On 16 February 1946, Italian Marshal Rodolfo Graziani was handed over to the Italian authorities and transferred to prison on the island of Procida near Naples.

Graziani had previously been held in a POW camp in Cap Matifou, Algeria, where he was taken after surrendering to Allied forces in late April 1945 following the surrender of German forces in Italy.
During World War II, Rodolfo Graziani served as minister of defence under the Fascist regime of Benito Mussolini. He was infamous for his brutal methods of suppressing resistance in Africa as commander of Italian forces in Libya, governor-general of Italian Somalia, and viceroy of Ethiopia. He set up a network of concentration and labour camps where tens of thousands of Libyans were killed, used prohibited chemical weapons against Ethiopian rebels, and executed a Bedouin resistance leader. For these war crimes, he became known as the “Butcher of Ethiopia.”
In 1948, an Italian military tribunal sentenced Graziani to 19 years in prison for his war crimes and collaborating with the Nazis. Four months later he would be amnestied.
In the early 1950s, Graziani joined a neo-fascist movement and in 1953 he became the “honorary president” of the neo-fascist Italian Social Movement (MSI).
Source:
The newspaper “Pravda”, No. 43 (10125) from 20 February 1946