Following the
Battle of Greece and the
Axis occupation of Greece, the
Ionian Islands came under Italian control. On 22 April 1941, after discussions between the German and Italian rulers, Adolf Hitler agreed that Italy could proceed with a de facto annexation of the islands. On 5 June 1941, Parini arrived at
Corfu as the new Chief of the Political Affairs Bureau of the Ionian Islands, a political body ruling the islands. Parini accommodated the bureau headquarters in the
Mon Repos villa, enacting a rigorous
Italianization campaign. On 10 August, the Ionian Islands, except
Kythira, were annexed by Italy as part of the
Grande Communità del Nuovo Impero Romano (Great Community of the New Roman Empire). On 16 August, Parini replaced Corfu mayor
Spyridon Kollas with lawyer
Gerasimos Tryfonas, to sever all administrative ties between the islands and the Greek mainland and the
collaborationist government in Athens. Parini ruled as de facto dictator imposing new laws or ignoring existing ones as he pleased. Parini encouraged the migration of Italians to the islands, expanded and legalized the underground Fascist organizations, and promoted his policies through a radio station and the official newspaper
Jonica, later replaced by
Gazzetta Jonica. Pictures of the heroes of the
Greek War of Independence were removed from public schools as were book chapters dealing with modern Greek history. The Italian language became a mandatory school subject and shop owners were forced to use bilingual signs. On 25 March 1942, the circulation of the
Greek drachma was outlawed and replaced by the Italian
Ionian drachma. Greek stamps were replaced in a similar manner. The Ionian Islands did not manage to escape the horrors of the
Great Famine of 1941–42, partially due to Parini's refusal to allow the
Red Cross to distribute aid in the region. Following the
Fall of the Fascist regime in Italy, Parini departed Corfu in late August 1943 on the yacht
Aspasia, while a second ship carried 40 crates of looted art he had collected. He supported the
Italian Social Republic and was appointed
mayor of Milan. In April 1945 he escaped to Switzerland with forged Spanish papers along with his second wife Melpo Fafaliou, whom he had married in 1944 following the death of his first spouse Rozetta Colombi. The authenticity of the papers was soon questioned and Parini was deported to Italy, where he was given a 12-year prison term by a military tribunal for war crimes committed during his spell as mayor of Milan; he was released in 1946 in an amnesty. A second trial regarding war crimes committed in the Ionian Islands ended in his acquittal. He then emigrated to South America with his wife, where he died in 1993. ==Footnotes==