The funeral of a Nazi war criminal was cancelled in Italy late Tuesday after clashes broke out between protesters and far-right activists on the eve of a major Holocaust ceremony.
Catholic breakaway traditionalists from the ultra-conservative Society of St Pius X had agreed to hold the funeral of former SS officer Erich Priebke at their seminary in Albano, a town near Rome.
But Mayor Nicola Marini and hundreds of local residents turned out to complain about the last-minute decision, following Priebke's death on Friday in Rome, where he had been under house arrest.
“Assassin!” the protesters shouted as the hearse drove into the religious compound for the start of the ceremony, which was quickly suspended by a police order when neo-Nazis broke into the area.
“Take him to the landfill!” one man shouted as the black hearse passed through the crowd, while others sang the Italian partisan song “Bella Ciao” and held up a banner reading “Priebke the Hangman”.
The far-right militants, some 30 of whom had gathered, gave Nazi salutes and fascist chants.
“We are here to celebrate his memory because he was part of our world,” said Maurizio Boccacci, head of the extreme-right Militia movement.
Marini issued a last-minute decree to try to prevent the hearse crossing his town, saying it had been a centre of the resistance during World War II. But the ruling was struck down by the Rome prefecture.
Dozens of riot police pushed about 500 protesters back and later fired tear gas after clashing with a few dozen neo-Nazis who attacked with glass bottles and chains, shouting: “He was a hero!”
A priest from the Society of St Pius X also had to be protected by police as he tried to enter the seminary after being shoved by the protesters.
The funeral was eventually called off, with Italian authorities particularly concerned as tensions were already running high ahead of Wednesday's 70th anniversary of a raid by Nazi troops that cleared out the city's historic Jewish quarter.
The ceremony was suspended in the afternoon then Priebke's lawyer Paolo Giachini decided later to call it off the private religious ceremony to avoid further trouble.
Priebke, who was 100 when he died, was convicted of the 1944 massacre of 335 people, including 75 Jews, at the Ardeatine caves near Rome in a Nazi retaliation for a partisan attack.
The unrepentant Holocaust denier, who claimed he was only following Gestapo orders, has continued to cause uproar even in death with an international controversy over his funeral and final resting place.
“This is a moment of mourning and has nothing to do with politics. We have done our best to respect the feelings of his critics,” the lawyer Giachini told reporters before the funeral ceremony got underway.