Fear and loathing in the Alto Adige
Was it random violence or something far more sinister
that drove a serial killer to gun down six people in a quiet Italian
town?
By Andrew Gumbel - Independent.co.uk
Thursday, 7 March 1996
Merano is rich. Merano is beautiful. Nestling in a
lush valley in the Dolomites of northern Italy and surrounded by some of
the most spectacular scenery in the Alps, its well-scrubbed streets and
brightly painted wooden buildings ooze the kind of self-satisfied
healthiness that only clean air, mountain spring water, good food,
plentiful sunshine and decades of tidy earnings from the tourist
industry can bring. Unemployment does not exist, and drugs and crime are
uncommon enough to be beyond most people's experience. The last place on
earth, one would have thought, to breed a deranged serial killer who
chooses to sneak up to his randomly chosen victims from behind and blast
them at close range with a sawn-off .22-calibre hunting rifle.
And yet it happened, and in a part of the world where
the outward picture of contentedness is more deceptive than it first
appears. For three weeks, from the first murders on 8 February until the
bloody climax to the affair last Friday, the town lived under a self-imposed
curfew of fear as the victims piled up and the mystery deepened. First
on the list were a German banker, Hans Otto Detmering, and his Italian
fiancee, Clorinda Cecchetti, who were hoping to buy a holiday home in
Merano when they were cut down on the Winter Promenade, a romantic
walkway along the banks of the Passirio river that flows through the
town. Five days later, a crippled old farmer called Umberto Marchioro
was hit outside his own cattle shed in Sinigo, a village a few miles
down the road towards the provincial capital, Bolzano. Another week
passed, and then the murderer struck again outside a bookshop opposite
the cathedral, killing a factory worker called Paolo Vecchiolini
directly in front of his girlfriend, who fled before she could become a
target herself.
Finally, last Friday, the rampage came to its
shockingly violent climax. Another farmer was killed, this time in the
hamlet of Rifiano north of the town, and his wife and daughter were
taken hostage in a barn next door. When the police arrived, their
commander, a carabinieri marshal called Guerrino Botte, was shot in the
head and later died in hospital. A long, tense shoot-out ensued, with
the police taking cover among the vineyards and olive trees, until
finally the killer let his hostages go and committed suicide with the
same weapon he had previously trained on each of his six victims.
What could possibly have linked all these crimes?
What was it that pushed the culprit, a withdrawn, secretive 39-year-old
farm labourer called Ferdinand Gamper, over the edge into unbridled
violence? While the killings were still going on, investigators
considered every usual motive for a serial killer: a grudge against
courting couples, perhaps, combined with a morbid interest in guns. But
they forgot completely about the peculiar social and political context
for the murders. Merano may be a quiet spa town, but it is also in one
of the most ethnically divided regions in Western Europe - the Alto
Adige, whose large population of German speakers has spent the last 80
years struggling to assert its minority rights.
It occurred to nobody that this rather tormented
local history might have had anything to do with the murders. But there,
in the barn where Gamper took his own life, and which he rented from the
farmer he shot on the fateful last morning, were leaflets and
handwritten notes pointing to a deep anti-Italian hostility, and
sympathy for the neo-Nazi separatist movement that wants the Alto Adige
(or Sudtirol, as they call it) to secede from Italy altogether and join
up with Austria, its direct neighbour to the north.
Suddenly all the pieces of the puzzle began to make
sense. Gamper was an ethnic German, while all but one of his victims had
been Italian. What he had been about, it seems, was a demented attempt
at ethnic cleansing, with the German banker killed either because he was
mistaken for an Italian or as a punishment for wanting to marry one of
the "enemy". Yes, Gamper must have been crazy to think this way. Yes,
all evidence suggests he acted alone. But, in a region with a history as
fraught as the Alto Adige's, the question nevertheless begs itself: were
his acts somehow an expression of a deeper malaise between the region's
ethnic groups? Is all the peace and tranquillity no more than a veneer,
beneath which seethes a potentially destabilising hostility?
So alarming is the very raising of such questions
that most citizens of Merano have, for the past few days, refused to
contemplate them. But those who have undertaken a little soul-searching
have come up with some pretty disturbing answers. "One of the papers
quoted Gamper as saying before he died that he was only doing what
others wanted to but didn't dare. I have to say, as an Italian of long
standing here in the Alto Adige that I recognise something true in such
sentiments," said Pierluigi Marteuzzi, a local painter. "Before we knew
who the killer was, I must admit I caught myself wishing he wasn't an
Italian, and I'm quite sure Germans were wishing he wasn't a German.
Nobody is willing to talk about this, but if you go out on the street
now you can see Germans in Tyrolean hats carrying thick walking sticks.
It's a self-protection reflex. Nobody was carrying these things around a
month ago."
These are not sentiments that most people dare to air
in public. The German community, in particular, seems so determined to
minimise the significance of the ethnic angle that many of them have
sought to deny it even exists. The eminent local writer Joseph Zoderer
suggested the neo-Nazi leaflets found in the barn in Rifiano were merely
unwanted junk mail that Gamper had not had time to throw out. The German
mayor of Merano, Franz Alber, has taken a similar line, saying that if
in the future any broader ethnic tension manifests itself, it will be
the fault of the Italian national press, which has had the bad taste to
give vent to the issue. "People who live here understand that there is
no basis to this supposedly ethnic motivation for the killings," Mr
Alber said. "Talking about it can only make things artificially worse
and take community relations a step backwards. It's not always easy to
live together but we are all working hard to do what we can."
True, life has been pretty quiet in the Alto Adige
for the past 10 years or so. But it was not ever thus. The original
occupants of the region were neither Austrian nor Italian but speakers
of a quite different language, Ladino, which still survives in a few of
the more remote valleys. Bounced around as a political football between
the Austrians, the Bavarians and Napoleon, the region became ever more
Germanic over the centuries but, in a crazy twist of fate, was awarded
to Italy in the great geopolitical carve-up at the end of the First
World War. Mussolini rubbed salt into this wound with an aggressive
Italianisation campaign, renaming every town, village, mountain and
stream and banning German in schools and public offices. Anyone caught
giving German lessons risked imprisonment or exile, and even gravestones
had to be engraved in the new official language. The Fascists brought
new architecture and new industry to the Alto Adige's capital, Bolzano,
bringing ethnically pure Italian workers and state functionaries up from
the south to do the jobs and to try to tip the ethnic balance.
Mussolini's Italianising zeal was tempered somewhat
when he formed his alliance with Hitler, and in 1939 the two leaders
offered the Germans of the Alto Adige an unenviable choice: stay put and
become fully Italian, or else leave for Austria as faithful followers of
the Third Reich. As it turned out, the war prevented this enforced
repatriation programme from getting very far, but the attempt to divide
the region into German Fascists and Italian Fascists, with no space for
moderates in between, left a deep psychological scar.
In 1945, geopolitics again dictated that the Alto
Adige should remain Italian, although this time the newly democratic
governments of Austria and Italy worked out an autonomy package under
which the region would be able to direct many of its own affairs and
receive generous state subsidies, but on condition that it did so in
conjunction with the Italian province of Trentino to the south. The main
German party in the region, the Sudtiroler Volkspartei (SVP), just about
swallowed this package, but more extreme groups did not. When the Rome
government failed to deliver the terms of the autonomy agreement, the
bombing began.
In the Fifties, the targets were mostly electricity
pylons, railway lines and other state property, but in the Sixties the
extremists started to target people. When six policemen were killed in
two years, Rome eventually capitulated and honoured its 1945 commitments.
There was another outbreak of extremist violence in the mid-Eighties,
including a bomb attack on the state broadcasting company's headquarters
in Bolzano, and again the Italian state reacted with further terms
favourable to the German population.
Since then, there has been peace, or at least a
semblance of it. The 400,000 citizens of the Alto Adige receive four
trillion lire (around pounds 2.5bn) a year in state money, and the
Germans are guaranteed their own school system and state jobs in direct
proportion to their population. Although the extremist movement has not
gone away, the Germans can scarcely complain. They are richer than they
would ever have been either as Austrians or as an independent state; and
the Italians who once persecuted them now provide the bulk of the
tourist trade that accounts for their wealth.
The boot, if anything, is now on the other foot, and
it is the Italians who feel unfairly treated. While nearly all the
Germans of the Alto Adige speak Italian, few Italians speak German and
many of them choose to leave rather than compete for a state job for
which bilingualism is a requirement under the 1945 accord. The Italian
population is falling dramatically, from 26 per cent according to a 1991
census to nearer 20 per cent now; according to one study, there will be
none left at all by the year 2010. The SVP therefore has no serious
competition, and local government looks more and more like a one-party
state. "We are an endangered species," as Orlando Facchini, Merano
correspondent for the Italian language newspaper Alto Adige, puts it.
As a result, the reformed Italian neo-fascist party,
the National Alliance, is booming, enjoying 13 per cent support in the
region as a whole, or something like half the Italian vote. The party's
local spokesman in Merano, Mauro Minniti, complains that the SVP refuses
to listen to Italian proposals on language teaching in schools, or the
allotment of state jobs to give weight to merit as well as ethnic origin.
"The Germans got what they wanted through the blackmail of terrorism,
and now they aren't prepared to give anything back," he complained.
Community relations on a personal level are cordial,
even warm, especially in the towns. But politically there seems little
interest in bringing the two language groups together. Both the SVP and
the National Alliance do everything they can to remain separate, while
newspapers in the respective languages snipe endlessly at each other.
Nazi stickers appear in an elementary school here, a group of German
children is beaten up there. It is an uncomfortable coexistence,
cemented above all by economic interests, not affection. A drama like
the recent serial killings is exactly the sort of event, therefore, that
can shake the region's fragile modus vivendi.
"People say this is an isolated incident, but if
something like it happened again I don't think our society could handle
it," said Leopold Steurer, an eminent local historian and campaigner for
the Green party. Merano might seem friendly enough to the passing
tourist, but up in the lonely mountain villages, where contact between
Germans and Italians is minimal, there may well be other Ferdinand
Gampers quietly seething away, sitting in front of their open log fires
with their hunting rifle beside them, reflecting on the Alto Adige's
peculiar fate and deciding that the time has come to act.