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TODAY IN ITALY

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

Speed camera reforms approved, Italian court rules against mosque closure, reporters strike over right-wing takeover fears, and more news from Italy on Friday.

Speed camera
Closeup of a stop sign as a car rides past a speed camera in Lagnasco, northwestern Italy, in January 2024. Photo by Marco Bertorello / AFP

Local authorities approve speed-camera reform 

Italy’s State-Cities and Local Autonomies Conference on Thursday approved a reform of current Highway Code rules on the positioning of speed cameras as well as speeding offences, Ansa reported.

Transport Minister and co-Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini expressed “great satisfaction” at the approval, claiming his reforms would put an end to speed cameras being “installed everywhere, not for safety reasons but to make money”.

Speed cameras have been at the centre of nationwide debate in Italy following the destruction of dozens of devices across northern regions by a controversial vigilante commonly known as ‘Fleximan’.

Italy is the European country with the highest number of speed cameras (11,130), with the UK being a far second (7,700). Italy’s 20 largest cities collected a total of nearly 76 million euros from speeding fines alone in 2022, up by 61,7 percent compared to the previous year. 

Italian city told to provide places of worship for Muslims after mosque closure

The northeastern port town of Monfalcone, where 33 percent of residents are of Muslim faith, must ensure that believers have adequate places of worship, Italy’s highest administrative court said on Thursday, according to a report from Ansa.

The Italian Council of State (Consiglio di Stato) upheld appeals filed by Monfalcone’s Islamic cultural associations Darus Salaam and Baitus Salat following the closure in mid-November of two local mosques deemed “illegal” by League party Mayor Anna Maria Cisint. 

The court reportedly stated on Thursday that “the administration is required to identify, in consultation with the interested parties […], alternative sites that are accessible and dignified to allow believers to pray”.

Cisint sparked nationwide outrage last July by saying that Muslim beachgoers bathing “with their clothes on” was against “decorum and hygiene”.

News agency reporters strike over right-wing takeover fears

Journalists at Italy’s AGI news agency on Thursday started a two-day strike in protest against a rumoured takeover by a publishing group led by an MP from the far-right League party, AFP reported.

The journalists’ general assembly said in a statement that “the independence and autonomy of journalists” guaranteed by current owner Eni would “be strongly at risk in the proposed scenario of a sale to the Angelucci publishing group”.

Antonio Angelucci, an MP with Matteo Salvini’s populist League party, is a private healthcare entrepreneur and the current owner of three right-wing newspapers: Il Giornale, Libero and Il Tempo.

Italy, which has a total of nine news agencies, all privately owned except for Ansa, ranked 41st worldwide in the 2023 Press Freedom Index by Reporters Without Borders, up from 58th in 2022.

Minister plays down concern at anti-Israel protests at universities

The government was “not worried” about recent episodes of alleged intolerance and censorship at Italian universities amid protests over the number of civilian deaths in Gaza, Italian Universities Minister Anna Maria Bernini on Thursday said

Bernini said her ministry was looking at “appropriate solutions” to “protect freedom of thought” while also making sure that “recent episodes are not repeated”.

Her words came after La Repubblica editor Maurizio Molinari last Friday was prevented from speaking at a debate at Naples’ Federico II University due to his alleged pro-Israeli stance.

On Wednesday, Turin University reportedly pulled out of a scientific tender with Israeli universities in protest against the civilian death toll in Gaza – a decision which Bernini said was “wrong and alien to the tradition and culture of our universities”.

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TODAY IN ITALY

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

A suspended army general to run in June's EU election, Venice's mayor praises the new entry fee amid protests, and more news from around Italy on Friday.

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

Suspended army general to run in EU election

Army general Roberto Vannacci, who was suspended from duty and placed under investigation last February for allegedly inciting racial hatred in his bestselling book The World Backwards, told Ansa on Thursday he will be a candidate for Italy’s populist League party in June’s European election. 

Vannacci said he will be an “independent candidate” fighting to “affirm the values of motherland, tradition, family, sovereignty and identity that I largely share with the League”.   

Deputy PM and League party leader Matteo Salvini expressed satisfaction over Vannacci’s EU election bid, saying he was “glad that a man of value like general Vannacci has chosen to continue his battles for freedom together with the League”.

In the controversial book The World Backwards (Il Mondo al Contrario), released last August, Vannacci denounces the “dictatorship of minorities”, saying that gay people are “not normal” and that the facial features of Italian black volleyball player Paola Egonu “do not represent Italianness”.

Venice mayor hails launch of new entry fee despite residents’ protests

Venice’s mayor Luigi Brugnaro on Thursday praised the launch of a long-planned entry fee for day visitors despite protests warning that the city was being put on sale.

Brugnaro said the new ticketing system was costing local finances more than it was bringing in, but called it a worthy investment as it was a “way to make people understand that we need to change” and “dilute visits to the city,” AFP reported.

Venice was the scene of protests on Thursday as residents gathered in Piazzale Roma – where the city’s main bus terminal is located – to object to the launch of the entry charge. 

Protesters were seen carrying banners reading “Venice for all, end the ticket wall” and “Welcome to Veniceland” – an ironic reference to the alleged transformation of the city into a theme park.

“This is not a museum, it’s not a protected ecological area, you shouldn’t have to pay – it’s a city,” Marina Dodino, from local residents association ARCI, told AFP.

Italy’s public TV reporters to strike over ‘suffocating’ political influence

Journalists at Italy’s state broadcaster RAI will take part in a 24-hour walkout on Monday, May 6th in protest against “the suffocating control” exerted over their work by Giorgia Meloni’s government, reporters’ trade union Usigrai said on Thursday. 

Usigrai criticised the current right-wing administration’s “attempt to reduce RAI to a megaphone for the government”, also citing staff shortages and the cancellation of an agreement over performance bonuses as further reasons behind the planned strike.

Discussions over RAI’s independence aren’t new in Italy as, unlike state-owned broadcasters in other European countries, the network is not controlled by a regulatory body but rather by the government itself. 

But fresh accusations of censorship erupted last weekend after RAI cancelled the appearance of high-profile author Antonio Scurati, who planned to give an antifascist speech on one of its talk shows ahead of Italy’s Liberation Day on April 25th.

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