Calabria Farmworker Killings Expose Italy’s Deep-Rooted Exploitation Crisis
Four migrant labourers burned alive in a minivan near Amendolara as investigators pursue gangmastering and turf war leads, prompting national outrage and pledges for justice.

The charred remains of four migrant farmworkers inside a Fiat Ulysse minivan at a service station near Amendolara, a small town in Calabria, have laid bare the violent underbelly of southern Italy’s agricultural economy. Surveillance footage captured two men dousing the vehicle’s interior with fuel before holding the doors shut and igniting it. Only one of the five occupants, a 35-year-old Afghan national, managed to escape by smashing a window. The victims — three Afghans aged 19, 27 and 28, and a 29-year-old Pakistani — were returning from a day harvesting strawberries across the regional border in Basilicata. Within hours, investigators had detained two Pakistani men, Safeer Ahmed and Ali Raza, known to the survivors as labour recruiters and already living in the area. “An episode of unheard-of gravity,” declared the chief prosecutor of Castrovillari, Alessandro D’Alessio.
Italian authorities are pursuing two central hypotheses. The first points to a brutal form of punishment within the illegal caporalato system, the gangmastering network that traps tens of thousands of migrant workers in exploitative conditions. The second suggests a turf war between rival groups — possibly of different nationalities — vying for control over the profitable illegal hiring rackets that supply cheap labour to the fertile plains of Sibari and Metaponto. “Caporalato is one line of inquiry, but not the only one,” D’Alessio told reporters, leaving open the possibility of a broader conflict. The suspects, according to investigators, were inside the van before the attack, turning it into a death trap for their fellow passengers.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni swiftly condemned the killings, writing on social media that “Italy does not retreat before violence and barbarism” and promising to shed full light on the crime. Yet from London, analysts note that such rhetoric, however resolute, contrasts with the slow pace of structural reform. Only 17 residence permits have been issued to exploited workers in the province of Cosenza since September 2024, a measure designed to encourage victims to report abuse. “The funds for prevention have never been spent,” Maurizio Landini, head of Italy’s largest trade union, told Domani. The incident has also drawn sharp attention in Germany, where tabloid Bild led with the headline “Obst-Mafia zündet Erntehelfer im Auto an” — framing the murders as the work of a fruit- and vegetable-harvesting mafia, a term that underscores the organised crime dimension often obscured in domestic debate.
The lone survivor, Taj Mohammad Alamyar, reportedly struggled with his captors even as the flames engulfed the vehicle. He and another survivor — whose whereabouts are now unknown — have vanished, raising fears for their safety as witnesses in a case that cuts to the heart of one of Europe’s most deeply rooted systems of modern slavery. The investigation, led by the Cosenza mobile squad and coordinated by the anti-mafia directorate, now faces the challenge of mapping the shadow networks that connect legal agricultural supply chains to brutal extortion. For Brussels, the Amendolara massacre reinforces long-standing calls to strengthen the EU’s directive on seasonal workers and to press member states into enforcing labour protections. Without such action, analysts warn, the fields of southern Italy will continue to yield not only produce but also periodic, appalling violence.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
An atrocity of unimaginable cruelty shakes Italy, as four young labourers, trapped in a system of gangmaster exploitation, are burned alive in a van in Calabria. Authorities vow to shed full light on the case, while outrage grows over the slave-like conditions tolerated in the southern countryside.
Four immigrant workers have been burned to death in Italy. Authorities say they were fruit pickers in the south, apparently trapped in a criminal labour trafficking ring.
This story appeared in
16 sources · 4 languages · 24h window