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Court to rule on Italian PM Meloni’s case against anti-mafia reporter

An Italian court is set to decide Thursday on a defamation case pitting Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni against journalist Roberto Saviano, which he has characterised as a battle for free speech.

Journalist Roberto Saviano leaves a hearing in a defamation lawsuit from Italy's prime minister Giorgia Meloni.
Journalist Roberto Saviano leaves a hearing in February 2023 in the defamation lawsuit filed by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP.

Meloni sued over comments Saviano made criticising her stance on migration and the charity ships that rescue migrants making the perilous journey across the Mediterranean from North Africa.

It went to trial in November 2022, just weeks after she took office at the head of a hard-right coalition elected in part on a promise to end mass migration into Italy.

“I am being prosecuted for the words I used to criticise the populist lies uttered against NGOs and migrants in recent years,” Saviano wrote on Thursday on X, formerly known as Twitter.

READ ALSO: Press freedom fears as Italian PM Meloni takes Saviano to trial

Saviano, best known for his international mafia bestseller “Gomorrah”, risks up to three years in prison if found guilty, although any decision on Thursday is open to appeal.

He is supported by press freedom groups, who have said the case sends a “chilling message” to journalists.

“The judge will have to establish whether or not it is possible to exercise the right of criticism” in Italy, Saviano wrote on social media on October 3rd. 

His lawyer, Antonio Nobile, told AFP on Wednesday the case “is important from a point of view of the health of Italian democracy”.

The conviction of a high-profile figure such as Saviano “would have a very strong deterrent effect on ordinary people”, he added. The hearing in Rome is due to start at 2pm.

Migrant shipwreck

The case revolves around comments Saviano made on a political TV chat show following the death of a six-month-old baby from Guinea in a shipwreck.

The baby, Joseph, had been one of 111 migrants rescued by the Open Arms charity ship, but died before he could receive medical attention.

READ ALSO: What’s behind Italy’s soaring number of migrant arrivals?

In footage shot by rescuers and shown to Saviano on the show, the baby’s mother can be heard weeping “Where’s my baby? Help, I lose my baby!”

A visibly emotional Saviano then blasted Meloni and Matteo Salvini – the leader of the anti-immigrant League party, now her deputy prime minister – who have both long used anti-migrant rhetoric.

“I just want to say to Meloni, and Salvini, you bastards! How could you?” Saviano said on the show.

READ ALSO: Italy investigates Placebo frontman over calling Giorgia Meloni ‘fascist’

The year before, Meloni had said charity vessels which rescue migrants “should be sunk”, while Salvini, as interior minister that same year, blocked rescue ships from docking in Italian ports.

In October 2022, Meloni took office on a promise to end illegal landings on Italy’s shores – only to see numbers surge.

Criticism of judges

Saviano, who lives under police protection due to threats from the Naples “Camorra” mafia, has decried an unequal fight between him and the country’s top politician.

Meloni’s lawyers have argued that, in suing Saviano, she is defending her reputation after being “insulted” on national television.

The verdict comes against a backdrop of increased tensions between Meloni’s government and the judiciary.

She led personal criticism earlier this month levelled at a judge who ruled her cabinet’s new anti-migrant decree was unconstitutional and contrary to European law.

“The controversies of recent weeks have certainly not reassured us,” Saviano’s lawyer said.

READ ALSO: Six things to know about the state of press freedom in Italy

Deputy Prime Minister Salvini has joined Meloni’s case as a civil party seeking damages.

He has filed a separate defamation suit against Saviano for calling him the “minister of the criminal underworld” in a social media post in 2018.

The next hearing is due on December 7th, when Salvini is set to give testimony, Nobile said.

Defamation through the media can be punished in Italy with prison sentences from six months to three years.

But Italy’s Constitutional Court urged lawmakers in 2020 and 2021 to rewrite the legislation, saying jail time for such cases was unconstitutional and should only be resorted to in cases of “exceptional severity”.

Italy has long compared poorly to its European neighbours for press freedom. It ranked 41st in the 2023 world press freedom index published by Reporters Without Borders, up from 58th in 2022.

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POLITICS

Italy’s Meloni breaks silence on youth wing’s fascist comments

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on Friday condemned offensive comments made by members of her far-right party's youth wing to an undercover journalist, breaking weeks of silence over the scandal.

Italy's Meloni breaks silence on youth wing's fascist comments

The investigation published this month by Italian news website Fanpage included video of members of the National Youth, the junior wing of Brothers of Italy, which has post-fascist roots, showing support for Nazism and fascism.

In images secretly filmed by an undercover journalist in Rome, the members are seen performing fascist salutes, chanting the Nazi “Sieg Heil” greeting and shouting “Duce” in support of the late Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini.

Opposition parties have been calling on Meloni to denounce the behaviour since the first part of the investigation aired on June 13.

Those calls intensified after a second part was published this week with fresh highly offensive comments directed at Jewish people and people of colour.

READ ALSO: Italy’s ruling party shrugs off youth wing’s Fascist salutes

Party youths in particular mocked Ester Mieli, a Brothers of Italy senator and a former spokeswoman for Rome’s Jewish community.

“Whoever expresses racist, anti-Semitic or nostalgic ideas are in the wrong place, because these ideas are incompatible with Brothers of Italy,” Meloni told reporters in Brussels.

“There is no ambiguity from my end on the issue,” she said.

Two officials from the movement have stepped down over the investigation, which also caught one youth party member calling for the leader of the centre-left Democratic Party (PD), Elly Schlein, to be “impaled”.

But Meloni also told off journalists for filming young people making offensive comments directed at Jewish people and people of colour, saying they were “methods… of an (authoritarian) regime”.

Fanpage responded that it was “undercover journalism”.

Meloni was a teenage activist with the youth wing of the Italian Social Movement (MSI), formed by Mussolini supporters after World War II.

Brothers of Italy traces its roots to the MSI.

The most right-wing leader to take office since 1945, Meloni has sought to distance herself from her party’s legacy without entirely renouncing it. She kept the party’s tricolour flame logo – which was also used by MSI and inspired France’s Jean-Marie Le Pen when he created the far-right National Front party in 1972.

The logo’s base, some analysts say, represents Mussolini’s tomb, which tens of thousands of people visit every year.

Several high-ranking officials in the party do not shy away from their admiration of the fascist regime, which imposed anti-Semitic laws in 1938.

Brothers of Italy co-founder and Senate president Ignazio La Russa collects Mussolini statues.

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