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TODAY IN ITALY

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

Italy's Senate gives first approval to electoral reform bill, appellants bring injunction against Messina Strait bridge project, man fined for climbing Trevi Fountain, and more news from around Italy on Wednesday.

Today in Italy: A roundup of the latest news on Wednesday
A man was fined for climbing Rome's Trevi fountain, Italian media reported on Tuesday. Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP.

Italy’s top story on Wednesday:

The Italian Senate on Tuesday approved the first draft of a controversial constitutional reform bill that seeks to overhaul the country’s electoral system and system of governance.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has called her ‘premierato’ policy – which would award the prime minister’s party or coalition an automatic majority in both chambers – “the mother of all reforms”, arguing that it’s necessary to reintroduce political stability to the country. Critics say it risks concentrating too much power in the hands of one individual.

The bill must now pass three more readings (for a total of twice in each chamber), before being put to a public referendum.

Representatives of Italy’s main opposition parties, including the centre-left Democratic Party, the Five Star Movement, the Left and Green Alliance, and +Europa, all of which oppose the reform, held a rally in Rome’s Piazza Santissimi Apostoli on Tuesday to defend ‘the Constitution and national unity’, Skytg24 reported.

Class action lawsuit brought against Messina Strait bridge project

Over one hundred people have brought a class action in Rome in a bid to halt the construction of a bridge connecting the island of Sicily to mainland Italy, arguing that the project is unconstitutional and unfeasible, Il Corriere della Sera newspaper reported on Tuesday.

The dream of building a bridge over the Strait of Messina dates back decades, with Silvio Berlusconi’s government backing the plan in the early 2000s – but critics say it’s highly impractical, at risk of mafia infiltration, and a waste of public funds that would be better spent on improving existing infrastructure.

Italy’s Infrastructure Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini insisted in April that construction on the bridge would begin by summer 2024; but the company responsible for completing project has since requested an extension that would push the timeline back by at least four months.

The appellants’ complaint reportedly alleges a lack of transparency and the violation of multiple domestic and EU regulations, noting that previous environmental evaluations found that the strait sits on an earthquake fault line.

Italy’s agricultural output down due to climate crisis

Italy’s agricultural output dropped by 1.8 percent in 2023 due the effects of the climate crisis, the country’s national statistics agency, Istat, said on Tuesday.

Wine and fruit production were particularly badly hit, falling by 17.4 percent and 11.2 percent respectively, the agency’s data showed.

Italy experienced an average of 11 extreme weather events per day in the first half of 2023, with severe ramifications for the country’s farming sector, according to Italian agricultural association Coldiretti.

The island of Sicily has been under a state of emergency for drought since February of this year, devastating the region’s crops and threatening its livestock industry.

Man fined for climbing Trevi Fountain

A 27-year-old Ukrainian man was fined €1,000 by police for climbing Rome’s historic Trevi Fountain, news site Roma Today reported on Tuesday.

A video of the incident posted to the instagram account Welcome to Roma shows the culprit being chased for several metres by police before being tackled to the ground by a tourist.

 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Welcome to Roma (@welcome.to.roma)

Every summer, Italian authorities struggle to contain a wave of vandalism from foreign visitors set on leaving their mark on the country’s historic sites.

Earlier this month, a Dutch man was reported to police for using a black permanent marker to scrawl graffiti on a frescoed Roman wall at the archaeological park of Herculaneum, and last year a video of a tourist carving his name on the Colosseum sparked national outrage.

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TODAY IN ITALY

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

Spanish Steps painted red in women's rights protest, Meloni rails against 'oligarchs' amid EU top jobs row, STIs on the rise among Italian youth, and more news from Italy on Thursday.

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

Italy’s top story on Thursday:

Italy’s far-right Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni vented her anger Wednesday over her exclusion from negotiations over the EU’s top jobs, saying unnamed leaders were acting like “oligarchs” and betraying voters, AFP reported.

Her complaint came on the eve of a two-day summit of the European Union’s 27 leaders in Brussels intended to divide up jobs in the wake of this month’s European Parliament elections.

Six leaders acting as chief negotiators reached a deal Tuesday to divvy up the key posts among the alliance dominating the parliament: the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP) and its partners, the Socialists and Democrats (S&D) and the centrist Renew Europe.

Meloni’s government has pushed for a top job for Italy, as she believes the election success of her hard-right European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) grouping – shaping up as the EU parliament’s third force – should be reflected in the bloc’s leadership.

She pointed the finger at “those who argue that citizens are not mature enough to make certain decisions, and (believe) that oligarchy is basically the only acceptable form of democracy,” according to AFP.

Women’s rights activists paint Spanish Steps red

Campaigners highlighting violence against women spread red paint across Rome’s famous Spanish Steps on Wednesday, saying it represented the victims’ blood, AFP reported.

Six activists from the Italian group “Bruciamo Tutto”, or “Burn Everything”, were led away by police following the protest involving what they said used children’s washable paint, according to AFP.

Their name comes from a call to action made by the sister of Giulia Cecchettin, a university student killed by her ex-boyfriend last year in a case that triggered nationwide grief and anger at violence against women.

“Don’t hold a minute’s silence for Giulia, but burn everything,” Elena Cecchettin said, calling for a revolution in what she said was a culture that allowed such violence.

STIs on the rise among Italy’s youth

The incidence of sexually transmitted infections is on the rise among young people in Italy, according to data collected by the Higher Health Institute (ISS)’s national STI sentinel surveillance systems.

The rate of bacterial infections caused by chlamydia, gonorrhoea and syphilis increased between 2021 and 2022 according to a report presented by the institute in Rome, Skytg24 reported on Wednesday.

The number of cases of gonorrhoea reported to the system grew by more than 30 percent, from 820 to 1200, between 2021 and 2022, while reports of syphilis grew by 20 percent and chlamydia 25 percent over the same period. The highest rates of increase in chlamydia infections were seen in women under the age of 25.

“In three out of four cases the infection is asymptomatic, so many girls are unaware they have it for a long time,” said Barbara Suligoi, director of the ISS’s Aids Operations Centre.

“What is needed is more information… and clear pathways for those who need early counselling if they suspect they have contracted an STI.”

Sicily’s Lago di Pergusa reduced to ‘puddle’ by drought

Sicily’s Lago di Pergusa, the island’s only natural reservoir, was reduced to little more than a puddle this week following a months-long drought, La Repubblica newspaper reported on Wednesday.

Giuseppe Maria Amato, a spokesperson for the Italian environmental organisation Legambiente’s Sicily chapter, said the lake’s disappearance was accelerated by the “total inattention and inertia” of regional authorities.

“We have been asking for years for the restoration of the environmental monitoring system and the cleaning of the various canals that carry water from the lake’s natural catchment area,” he told local newspaper La Sicilia.

Sicily declared a regional state of emergency over its drought situation back in February, following eight months of what the ANBI Observatory on Water Resources described as “almost total aridity”.

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