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By Dany Mitzman Sicily, Italy
A tiny Sicilian TV station that campaigns against the Mafia, Telejato, is among
hundreds of channels threatened with closure due to a change in the law.
Partinico is a pretty nondescript little town - a handful of baroque churches,
a couple of elegant palazzos and a lot of ugly concrete in between.
If it were not for the fact that it is in the so-called "Mafia Bermuda
Triangle", perhaps nobody outside the province of Palermo would have heard of
it.
As it is, like Corleone, it is a name that prompts Italians to raise an eyebrow
and suck in their breath when you tell them you are planning to visit.
Discrete entrance
My point of departure is San Giuseppe Jato, another former Mafia stronghold.
Having just visited a vineyard on land confiscated from an infamous jailed
boss, I decide to try my luck with the only direct bus of the day to Partinico.
I do what the traffic warden advises and wave it down in the middle of the
road, just in front of the toy shop.
After a picturesque journey through the Jato Valley, I alight an hour later at
my destination, a town where the mountains rise up above the church steeples
and illegal attic extensions.
I find the block of flats which is home to Telejato without too much
difficulty. It is on a quiet side street away from the bustle of the main road.
The building number seems right but there is no sign or any directions to the
TV station inside. I conclude that the best way to find Pino Maniaci is to
follow my nose. As I climb the staircase, the smell of cigarette smoke gets
stronger.
I follow the aroma up to the second floor, through an unlocked door and into
the newsroom.
Pino Maniaci and his daughter Letizia Pino Maniaci's daughter Letizia is the
station's main reporter
It is 13:20 and they go live at 14:00. Pino, his daughter and a couple of
volunteer journalists are putting together the bulletin.
When I come in, he turns towards me, cigarette between his lips. After the
briefest of greetings he says, "We're on air soon so sit down and don't break
my balls."
His daughter looks up and grins. "Don't worry, that's how he talks to
everyone," she says.
Indeed Pino Maniaci, when not inhaling smoke, is invariably exhaling
expletives.
Unable to sit still and not wishing to be a ball-breaker, I nose around the
small converted apartment.
You can tell by the pictures, tributes and cuttings on the walls, just how
proud Pino is of Telejato.
Courage
He has turned a tiny local TV station into one of Sicily's most powerful
anti-Mafia voices.
Continue reading the main story
Start Quote
With his Groucho Marx-style moustache and Chico Marx-style accent, he boasts
that even the Mafia watch Telejato
He says nearly all the locals watch it. In the heart of Cosa Nostra territory,
he was the first journalist to dare to give the full names of arrested mafiosi.
Before him, nobody published more than initials for fear of reprisals.
Pino, his family and a small team of volunteers put together a daily news show,
which is dominated by Mafia and corruption stories.
"We're always first on the scene," he tells me. "Even international channels
like CNN call and ask to use our footage."
The station works closely with the various police forces, including the
Catturandi di Palermo - a special squad that hunts mafiosi in hiding.
"Wherever we show up, they're there. Wherever they show up, we're there."
Pino's childlike bravado conceals his genuine courage.
With his Groucho Marx-style moustache and Chico Marx-style accent, he boasts
that even the Mafia watch Telejato.
"We were the only ones to interview the brother of Bernardo Provenzano, one of
the biggest Mafia bosses," he tells me.
With a gleeful twinkle, Pino continues, "We even discovered that Provenzano
himself had an aerial specially positioned to pick up our signal. If you listen
to the police wire taps, you can hear our signature tune!"
Murder attempt
Telejato has a motto: "They consider themselves men of honour. For us,
dishonouring them is a question of honour."
Map of Italy showing Sicily, Palermo and Partinico
Pino uses derision as both weapon and shield, but he admits he is scared,
especially for his family.
"I smoke three packets a day and always joke that it's just as well the biggest
room in our tiny station is the bathroom!"
Living under police escort, he has suffered countless attacks - slashed tyres,
severed brake cables, burnt-out cars, windscreens shattered by gunshots.
"They even tried to bump me off!" he chuckles, describing a failed attempt to
strangle him, which left him with four fractured ribs, a broken leg, a black
eye and several broken teeth.
At 17:00, it is time for me to head for the station to catch a train up to
Palermo.
Pino refuses to let me go without showing me some true Sicilian hospitality.
Police escort in tow, we go to a nearby coffee bar.
Everyone, including the officers, gets an espresso and Pino insists I taste a
cannolo, the island's famous ricotta-filled pastry.
"I have to keep Telejato going," says Pino between mouthfuls, "so that one day
Sicily will be more famous for these than for the Mafia."