The army can be deployed "to deal with in the most efficient manner the phenomenon of the environment mafia in the area between Naples and Caserta," said Defence Undersecretary Gioacchino Alfano yesterday.
Parliament is due to examine the decree but Alfano said that "for the first time, all political forces are in agreement to offer concrete solutions to resolve a specific problem".
The smoke-choked area north of Naples has been dubbed the "Triangle of Death" and it is a grim sight -- a short trip but a world away from the postcard images of the city's bay and its famous cuisine.
Periodically set alight, they billow black fumes towards neighbouring towns, but locals say the real killer lies in aquifers feeding tomato, cabbage and broccoli crops which are poisoned with chloroform, arsenic and heavy metals.
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Environmental groups say the toxic garbage could affect one and a half million people living in the Naples and Caserta provinces.
According to environment protection association Legambiente, 10 million tonnes of industrial waste were burnt or buried in the zone between 1991 and 2013, all trucked in at night.
Instead of paying exorbitant sums to have it disposed of legally, companies paid mobsters a fraction of the cost to dump it in fields, wells and lakes.