Italian police hunted for clues Sunday after a school bombing that killed a 16-year-old girl and gravely injured five more teens, reviving memories of attacks by political militants and the mafia. There was shock across Italy after a powerful device with three gas canisters and a timer went off just as students were arriving for Saturday classes at a vocational high school in the southern city of Brindisi. Italy's flags flew at half mast and the Adriatic port city held the first of two days of mourning for Melissa Bassi, who died from her injuries in hospital, an only child from a working class family who was studying to be a social worker. Another young victim was fighting for her life after suffering extensive injuries to her chest and another was badly wounded in the legs. The victims had all been scorched by the blast, with doctors and witnesses describing flying shrapnel and their blackened bodies on the ground. Thousands of young people spontaneously took to the streets of Italy's main cities in emotional demonstrations against the violence, which many protesters blamed on a rising climate of social tension linked to a steep economic crisis. No one has claimed the attack and Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri said on Saturday that police were looking into "numerous hypotheses". She said the bombing was "anomalous" and warned against hasty conclusions. The region where the attack took place is a hub of the Sacra Corona Unita (United Sacred Crown), a local mafia that has been under pressure from investigators in recent years and whose influence is seen as being on the wane. The group, which is heavily involved in drug and arms smuggling through the Balkans as well as human trafficking, is believed to be behind a separate bomb attack in the region earlier this month against an anti-mafia campaigner. Observers pointed to the fact that the school is named after Francesca Morvillo, the wife of famous anti-mafia judge Giovanni Falcone, who was assassinated with her husband and three bodyguards by a mafia bomb 20 years ago on Wednesday. But officials have cautioned that it is unlikely the Sacra Corona Unita would target civilians in its own territory and said the device used was not sophisticated enough for an organisation that has easy access to explosives. At a demonstration in Rome on Saturday, several participants said the bombing was reminiscent of attacks carried out by far-right and far-left militants in the 1970s and 1980s in a period known as the "Years of Lead". Speaking on the sidelines of a G8 summit at Camp David in the United States preoccupied with the economic crisis, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti on Saturday condemned the bombing as "tragic", "criminal" and "unprecedented".
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