Following reports of rampant food fraud in the European Union, Roberto Moncalvo, head of the Coldiretti association in Italy, said, “The agriculture and food sectors have become priority investment areas for organized crime groups.”
He called it “a strategic move in times of crisis because they have understood that, as bad as it gets, nobody can do without food.”
Coldiretti estimates mafia groups took in around €14 billion last year from agricultural rackets, an increase of 12 percent from 2012.
According to the anti-mafia unit in Rome, around 15 percent of turnover in the agriculture sector is linked to criminal activities.
Coldiretti said crime groups “control in many regions the distribution, and sometimes even production, of milk, meat, mozzarella, coffee, fruit and vegetables.”
They also run around 5,000 bars and restaurants – from pizzerias to ice-cream parlours – in Italy, mostly under dummy corporations.
The industry association said gangsters use extortion and intimidation to gain monopolies over products, force farmers to sell at low prices, as well as pressing businesses to buy their items and launder money.
Crime groups also tamper with ingredients and illegally butcher meat, it added.
Tampering with ingredients or swapping them for inferior ones in food then sold throughout Italy and Europe “seriously jeopardizes the quality and security of products,” said Coldiretti.