On August 2nd 1980, a bomb exploded in the railway station’s waiting room, causing devastation on an unprecedented scale.
Five members of terrorist groups were later convicted in relation to the bombing, the worst episode in Italy’s ‘Years of Lead’ period of political violence in the 1970s and 80s.
Most recently, in 2020, a former member of the far-right Armed Revolutionary Nucleus (NAR) was sentenced to life imprisonment for providing logistical support to those who carried out the attack.
But suspicions remain of cover-ups and the involvement of “deviant elements” within the nation’s security services, reported Italian news agency Ansa.
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“The bomb that killed people who happened to be at the station on that morning 42 years ago still reverberates with violence in the depths of the country’s conscience,” Mattarella said in a speech marking the anniversary on Tuesday.
“It was the act of cowardly men of unequalled inhumanity, one of the most terrible of the history of the Italian Republic.
“It was a terrorist attack that sought to destabilise democratic institutions and sow fear, hitting ordinary citizens going about their everyday tasks.
“On the day of the anniversary our thoughts go, above all, to the relatives forced to suffer the greatest pain.
“The neo-fascist nature of the massacre has been established in court and further steps have been made to unveil the cover-ups and those who ordered the attack in order to comply with the Republic’s duty to seek the full truth”.
The bombing remains Western Europe’s fourth deadliest postwar terror attack, and one of the most devastating in Italy’s history.
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