Mario Cerciello Rega: Huge manhunt for killers of Italian policeman Published duration 26 July 2019

image copyright Carabinieri image caption Mario Cerciello Rega was a deputy brigadier in the Carabinieri police force

A huge manhunt is under way for the killers of an Italian policeman stabbed to death in the centre of Rome while trying to make an arrest.

Two men believed to be North Africans are being sought after Mario Cerciello Rega, 35, died confronting suspected thieves, Italian media report.

The thieves are said to have stolen a bag, then arranged to meet and sell it back to the owner for €100 (£90; $111).

Two Americans have been arrested in connection with the theft of the bag.

Interior Minister Matteo Salvini has offered his condolences on Twitter, describing the dead Carabinieri officer as "a hero, a boy with all his life ahead".

Earlier, he called for whoever killed the policeman to face "forced labour in prison for as long as he lives".

Hours after the death became known, Italian state police (Polizia di Stato) stopped their cars outside the Carabinieri's general headquarters and sounded their sirens in tribute to the officer.

What do we know about what happened?

Two men were apparently later caught on CCTV running away with the bag but others may also have been involved.

After the owner called his own phone, someone on the other end offered to sell the bag back to him in another part of the city, the Prati district. The owner then alerted the police.

The suspected thieves were waiting in the early hours of Friday for the owner to turn up when, instead, Vice-Brigadier Rega and a colleague appeared.

The police officer was taken to hospital but died of his injuries.

Four people are being questioned at a Carabiniere barracks in connection with the case, Ansa adds.

The two Americans being investigated over the theft of the bag were picked up at a hotel by police on Friday morning.

You may also be interested in:

Who was the victim?

Vice-Brigadier Rega had been married only 43 days and had returned from his honeymoon just this week.

"Mario was a lovely lad," Sandro Ottaviani, commander of Rome's Piazza Farnese Carabinieri station, was quoted as saying by Ansa.

"He never held back at work and he was a figurehead for the whole district. He always helped everyone. He did voluntary work, accompanying sick people to Lourdes and Loreto. Every Tuesday he went to Termini train station to feed the needy."

His funeral will be held on Monday, in the same church in which he was married.

The killing shocked Italy and prompted tributes from across the country.

On social media pages, the Carabinieri paid tribute to Mario Cerciello Rega's "unconditional and brave dedication" , and said his loss would be felt by his 110,000 fellow Carabinieri officers.