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TODAY IN ITALY

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

People evacuated after flash floods in northwest Italy, Florence awaits key court decision on ‘Airbnb ban’, and more news from Italy on Monday.

A member of Italy's Civil Protection stands in a flooded street
A member of Italy's Civil Protection stands in a flooded street following heavy rainfall. Photo by MARCO BERTORELLO / AFP

Floods and landslides trigger emergency evacuations in northwest Italy

Flash flooding and mud landslides triggered multiple emergency evacuations in Italy’s Piedmont and Valle d’Aosta regions on Sunday after the northwest was battered by persistent torrential rainfall over the weekend.

Authorities in the Cogne valley, southern Valle d’Aosta, evacuated some 300 people by helicopter after overflowing watercourses flooded the main local road and damaged the water supply network, according to Italian news agency Ansa.

A further 120 people were being evacuated in Alpe Veglia, in Piedmont’s Verbano-Cusio-Ossola area, on Sunday afternoon after the Anza river burst its banks.

Flash flooding caused “millions of euros’ worth of damage” in the popular mountain resort of Cervinia, Valle d’Aosta, according to deputy mayor Massimo Chatrian.

Besides northwest Italy, torrential rains also lashed parts of France and Switzerland over the weekend, leaving seven people dead.

Florence awaits decisive court decision on contested ‘Airbnb ban’

Tuscany’s regional administrative tribunal (TAR) is expected to rule on an appeal filed against Florence’s contested ‘Airbnb ban’ at the start of this week, Il Sole 24 Ore newspaper reported on Sunday.

Florence authorities banned new short-term tourist lets, including Airbnb rentals, in the city’s historic centre last October under efforts to free up homes for residents and tackle a long-standing shortage of affordable housing.

But consumer associations lodged an appeal against the ban shortly after its approval, raising questions over the measure’s legitimacy. 

Tuscany’s regional tribunal was originally expected to make a ruling on the appeal on May 9th, but the decision was later postponed to allow for further deliberation.

Spalletti to remain Italy coach despite Euro 2024 humbling

Luciano Spalletti will stay on as the coach of Italy’s national football team despite the Azzurri’s humbling elimination from Euro 2024, the head of the Italian football federation Gabriele Gravina said on Sunday according to AFP.

Italy were knocked out of the Euros at the last 16 stage after being beaten 2-0 by Switzerland in Berlin on Saturday, but a disastrous title defence has not cost Spalletti his job.

“I’m pragmatic, it’s impossible to resolve problems by abandoning a long-term project or by abandoning the coach and players who have accompanied us in this project,” Gravina told reporters.

Italy came into the Euros as reigning champions but flopped in Germany under Spalletti, who replaced Euro 2020 winner Roberto Mancini last summer.

Italy will begin their Nations League campaign against France in Paris on September 6th.

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TODAY IN ITALY

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

Valle d’Aosta requests state of emergency after devastating floods, Italy to recruit 1,600 new labour inspectors after workplace deaths, and more news from Italy on Friday.

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

Valle d’Aosta region requests state of emergency after devastating floods

Regional authorities in Valle d’Aosta, northwest Italy, on Thursday asked the Italian government to declare a state of emergency for the region in the wake of devastating flooding and landslides last weekend, according to Ansa.

Some 1,800 people were evacuated from the town of Cogne, southern Valle d’Aosta, earlier this week after flooding blocked the main local road and damaged the water supply network. 

Italian Civil Protection minister Nello Musumeci said on Tuesday that it will take operators at least a month to repair the road. 

The popular mountain resort of Cervinia was also severely hit by landslides and flash floods last weekend, with deputy mayor Massimo Chatrian saying the damage to local infrastructure added up to “millions”.

Italy to recruit 1,600 new labour inspectors after rise in workplace deaths

The Italian government on Thursday said it will recruit some 1,600 new labour inspectors following a spate of workplace deaths across the country in recent months, Ansa reported.

“We ordered the hiring of 1,600 additional labour inspectors, with the goal of doubling the number of inspections in 2024,” PM Giorgia Meloni said in a speech in the lower house of parliament on Thursday.

The announcement came just over two weeks after the gruesome death of Satnam Singh, 31, an undocumented Indian labourer who bled out after his arm was severed by farm machinery.

38-year-old Italian employer Antonello Lovato, for whom Singh worked without papers, was arrested last Tuesday on second-degree murder charges. He stands accused of dumping the injured worker’s body outside his home instead of calling for help.

Activists splash red paint on state TV’s headquarters in femicide protest

Five activists from Italy’s Bruciamo Tutto (‘Let’s burn everything’) movement threw red paint over the entrance of state broadcaster Rai’s Rome headquarters on Thursday in an act of protest against violence against women, according to media reports.

Protesters reportedly made chants denouncing poor public information regarding gender-based violence and left dolls in memory of Italian femicide victims. 

All five activists were arrested by local police shortly after the protest.

Some 120 women were murdered in Italy in 2023, with over half of the victims killed by their partners or former partners, according to data from the Interior Ministry’s Criminal Police Directorate.

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