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Italy Steel Exec Arrested Over ILVA Plant

An Italian steel executive turned himself into British authorities on Tuesday after being placed under investigation in Italy over environmental and health problems at Europe's largest steel mill — a case that has become a major headache for the government given the 20,000 jobs at risk if the plant closes.

ROME (AP) -- An Italian steel executive turned himself into British authorities on Tuesday after being placed under investigation in Italy over environmental and health problems at Europe's largest steel mill — a case that has become a major headache for the government given the 20,000 jobs at risk if the plant closes.

Fabio Riva, 58, was arrested on a European arrest warrant alleging, among other things, failing to take precautions against work accidents, corruption of judicial acts, poisoning water or food and making false declarations, Scotland Yard said in a statement. He was released on bail and ordered to appear again March 5.

His lawyers said they would fight extradition to Italy, according to a statement released by Riva's advisers.

Riva is one of more than a half-dozen company officials under investigation for problems at the Ilva steel plant in the southern city of Taranto. The plant is at the center of a stalemate between prosecutors who, citing studies pointing to increased incidents of cancer in the area, have taken moves to close Ilva and the government which wants to keep the plant operating — albeit with investments and environmental improvements — given its economic importance in recession-plagued Italy.

The plant itself employs some 12,000 people and accounts for 75 percent of the economic production in Taranto province, located in one of Italy's poorest regions. But it is also an integral part of a steel supply chain that employs some 20,000.

Parliament last month approved a "Save Ilva" law which allowed for the plant to continue operating, with a host of environmental improvements and under strict monitoring. But prosecutors challenged the constitutionality of the law, charging among other things that parliament had usurped judicial powers in passing it.

Just last week, Italian Premier Mario Monti convened a summit of government and company officials, union leaders and business groups who jointly demanded "with absolute respect for magistrates " that the provisions of the law be immediately implemented while the Constitutional Court reviews the case.

Prosecutors last year seized Ilva's steel products bound for the market and police arrested more than a half-dozen people, including Riva's father, the founder of the company Riva Group which purchased Ilva from the government in 1995. The younger Riva was in Britain at the time the arrest warrant was issued and, during weeks of contact with British authorities, turned himself into Scotland Yard on Tuesday, his advisers said.

Also Tuesday, Ilva's president, Bruno Ferranto, asked the court in Taranto to release the sequestered steel products so they could be sold, saying the "survival" of the company and its ability to pay the salaries of its workers were at stake.

Ilva has disputed court-ordered studies into the environmental and health impact of the steel plant, saying its emissions meet European environmental standards, that the presence of dioxins in the air is comparable to other cities and regardless can't be directly linked to Ilva.

In a line-by-line response to the court-ordered investigation, Ilva said any long-term health problems of Taranto residents are the responsibility of the plant's operators before the government privatized it.

Italy's environment minister is due to meet with company officials on Wednesday in Taranto.

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