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Sunday, December 1, 2019
Tourism In Italy Essays - Transnational Organized Crime, Camorra
  Tourism In Italy  You would not know it from the English-language signs promising to serve  passengers ``quckly'', but Naples' Capodichino airport is British-owned. In    August, 70% of it was bought by BAA, a company that also runs, among other  things, London's main airport, Heathrow. For the Italian south this is a symbol  of hope. Finding an international firm of this calibre willing to invest there  has greatly boosted its confidence. BAA, for its part, was attracted by the  south's tourist potential, but spent three years thinking hard about the $44m  deal. What clinched it in the end was the enthusiasm of Antonio Bassolino, the  mayor of Naples since 1993. He won round BAA bosses with his clear commitment to  privatisation, and fought off opposition at home to foreign ownership, branded  as ``colonisation by the British''. A former communist fundamentalist, Mr    Bassolino is an unlikely champion of privatisation. But the BAA deal is no  one-off. Mr Bassolino boasts about selling the municipal dairy-``What was a city  council doing selling milk?''-and about pioneering, with Merrill Lynch, Italy's  first international municipal bond issue, which sold well in America. The cash  was used to renovate the city's public transport system. He is promoting  public-private partnerships; and he has just persuaded the Chinese commercial  fleet to use Naples as its main container port for serving Europe. The city's  inefficient bureaucracy has been shaken up, with the mayor leading by example.    His distinctly un-Neapolitan punctuality and long working hours have earned him  the nickname ``the German''. Using money for hosting the G7 summit in 1994 as a  catalyst, the city has cleaned and restored many of its vast number of tourist  attractions. It has also extended its opening hours and cleared the main piazzas  of parked cars (though not, alas, of moving mopeds). Mr Bassolino talks with  passion of re-born civic pride, of the need for Naples to solve its own  problems. ``The south has been living on money from the government for too  long,'' he says; this has created a ``deadly dependence''. Mr Bassolino explains  that he has been able to make these changes only thanks to a new system,  introduced in 1993, for the direct election of mayors in cities throughout    Italy. This gave him a mandate for four years, allowed him to appoint his own  senior officials, and made him directly accountable to the electorate rather  than to party politicians on the city council-who cannot now remove him without  also triggering new city-council elections. Past mayors, chosen by the ruling  party on the council, did well to last a year. Direct election has produced a  crop of impressive new city mayors all over the south (and some in the north,  too), many of whom have followed Naples' strategy of promoting cultural tourism  and tackling inefficient bureaucracy. Their first test will come later this  month, when some of them are up for re-election. But there is still plenty of  inefficient southern bureaucracy left. Consider, for example, the startling  statistic that in 1996 Italy managed to spend only 30% of its entitlement to EU  money to help disadvantaged regions such as the mezzogiorno. The country's local  and regional governments, it seems, are not even up to collecting hand-outs. The    EU increasingly allocates money to specific projects instead of handing it over  in a chunk. That means local administrators have to prepare a project submission  and translate it for officials in Brussels, for which many of them at present  lack the skills. But things may be getting better, slowly. For instance, a  ``Europe Office'' with English-speaking staff has been set up in Palermo's city  hall. Bassolino's new recipe for Naples Bureaucracy has also made it hard to do  anything new. One big firm wanted to sink some wells so it could build a new  plant in Sicily. Enzo Bianco, the mayor of Catania, tells the story of how,  after two years of waiting, the firm made its fourth phone call to the regional  government, only to be told that ``if you call a fifth time, you will never get  permission.'' Mr Bianco has made some improvements in his city, including  setting up a ``one-stop shop'' to help firms with permits. But much remains to  be done, he says: over the years, the impact of bureaucracy on Sicily's  development has been ``no less than the impact of the Mafia''. Who is the boss  now? The Mafia (along with similar criminal organisations, such as the Camorra  in Naples) remains a huge problem for the south. Even in areas where the  influence of organised crime has been greatly reduced,    
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