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POLITICS

Italy speaker wants new law to protect women

Italy's speaker of the lower house of parliament Laura Boldrini on Friday denounced threats made against her since her election to the post in March and called for a law to defend Italian women from misogynist and violent acts.

Italy speaker wants new law to protect women
Lower Chamber President Laura Boldrini leaves the Quirinale presidential palace in April. Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP

"I am not afraid to open a battle front," Boldrini told Italy's La Repubblica daily after receiving hundreds of menacing messages on the Internet, including photos altered to show her head on the bodies of women being raped or strangled.

Those sending threatening messages to women in Italy are in their "thousands and thousands, the number grows day by day, and they represent a part of the country which we cannot ignore," she said.

"It's not an issue which affects me alone. When a woman occupies a public role, sexist attacks are unleashed against them," she said, adding that "it is an emergency situation in Italy, because women are being killed by men every day."

Boldrini said the issue must be dealt with urgently "at an institutional level."

Her comments struck a chord in a country which has been battling in recent years with a growing awareness of the abuse of women by boyfriends, husbands or ex-partners.

In 2012, some 120 women were murdered in so-called femicide attacks, and a third of all women in Italy are victims at some point of domestic violence according to a United Nations report, which cited data from the national statistics agency (ISTAT).

Pages and pages of threats against Boldrini have been left by people on websites and social networks.

"You live 30 kilometres (18 miles) from my house, I promise I'll come and find you," reads one, while another says: "I will handcuff you in a dark room and use you like a urinal, you will drown."

Rome's public prosecutor's department opened an investigation into the threats on Friday.

"The political world must be courageous, it must act," Boldrini said.

Several top politicians spoke out in the speaker's support.

Italy's new equal opportunities minister Josefa Idem said she had been left dismayed and indignant.

"Hundreds of men, vile and without dignity, who consider it normal to insult and threaten a woman for her own opinions – indeed, probably just for the fact that a woman dared to express ideas – are a sign of a subculture that must be uprooted in this country," German-born Idem said.

She said violence against women would be placed among "priority items for the political agenda of this parliament, starting with the ratification of the Istanbul Convention," a 2011 Council of Europe convention on tackling violence against women.

Boldrini "is a courageous woman denouncing the constant humiliation of women on the Internet and in everyday life. We are by her side," said Nichi Vendola, the head of the Left, Ecology and Freedom (SEL) party of which she is a member.

Nils Muiznieks, European commissioner for human rights, said that "the Italian authorities must send a clear signal that verbal attacks cannot exist in a democratic society."

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POLITICS

Italy’s public TV journalists to strike over political influence

Journalists at Italy's RAI public broadcaster on Thursday announced a 24-hour walkout next month, citing concerns over politicisation under Giorgia Meloni's hard-right government.

Italy's public TV journalists to strike over political influence

The strike comes after Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama — who is close to Meloni — called a top RAI editor to complain about a television report into Italy’s controversial migration deal with his country.

The Usigrai trade union called the strike from May 6 to May 7 saying talks with management had failed to address their concerns.

It cited numerous issues, including staff shortages and contract issues, but in first place was “the suffocating control over journalistic work, with the attempt to reduce RAI to a megaphone for the government”.

It had already used that phrase to object to what critics say is the increasing influence over RAI by figures close to Prime Minister Meloni, who leads Italy’s most right-wing government since World War II.

However, another union of RAI journalists, Unirai, said they would not join what they called a “political” strike, defending the return to “pluralism” at the broadcaster.

Funded in part by a licence fee and with top managers long chosen by politicians, RAI’s independence has always been an issue of debate.

But the arrival in power of Meloni — leader of the far-right Brothers of Italy party, who formed a coalition with Matteo Salvini’s far-right League party and the late Silvio Berlusconi’s right-wing Forza Italia — redoubled concerns.

Tensions erupted at the weekend amid accusations RAI censored a speech by a leading writer criticising Meloni ahead of Liberation Day on April 25, when Italians mark the defeat of Fascism and the Nazis at the end of World War II.

Both RAI’s management and Meloni have denied censorship, and the premier posted the text of the monologue on her social media.

In another twist, Albania’s premier confirmed Thursday he called senior RAI editor Paolo Corsini about an TV report on Sunday into Italy’s plans to build two migration processing centres on Albanian territory.

Rama told La Stampa newspaper the report was “biased” and contained “lies” — adding that he had not raised the issue with Meloni.

The “Report” programme claimed the costs of migrant centres, which are under construction, were already “out of control” and raised questions about criminals benefiting from the project.

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