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TODAY IN ITALY

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

Italian activist held in Hungary to run in EU elections, Campania issued with ‘yellow’ weather warning, and more news from around Italy on Friday.

Ilaria Salis, Italy
Italian activist Ilaria Salis pictured during a court hearing in Budapest, Hungary in March 2024. Photo by Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP

Italy issues ‘yellow’ weather warning for Campania region 

The whole of Campania was under a ‘yellow’ weather warning on Friday as heavy rainfall was expected in the southern region.   

Campania’s Civil Protection Department said on Thursday that the weather alert had been issued based on risks “of flooding, rise in waterways’ levels, water flow on roads, […] rockfall, and landslides”.

A yellow-coded warning is the least severe type of alert under Italy’s weather alert system, but still indicates some level of risk related to possible flooding incidents affecting underpasses, tunnels, and basement-level structures as well as roads and railway lines.

The weather alert was set to be lifted at midnight on Friday, though an extension could not be ruled out at the time of writing.

Italian activist held in Hungary to run in EU elections 

Italian antifascist activist Ilaria Salis will be a candidate for Italy’s left-wing Greens and Left Alliance (Alleanza Verdi Sinistra, AVS) in June’s European elections, the AVS party said on Thursday evening. 

AVS leaders Nicola Fratoianni and Angelo Bonelli said in a statement that they hoped Salis’s candidacy would “reaffirm the inviolability of fundamental human rights across all of the [European Union’s] territory and in each of its member states”.

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.

Italy to welcome close to 66 million tourists this summer, new report says

Italy will welcome some 65.8 million tourists this summer – up by 2.1 percent compared to last summer – forecasts from Italian research institute Demoskopika said on Thursday. 

Of those, some 35.5 million people will be foreign nationals, up by 5 percent compared to summer 2023, the report said.

Tourism Minister Daniela Santanche’ expressed satisfaction over the forecasts, saying that the latest projections confirm “how Italy continues to be a sought-after destination” and testify to industry operators’ “resilience”. 

Italy saw one of its best years for tourism in 2023, with a record-breaking number of passengers passing through the country’s airports.

State-run museums to open for free on Liberation Day

State-run museums and archaeological sites will open to visitors for free on Thursday, April 25th as part of celebrations for Italy’s Liberation Day public holiday, Italy’s Culture Ministry said on Thursday. 

Culture Minister Gennaro Sangiuliano said that April 25th will once again be one of three national holidays where visiting state-run sites will be free of charge this year, with the other two being June 2nd (Republic Day) and November 4th (National Unity Day). 

The initiative aims to “associate highly symbolic occasions for the country with visiting places of culture,” Sangiuliano said.

Liberation Day, which celebrates the fall of the Fascist regime and the end of German occupation in April 1945, is one of Italy’s most heartfelt national observances and is generally marked by a number of official ceremonies and nationwide marches featuring renditions of the Bella Ciao anthem.

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TODAY IN ITALY

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

Heavy rain in Milan causes flooding overnight, unions call 100-euro tax break for workers an 'insult', forklift operator dies in workplace accident, and other news from Italy on Thursday.

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

Heavy rain in Milan causes flooding overnight

On Thursday morning, parts of Milan and the surrounding province woke up to localised flooding after intense rainfall throughout the night.

The municipal civil protection agency warned that the river Seveso was reaching a critical level on Thursday morning, the Milan edition of Corriere della Sera reported.

“We are not on a weather alert, but tonight in the north of Milan (Cinisello Balsamo and Milano Lambrate) 30mm of rain fell between 1 and 4am,” the Councilor for Security and Civil Protection, Marco Granelli, wrote in an update on Facebook at 6am.

The agency warned residents to take precautions on Thursday and avoid flooded areas as unstable weather was forecast to continue throughout the day.

Worker dies in forklift accident

A forklift truck driver in the southern Italian town of Gioia del Colle died as a result of his injuries after reportedly being thrown from the forklift he was operating on Tuesday, news agency Ansa reported.

“I was deeply dismayed to learn of the dramatic news of the death of one of our fellow citizens in his workplace,” Giovanni Mastrangelo, mayor of Gioia del Colle, said on social media.

“On behalf of the entire community, I express all my… condolences to the family and to all the people affected by this immense pain,” he said.

Workplace deaths and accidents are regularly reported by the media in Italy, where almost 800 deaths at work were recorded last year, according to official statistics.

Italy’s trade unions slam government tax break as ‘insult’

The national May Day event of the CGIL, CISL and UIL trade unions took place in northern Italy’s Friuli Venezia Giulia this year, dedicated to Europe, Ansa reported.

“Let’s build a Europe of peace, work and social justice together” was the slogan chosen by the three unions, and speakers addressed low wages, the cost of living and safety at work.

General secretary of the CGIL Maurizio Landini called the government’s newly announced 100-euro tax deduction for single-income and single-parent families earning less than 28,000 euros “an insult”.

“Today is not a celebration, it is a day of mobilisation. It cannot be a celebration as long as there is even one death at work,” he said.

Snakes feature in Italian mountain saint procession

Snakes were once again the highlight of an ancient religious procession held every May 1st that attracts thousands of visitors to a mountainous village in central Italy.

Every year, villagers wrap a statue of Abbot Saint Dominic in snakes in the weeks leading up to the procession, before carrying it from the church and down Cocullo’s narrow streets.

Thousands of visitors again flocked from all over the peninsula and even abroad to join the procession alongside a few hundred locals on Wednesday, AFP reported.

The procession marks a rare peaceful interaction between snakes and humans, who often hunt and kill the reptiles despite being a protected and declining species.

This time-honoured tradition is also a way of monitoring the population and health of snakes in the region.

According to a recent study by the University of Bari in southern Italy, studying snake behaviour could help scientists predict earthquakes.

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