The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that Italy violated the right to life of those living in a toxic-waste polluted area around Naples.
The plaintiffs presented scientific data showing rising cancer rates and groundwater contamination in the provinces of Naples and Caserta, home to some three million people.
Europe's top rights court on Thursday ruled that Italy had failed to protect nearly three million people living in a region blighted by toxic waste dumped by the mafia, and gave the government two years to fix the situation.
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Father Maurizio Patriciello lost four relatives to cancers he blames on toxic waste dumps operated by the mafia in southern Italy, but despite death threats he has never stopped campaigning for justice.
The European Court of Human Rights has ruled against Italy for failing to protect citizens' right to life in a toxic-waste affected area near Naples. The court ordered the development of a strategy to address contamination caused by the mafia-controlled waste disposal.
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The landmark ruling found the Italian Republic was guilty of violating citizens' right to life by failing "to deal with the problem of widespread dumping" on private land by criminal groups in the Terra dei Fuochi area — home to roughly 2.9 million people.
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Alessandro Cannavacciuolo, a plaintiff, said he first knew something was wrong when his sheep in the early 2000s birthed