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TODAY IN ITALY

Today in Italy: A roundup of the latest news on Friday

Italian activist to remain in jail in Hungary, ministers push to limit number of foreign children in schools, Italian artist injured in 'blasphemy' protest, and more news from around Italy on Friday.

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Students are pictured inside a classroom during a lesson. Photo by JEFF PACHOUD / AFP

Italy’s top story on Friday

News headlines on Friday morning were again dominated by the trial of Ilaria Salis, the Italian antifascist activist held in Hungary, after a Budapest court rejected her request to be placed under house arrest, saying that “circumstances haven’t changed” and “there is still a flight risk”, according to a report from Il Post.

Salis, aged 39, from Milan, has been held in a maximum security prison in Budapest for 13 months on suspicion of having assaulted two far-right militants during commemorations for a World War II Nazi regiment in February 2023 – a charge she has pleaded not guilty to. 

Footage of Salis appearing in court in shackles sparked widespread outrage in Italy in late January, with figures from both sides of the political spectrum protesting against her detention conditions. 

Salis provided accounts of her detention in letters first published by TV broadcaster LA7 in January, saying she had been forced to wear the same clothes “for five weeks” and her bed was infested with bugs.

Salis’s next court hearing is set for May 24th.

Italian government plans limit on number of foreign children in schools

Italian Education Minister Giuseppe Valditara on Thursday said he would “take measures” to ensure that the “majority of pupils in school classes were Italian”, news agency Ansa reported.

His words came after Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini called for a cap of “20 percent of foreign children per class”, triggering nationwide debate this week as he insisted most foreign children were unable to speak Italian and that this caused “chaos” in schools.

Valditara voiced his support for Salvini’s stance, claiming such a limit would help foreign children “assimilate into the fundamental values enshrined in the Constitution.”

In the year 2021-2022, only 7.2 percent of Italian schools had a proportion of non-Italian pupils above 30 percent. By contrast, some 18 percent of schools around the country had no foreign pupils at all.

Italian artist injured in ‘blasphemy’ protest in church

An Italian artist accused of blasphemy over an “offensive” painting of Jesus was injured on Thursday by a protester who vandalised his exhibition in a Catholic church, AFP reported.

Saltini’s exhibition “Gratia Plena” at the Church of Saint Ignatius in Carpi, northern Italy, drew protests and 30,000 people signed a petition accusing him of blasphemy, saying one picture showed Jesus “engaged in an obscene sexual act”.

On Thursday morning, the artist was “lightly injured” after confronting a masked man carrying black spray paint and a knife who sought to damage the paintings, a local police spokesman told AFP.

The diocese had previously rejected accusations of blasphemy, hailing Saltini’s works as a rare example of “true contemporary art with a religious subject”.

Lebanese PM mistakes Meloni’s aide for Italian premier 

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati mistook Giorgia Meloni’s personal assistant Patrizia Scurti for the Italian premier ahead of an Italy-Lebanon summit in Beirut, news agency Ansa reported on Thursday.

The incident reportedly took place on Wednesday evening, shortly after the Italian PM’s plane touched down in Beirut airport.

Online videos on Thursday showed Mikati greeting Scurzi with a kiss on both cheeks and a hug before being informed of the mistake by an aide and proceeding to greet the ‘real’ Meloni. 

Meloni attended an official meeting with Mikati later on Wednesday, her office said, with the two leaders said to have discussed efforts to reduce tensions in southern Lebanon following an Israeli strike that killed 16 people.

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For members

TODAY IN ITALY

Today in Italy: A roundup of the latest news on Friday

A suspended army general to run in June's EU election, Venice's mayor praises the new entry fee amid protests, and more news from around Italy on Friday.

Today in Italy: A roundup of the latest news on Friday

Suspended army general to run in EU election

Army general Roberto Vannacci, who was suspended from duty and placed under investigation last February for allegedly inciting racial hatred in his bestselling book The World Backwards, told Ansa on Thursday he will be a candidate for Italy’s populist League party in June’s European election. 

Vannacci said he will be an “independent candidate” fighting to “affirm the values of motherland, tradition, family, sovereignty and identity that I largely share with the League”.   

Deputy PM and League party leader Matteo Salvini expressed satisfaction over Vannacci’s EU election bid, saying he was “glad that a man of value like general Vannacci has chosen to continue his battles for freedom together with the League”.

In the controversial book The World Backwards (Il Mondo al Contrario), released last August, Vannacci denounces the “dictatorship of minorities”, saying that gay people are “not normal” and that the facial features of Italian black volleyball player Paola Egonu “do not represent Italianness”.

Venice mayor hails launch of new entry fee despite residents’ protests

Venice’s mayor Luigi Brugnaro on Thursday praised the launch of a long-planned entry fee for day visitors despite protests warning that the city was being put on sale.

Brugnaro said the new ticketing system was costing local finances more than it was bringing in, but called it a worthy investment as it was a “way to make people understand that we need to change” and “dilute visits to the city,” AFP reported.

Venice was the scene of protests on Thursday as residents gathered in Piazzale Roma – where the city’s main bus terminal is located – to object to the launch of the entry charge. 

Protesters were seen carrying banners reading “Venice for all, end the ticket wall” and “Welcome to Veniceland” – an ironic reference to the alleged transformation of the city into a theme park.

“This is not a museum, it’s not a protected ecological area, you shouldn’t have to pay – it’s a city,” Marina Dodino, from local residents association ARCI, told AFP.

Italy’s public TV reporters to strike over ‘suffocating’ political influence

Journalists at Italy’s state broadcaster RAI will take part in a 24-hour walkout on Monday, May 6th in protest against “the suffocating control” exerted over their work by Giorgia Meloni’s government, reporters’ trade union Usigrai said on Thursday. 

Usigrai criticised the current right-wing administration’s “attempt to reduce RAI to a megaphone for the government”, also citing staff shortages and the cancellation of an agreement over performance bonuses as further reasons behind the planned strike.

Discussions over RAI’s independence aren’t new in Italy as, unlike state-owned broadcasters in other European countries, the network is not controlled by a regulatory body but rather by the government itself. 

But fresh accusations of censorship erupted last weekend after RAI cancelled the appearance of high-profile author Antonio Scurati, who planned to give an antifascist speech on one of its talk shows ahead of Italy’s Liberation Day on April 25th.

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