Valsella Meccanotecnica Explained

Valsella Meccanotecnica SpA (also known as Valsella) was one of Italy's largest manufacturers of land mines. The Company's headquarters initially were in Montichiari. It had two production plants in Castenedolo near Brescia, Italy. The three companies of Valsella, Tecnovar Italiana SpA, and Misar SpA (both the latter started by former Valsella employees) together were the centre of Italian mine production.

Valsella ceased production of mines in 1994 due to the Italian Government's moratorium on production of anti-personnel mines. In 1999, prior to bankruptcy, it moved to complete civil production of engineering and vehicle projects. It ceased to be a separate company in 2005.

History

The beginning

Valsella was formed in 1969–1970 by Brescia-based entrepreneurs, Francesco Rena and Antonio De Cristofano, with ties to the Italian Ministry of Defence and the Redon Trust, a Schaan, Liechtenstein, based company of which one of the Valsella founders, Cristofano, was an attorney. In 1980 Valsella Meccanotecnica Spa was formed from the two companies, Valsella SpA and Meccano Tecnica MT SpA. Meccano Tecnica was a company, based in Castenedolo, that produced furniture, chairs and plastic containers especially for televisions. Meccano Tecnica was founded in 1962 but put into liquidation in 1979 just prior to its joining with Valsella. Meccano Tecnica was 50% owned by the Redon Trust.

Valsella owned 50% of a Milan-Rome company, Valtec, which was responsible for sales, and 32.4% ownership of Motomar, a Milan-based manufacturer of marine motors. Overall, Valsella, via the Redon Trust was controlled by a Swiss-based Italian, Paolo Jasson resident in Collina d'Oro, Switzerland, until the arrival of Fiat in 1984.

Formation of Tecnovar Italiana

In 1971, Valsella Sud Srl, located in Bari, was formed and sold to a former Valsella employee, Ludovico Fontana, and renamed to Tecnovar Italiana SpA.[1] In 1993 the then owner, Vito Alfieri Fontana (who inherited the business) had concerns as to the impact[2] of his business as a mine manufacturer. He started a program of restructuring the company away from certain weapons, and in 1997 shut the company.

In 1976, following a legal dispute, the Valsella founder, Francesco Rena, resigned from Valsella and joined Società esplosivi industriali SpA (SEI), the company that Valsella used to fill their mines with explosives.

Formation of Misar

In 1977, Misar SpA, also Brescia based, was founded by technical staff of Valsella in conjunction with SEI, Società Esplosivi Industriali. Misar was incorporated into the Fiat subsidiary Whitehead SpA in 1990 (now part of the Fiat subsidiary, BPD Difesa e Spazio which since 1996 is now wholly part of Fiat Avio). In 1995 the Misar sea and land mine product line was sold from Whitehead to SEI.[3] [4] [5]

Establishing presence in Singapore

In 1982, Valsella Meccanotecnica Pte Ltd (Singapore) (Valsella Pte Ltd) was formed as a subsidiary of Valsella via its finance companies Finabel SpA and Dukan sas. The finances were managed by Rimon Srl, Falcom Spa, and Unione Fiduciaria Spa. The mines were provided by Valsella, and along with explosives from Bofors, these were assembled by Chartered Industries of Singapore in Singapore for export out of Singapore.

In 1983 Valsella sold its shares in Valsella Meccanotecnica to Meccano Tecnica. Meccano Tecnica is controlled 90% by Valsella and 10% by Dukan Sas.

Sale to FIAT

Through 1984, Fiat via the Fratelli Borletti SpA (which was subsequently 100% owned by a Fiat subsidiary Magneti Marelli in 1985) and via another Fiat company, Gilardini, obtained 100% of the capital of Meccano Tecnica (and thus of Valsella Meccanotecnica). This gave full control of both Valsella and Misar to Fiat. For a time Fiat effectively took over control of Italy's mine industry; a position that it consolidated in 1988 with the purchase Simmel Difesa which purchased the assets of Bombrini-Parodi-Delfino (BPD).

From May 1986 – September 1987 the president of Valsella was Ferdinando Borletti (of Fratelli Borletti). In September 1986, Borletti purchased 50% of the company.[6] Cesare Somigliana was president from 1987–(?).

Valsella sales though fell through to 1986. In 1987, exports were stopped when an investigation by Swedish customs was leaked by the French weekly, Envenement du Jeudi, causing an Italian investigation into the company and another company Tirrena Industriale (Pomezia).[7]

Iraq mine sales court case

In 1991 the Valsella's managers, consultants, and administrators – Antonio De Cristofano, Mario Fallani (director of Casalee Italia), Gabriel van deuren (manager of Cofitec), Cesare Somigliana, Calista Calisto, Paulo Jasson, Paolo Torsello, Vito Taddeo, and Peter Kurt Maier[8] – were charged with illegal trading with Iraq. The allegations were related to the estimated 9 million anti-personnel mines that were sent to Iraq via Singapore. These mines were used by the Iraqis during the war with Iran, the Gulf war and the attacks on the Kurds.[9] The defendants plea-bargained at their 1991 trial; although they acknowledged having committed irregularities, the Supreme Court acquitted the managers of the serious crimes of illegal arms trade and violation of currency regulations.

Withdrawal by FIAT

In 1994 Fiat announced that (via Fiat Ciei SpA) that it had ended its participation on the board of directors of Valsella, and in 1994 Fiat Ciei was merged with Whitehead SpA. In 1995, the land and sea mine production of Misar (which was already incorporated into Whitehead in 1990) was sold to Società esplosivi industriali SpA (SEI). SEI ended up with 30%, with the remaining 70% controlled by Societé Anonyme d'Explosifs et de Produit Chimique (EPC Groupe); however, later in 1995 SEI became mostly (70%) owned by EPC Groupe with the remaining owned by the Sorlini in Brescia.[10]

The end

In 1994 the Italian Government adopted a moratorium on antipersonnel mine production and trade. The manufacture of mines and related technology ended in Italy following Italian legislation (Law 374/97) which specifically banned the manufacture, sale and use of these weapons.

By 1995, only a fraction of Valsella's sales were for military production. Through to 1997 its production collapsed. Its military production was decommissioned and migrated to civilian use. In 1999, Valsella moved to complete civil production of engineering and vehicle projects. Prior to bankruptcy, it was taken over in 1999 as a production site for Bremach.

The company finally merged into the company Pro.De Srl in 2005, now a part of Bremach.

Products

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Landmine monitor report, International Campaign to Ban Landmines, pg 721
  2. Web site: Krieg ist ein perverses Geschäft . War is a perverted business . Kathrin . Zeiske . 7 October 2009 . Neues Deutschland.
  3. Web site: Unknown. https://web.archive.org/web/20110720080321/http://www.aiad.it/aiadcd/scheda_azienda.php?lingua=en&&IDAzienda=83 . dead . 20 July 2011 .
  4. Web site: ITALY: Mine Ban Policy . Landmine & Cluster Munition Monitor . International Campaign to Ban Landmines . 19 October 2012 . Misar‘s land and sea mine production line was sold to Societa Esplosivi Industriali (SEI), which is now controlled by the Paris-based Societe Anonyme d’Explosifs de Produit Chimique (SAEPC)..
  5. Web site: Legal Force . Trademarkia.com . S.E.I. Società Esplosivi Industriali S. p. A. . MISAR .
  6. News: Un Impero Cresciuto Con La Guerra . An Empire Grown with the War . 11 March 1988. La Repubblica . Milan . 19 October 2012.
  7. News: Mine Sales Draw Italian Inquiry . 17 August 1987. Uli . Schmetzer . Chicago Tribune . Rome.
  8. News: Nove Milioni di Mine a Saddam . Nine Million Mines to Saddam . 12 February 1991. La Repubblica . 19 October 2012.
  9. News: Tobacco firm accused of Iraqi arms deal: French TV programme alleges mysterious international company was key player in shipment of 9 million anti-personnel mines, which were used in the Gulf War . Chris . Blackhurst . 18 November 1993. 19 October 2012.
  10. News: Unknown (registration required, in Italian) . L'Unione Sarda.