europe fights ‘Ndrangheta criminal groups. A Eurojust coordinated operation led to arresting over 90 people involved in drug trafficking & money laundering,” he tweeted.

Police have been searching properties in the German states of Bavaria and North Rhine-Westphalia since the early hours of Wednesday, a spokesperson at the German federal criminal police office told CNN.

Several arrests have been made so far and operations are ongoing, the spokesman said. About 440 police officials in Germany are involved, according to investigators.

Earlier this year, police arrested about 170 people in Italy and Germany in an anti-Mafia swoop.

Following the arrest of Settimo Mineo on Tuesday, Italian police said he had been elected godfather at the first Cosa Nostra summit held since 1993, after former boss, Toto Riina, died in prison last year. Mineo, aged 80, has been working as a jewelry maker.

There is no indication that the two operations are related.

Mineo had previously been handed a five-year jail sentence in the 1980s anti-mafia Maxi trial, in which anti-Mafia magistrate Giovanni Falcone – who was killed by the Mafia in a car bomb in 1992 – was the chief prosecutor.

CNN’s Hada Messia reported from Rome and Nadine Schmidt from Berlin, while Laura Smith-Spark wrote from London. CNN’s Stephanie Halasz contributed to this report.