Italy marks 30 years since anti-mafia judge Giovanni Falcone was murdered
Thirty years ago, the Sicilian mafia killed judge Giovanni Falcone with a bomb so powerful it was registered by experts monitoring volcanic tremors from Etna on the other side of the island. The explosion, which ripped through a stretch of motorway near Palermo at 5:56 pm on May 23, 1992 sent shockwaves across Italy, but also signalled the start of the mafia's decline. Anti-mafia prosecuting magistrate Falcone, his wife, and three members of his police escort were killed. The mob used a skateboard to place a 500-kilogramme (1,100-pound) charge of TNT and ammonium nitrate in a tunnel under the motorway which linked the airport to the centre of Palermo. Falcone, driving a white Fiat Croma, was returning from Rome for the weekend. At a look-out point on the hill above, a mobster nicknamed "The Pig" pressed the remote control button as the judge's three-car convoy passed. The blast ripped through the asphalt, shredding bodies and metal, and flinging the lead car several hundred metres. The three policemen on board were killed instantly. Falcone, whose wife was sitting beside him, had slowed seconds before the explosion and the car slammed into a concrete guard rail. His chauffeur,...