Brazil arrests Italian extremist convicted of murder

SAO PAULO: Federal police in Brazil arrested Thursday the Italian extremist and writer Cesare Battisti, who was convicted of murder in his home country and has been on the run for decades.

Battisti, who faces deportation, was detained in Embu das Artes, a city in the state of Sao Paulo, and will be held until he is expelled.

It comes after a judge last week ruled that Battisti does not have the right to stay in Brazil, where he sought refuge after his conviction for murder in Italy blamed on an armed Marxist group active in the 1970s.

Battisti spent some 30 years on the run in Mexico and France and came to Brazil in 2004, living in secret before being arrested in Rio de Janeiro.

After four years in confinement, Battisti was released in 2011 and given permanent residency in Brazil.

Prior to last week's ruling, the supreme court had turned down an Italian extradition request, sparking a diplomatic row, and former Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva also had said Battisti should not be extradited.

Battisti says he is innocent and has no intention of leaving Brazil. During his life on the run he became an author of crime novels and other books about his experiences. – AFP

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