RMNews wrote and published an article several days ago. In it we stated that pedophiles have infiltrated governments and military on a world wide basis. Here is an excerpt of that article.
"When the pedophile scandal broke in Belgium several years ago, Interpol first realized how many governments in Europe are massively infected with pedophiles."
The first reports of the Italian pedophile scandal in Italy filled the radio and television waves with horror that outraged Italian citizens. Many pedophiles were arrested. Then inexplicably, the scandal disappeared from the media and many of the pedophiles were released from custody. The following article from the UK Independent explains why. Just as Rumor Mill News stated in our earlier article, the problem of pedophilia infests all governments, at every level, in every country. Until people realize this and become outraged enough to defy the pedophile lobby, two things will continue:
Pedophiles in positions of power, writing laws and shaping society at the behest of their controllers
"Italy is grappling with the nightmare that leading politicians or
institutional figures may be implicated in the inquiry. "
"The magistrate leading the investigation, Alfredo Ormanni, has provoked a
furore by denouncing a "paedophile lobby" supported by politicians which he
said openly obstructed the investigators and worked to prevent tougher
sanctions for the consumers of child pornography."
From the UK Independent
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/World/Europe/2000-11/italy011100.shtml
Italian politicians 'obstructing inquiry into child porn on Net'
By Frances Kennedy in Rome
1 November 2000
Child-mad Italy, already perturbed by a sweeping international probe into
paedophiles on the internet, is grappling with the nightmare that leading
politicians or institutional figures may be implicated in the inquiry.
The magistrate leading the investigation, Alfredo Ormanni, has provoked a
furore by denouncing a "paedophile lobby" supported by politicians which he
said openly obstructed the investigators and worked to prevent tougher
sanctions for the consumers of child pornography. His comments have seen
Italy's fragmented political forces close ranks swiftly to demand that if
the magistrate has evidence of an organised pro-porn lobby that he name
names.
Mr Ormanni last weekend charged 1,500 people, including 831 Italians, with
selling or downloading internet child pornography. It was the culmination of
a lengthy investigation by police, centring on a paedophile ring in Russia
that operated a vast traffic via the internet. The gang allegedly kidnapped
children from orphanages and parks and filmed them doing sexual acts against
their will and then sold the footage for between £200 and £4,000 via the
internet. Horrified investigators gathered images of more than 2,000
children who were filmed while being abused, raped and in one case killed.
"There is a paedophile lobby that acts in broad daylight and probably with
the support, which I could consider unwitting, of certain political
parties," said Mr Ormanni.
"If he has evidence of a crime we need names and surnames," responded
interior minister Enzo Bianco in a television interview, saying he had
created a "climate of suspicion that is frankly unacceptable".
The Social Affairs Minister, Livia Turco, accused Mr Ormanni of
electioneering, and defended Italy's child protection legislation.
Opposition hard-right MP Alessandra Mussolini, who recently proposed
bombarding child sex sites with viruses, said the allegations must be
cleared up immediately.
Mr Ormanni's comments, which recall the scandal that rocked Belgium, came
shortly after one of Italy's most active anti-porn campaigners, Father
Fortunato Di Noto, said he would not longer collaborate with the authorities
because the phenomenon wasn't being taken seriously enough.
Material provided by Fr Di Noto and his volunteers at Telefono Arcobaleno
has been indispensable in the current inquiry and past convictions.
Further heightening suspicion that the inquiry had touched insospettabili,
figures above reproach, Fr Di Noto said he would explain his decision only
in person to the Italian president.
As part of the operation, a special police squad near Naples set up a fake
paedophile website which attracted more than 1,000 subscribers, despite
clear warnings about the content. Most of those indicted are charged with
downloading child pornography.