Sardinian Armed Movement Explained

Sardinian Armed Movement
Native Name:Movimento Armato Sardo
Movimentu Armadu Sardu
Native Name Lang:it
Active:ca. 1983-1985
Ideology:Sardinian nationalism, Far-left
Area:Sardinia, Italy
Italian mainland
Allies:Some members of Anonima sarda
Opponents: Government of Italy

The Sardinian Armed Movement was a short-lived terrorist movement advocating socialism and political independence for the island of Sardinia. It mainly operated in Sardinia, but also in the Italian mainland, from 1983 to 1985. The group has been inactive ever since.

Ideology

The group wanted to merge the socialist class struggle, elements of local banditry and the separatist aspirations on the island, calling for a "Sardinia for the Sardinians";[1] they were also against the Italian and American military installations on the island, that were to be sold to the highest bidder.[2] Everything was actually in accordance with Giangiacomo Feltrinelli's ideas, who made a failed plan to turn the island into "the Mediterranean Cuba" in 1968. Some argue that, despite the declared political goals, the group may have been actually common-crime oriented.[3]

Criminal activity

The group claimed responsibility for a number of homicides, bombings and also kidnappings for ransom,[4] [5] [6] [7] although it is believed it operated even more fiercely against the Italian Armed Forces, accused of colonizing the island and destroy the "morality, way of living, and noble traditions" of the Sardinians. Some murders, however, were also performed against some natives besides the so-called Continentals. To name some of their claimed activities, for instance, on 15 June 1983 some bandits barged into a pub in Mamoiada and killed with a handgun the owner Claudio Balia, brother of Pietro Balia (later assassinated in 1984) and Alberto Balia (blown up in a bombing attack carried out on Marsaille in 1991); some days later, Gonario Sale (married with a cousin of Balia) was also murdered nearby his sheepfold. On 5 July Giovanni Bosco, a mainland priest from Benevento, had been found dead by a gas station in Dorgali. They would also carry out a few attacks on the mainland, like on 19 November 1983, when they kidnapped Anna Bulgari and his son Giorgio Calissoni in Latina, Lazio.

References

  1. http://www.start.umd.edu/tops/terrorist_organization_profile.asp?id=108 Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism. "Sardinian Autonomy Movement" (MAS), start.umd.edu.
  2. https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/Digitization/101561NCJRS.pdf Terrorism in Italy: an update report 1983-1985, U.S. Department of Justice, pp.11-12
  3. Pisano, Vittorfranco (1987). The Dynamics of Subversion and Violence in Contemporary Italy, Hoover Institution Press, pp.50, 79
  4. http://gnosis.aisi.gov.it/gnosis/Rivista3.nsf/ServNavigE/7#%286%29 "Sardinia, a political laboratory".
  5. Paola Sirigu, Il codice barbaricino, La Riflessione (Davide Zedda Editore), 2007, pp.225-234
  6. Shao Chuan Leng, Coping with Crises: How Governments Deal with Emergencies, University Press of America
  7. Giovanni Ricci, Sardegna Criminale, Newton Compton, 2008

Bibliography