Relatives of six Italian men hanged by German troops during World War Two are set to receive hundreds of thousands of euros in compensation for their families' trauma. All but one of the civilians' family members alive when the killings happened in Fornelli in October 1943 are now dead, but under Italian law, damages owed to them can still be passed to their heirs. This means that 80 years after the atrocity, Mauro Petrarca, the great-grandson of victim Domenico Lancellotta, is due to receive €130,000 (£111,000) following a 2020 ruling by an Italian court that awarded a total of €12m...