Sardinia, a top holiday destination for Brits and famed for its stunning beaches, is set to house around 250 of Italy’s most dangerous criminals, including mob bosses
One of Brits’ favourite holiday destinations is set to become a huge prison for some of the worst criminals in the continent. Sardinia, Italy, a hotspot known for its dazzling white beaches and crystal-clear waters, will soon become the new home for mobsters and convicted terrorists.
Under the orders of Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government, the Mediterranean island will welcome around 250 of Italy’s most dangerous criminals, including mafia bosses, killers, and domestic terrorists.
This controversial move means a third of the country’s 750 top-risk inmates will be concentrated in just a handful of Sardinian maximum-security prisons, despite fierce opposition from locals who fear the island will once again be branded a haven for the “highest echelons” of Italian organised crime.
“Sardinia does not deserve to be seen as Italy’s Cayenne,” fumed governor Alessandra Todde, referencing the infamous Devil’s Island penal colony. She added: “We have always done our bit in the fight against the mafia and organised crime, but we cannot accept such an unfair distribution [of prisoners].
“These are men who represent the highest echelons of mafia organisations, from the ’Ndrangheta to the Camorra, and they will have a profound impact on the island.” More than 1,500 people, including local officials, unions, and residents, rallied in February to protest the plan, but Todde says her pleas to Meloni have fallen on deaf ears, the Sun reported.
Todde said: “We have written to Giorgia Meloni, but we’ve had no response. We are not asking for special privileges, just respect.”
The prison plan is part of Italy’s national strategy set for 2026. Consequently, the distribution of the 250 inmates will be spread across Sardinia’s three main maximum-security prisons.
The Cagliari-Uta facility, also known as Ettore Scalas Prison and situated near the island’s capital in the south, is expected to receive about 90 new inmates under the strict 41-bis regime, Italian news outlet L’unione Sarda reported. In the north, Sassari’s Bancali Prison already houses a similar number of high-security prisoners and will take on a significant share of the new transfers to reach its specialised capacity.
Meanwhile, Nuoro’s Badu ’e Carros Prison, a fortress-like complex in central Sardinia, is currently undergoing renovations to accommodate an additional 30 to 40 maximum-security inmates, expanding its role in the national crackdown. These prisoners are not simply being locked away; they are managed under a highly controlled system specifically designed to dismantle their criminal influence.
Under the notorious 41-bis regime, inmates are kept in near-total isolation from both other prisoners and the outside world. This includes severely restricted visiting hours, limited exercise time, and tightly censored communications, all aimed at severing any links mafia bosses might maintain with their criminal networks.
Oversight of these inmates falls to the GOM (Mobile Operations Group), an elite unit of the Italian Penitentiary Police, rather than standard prison guards. This specialised force is trained to handle the unique security challenges posed by such high-risk detainees.
Previously, these inmates were scattered across 12 mixed-security prisons throughout Italy, but the new strategy will see them concentrated in three Sardinian facilities and four others on the mainland, all serving exclusively as 41-bis high-security hubs. This consolidation means that roughly a third of Italy’s most dangerous prisoners will soon be housed in Sardinia, marking a significant shift in the country’s approach to managing organised crime and high-risk offenders.
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