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TODAY IN ITALY

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

G7 meets in Turin, Schlein says Meloni has 'lost touch with reality', woman shot in Latina, and more news from Italy on Monday.

Today in Italy: A roundup of the latest news on Monday
Activists burn portraits of G7 leaders, US President Joe Biden and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni during a demonstration against the G7 Climate, Energy and Environment summit in Turin, on April 28, 2024. (Photo by MARCO BERTORELLO / AFP)

Italy’s top story on Monday

G7 ministers were to meet for environment and climate talks in Turin on Monday, with experts urging the highly industrialised countries to use their political clout, wealth and technologies to end fossil fuel use.

The Group of Seven meeting in the northern Italian city is the first big political session since the world pledged at the UN’s COP28 climate summit in December to transition away from coal, oil and gas, AFP reported.

It comes as a new report by a global climate institute showed the G7 was falling far short of its targets.

Hundreds of protesters demonstrated in Turin on Sunday, some burning photos of the G7 leaders as they accused them of failing future generations over the climate crisis.

PD’s Schlein says Meloni has ‘lost touch with reality’

Democratic Party leader Elly Schlein criticised Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni for “burying Italy’s problems under a river of rhetoric” after Meloni spoke for an hour on Sunday without mentioning public health, lengthy waiting lists, low wages or job security.

“Italy has changed.. for the worse,” the social democrat said.

“The problem is that the prime minister is divided between Palazzo Chigi [the seat of the Council of Ministers and the PM’s office] and ‘TeleMeloni’ propaganda, she has lost contact with reality,” she added.

Schlein was referring to political divides within the coalition government and an ongoing row over Meloni’s influence at state broacaster Rai.

Woman injured by stray bullet in Latina

A 20-year-old Italian woman was hurt after she was accidentally hit by a stray gunshot during a riot near the Ferro di Cavallo area in Latina on Saturday night, Italian news agency Ansa reported.

It remains unclear what prompted the fight, which broke out shortly after midnight, but investigators said two groups of “intoxicated” people of Albanian and Romanian nationality were involved.

The woman was taken to hospital where she had surgery to remove the bullet that was lodged between her foot and ankle.

This came in the wake of another incident in Sezze earlier in the week – police were investigating a hooded man who fired a gunshot into the air on Thursday night.

Coffee and chocolate could cost more in Italy as raw material prices surge

The cost of coffee and coffee beans has reached worrying new price records on international markets, which could soon lead to sharp increases in retail prices for many products sold in Italy, Ansa reported, citing consumer protection NGO Codacons.

At the beginning of January, the price of cocoa was around 4,250 dollars per tonne, while on Wednesday April 24th, market prices had reached 10,800 dollars, an increase of 154 percent since the start of the year.

It’s a similar picture for coffee, with Robusta coffee beans jumping from 2,800 dollars a tonne in January to 4,250 dollars at the end of April, a 51.8 increase.

Retail prices have already been affected – cocoa and coffee-based products cost significantly more than they did last year, Codacons said.

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TODAY IN ITALY

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

Milan hit by flooding, PM Meloni slams 'cowardly' assassination attempt on Slovak premier, Swedish tourist dies after falling from Tiber embankment in Rome, and more news from around Italy on Thursday.

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

Heavy rain persists after Milan hit by flooding

Several areas of Milan were hit by severe flooding on Wednesday after the Lambro river, which runs east of the city centre, burst its banks following heavy rainfall in the entire Lombardy region, Italian media reported.

Flooding halted traffic in several of the city’s neighbourhoods, especially in the southeastern Ponte Lambro area, and caused public transport services around the city to be diverted or cancelled.

Milan’s fire department responded to over 100 calls on Wednesday morning, with operations including the drainage of flooded streets, underpasses and basements and the removal of fallen trees.

The entire Lombardy region has been hit by heavy rainfall since Tuesday evening, with rain storms expected to continue on Thursday according to the latest forecasts.

Meloni slams ‘cowardly attack’ on Slovak PM

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni expressed shock after her Slovak counterpart Robert Fico was shot and rushed to hospital on Wednesday, AFP reported.

“I learned with deep shock the news of the cowardly attack,” she said in a statement, stressing the Italian government’s “strongest condemnation of all forms of violence and attacks on the cardinal principles of democracy and freedom”.

Fico was shot multiple times as he greeted crowds in front of a cultural community centre in the town of Handlova after attending a government meeting.

The Slovak leader was taken to hospital immediately after the shooting. He was reported as being in life-threatening condition on Wednesday evening.

Swedish tourist dies after falling from Tiber river’s embankment in Rome

A 29-year-old Swedish tourist died after falling from an embankment wall along Rome’s Tiber river early on Wednesday morning, Italian media reported.

The incident occurred on the Lungotevere Sanzio bank, between Ponte Sisto and Ponte Garibaldi, reports said.

CCTV video footage viewed by police authorities on Wednesday showed the man staggering on the riverside walk before falling to his death 15 metres below, according to reports.

Authorities said the victim’s body will undergo a post-mortem examination in the coming days to ascertain the exact cause of death.

Italy seizes two million doses of sexual enhancement and bodybuilding drugs 

Italian authorities on Wednesday said they had seized 2.1 million doses of illegal Indian-made drugs used to improve sexual performance and build muscle mass, AFP reported.

The shipment, which was estimated to be worth 20 million euros in street value, was found in a lorry arriving in the Adriatic port of Ancona from Greece and was the largest haul of its kind in the country to date, Italy’s financial crimes police said.

Police said the seizure of the drugs – which are not legally available in Italy – averted a “serious and immediate threat to the health of potential consumers”.

The shipment, registered on customs documents as cosmetics, included 1.7 million doses of drugs used for erectile dysfunction, as well as 400,000 doses of pregnancy-aiding hormonal drugs that are “often used in the world of bodybuilders to increase muscle mass,” police said.

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