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Italian prosecutors to question PM Conte over handling of virus crisis

Prosecutors are to question Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte on Friday as part of an investigation into whether the government handled the coronavirus pandemic correctly.

Italian prosecutors to question PM Conte over handling of virus crisis
Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte is among those to be questioned as part of the investigation. File photo: AFP
Prosecutors from Bergamo, the city in the northern Lombardy region worst hit by the virus, have launched an investigation into the crisis, which has killed over 34,000 people in Italy.
 
They are looking in particular at why a red zone was not enforced in February around the towns of Nembro and Alzano, in the worst-hit Lombardy region, Italian media reported on Wednesday.
 
Local officials and the national government blame each other.
 
The crisis has claimed more thsn 34,000 lives according to the official death toll – which is thought to be underestimated.
 
Italy was the first European country to be ravaged by the virus, and the first westrn democracy to impose lockdown measures – a move widely described as a “gamble” at the time, and watched closely by other world leaders as the outbreak spread and they decided whether to follow suit.
 
The government imposed the country's first red zone, around the town of Codogno, 24 hours after doctors discovered a patient positive for COVID-19.
 
The town of Codogno, Lombardy, was the first to be declared a “red zone”. Photo: Miguel Medina/AFP
 
Codogno was closed on February 21st. Lombardy and 14 provinces in the neighbouring regions of Veneto, Piedmont and Emilia Romagna followed on March 8th, and the whole of Italy was shut down two days later.
 
Conte, as well as Health Minister Roberto Speranza and Interior Minister Luciana Lamorgese, will be called on by prosecutors in Rome later Wednesday, the Corriere della Sera and Sole 24 Ore dailies reported.
 
‘Blame game’
 
The team has already questioned Lombardy regional governor Attilio Fontana and its health minister Giulio Gallera. They insist it was up to Rome to decide whether certain areas should be shut.
 
Gallera has said it was clear from February 23rd that there were a lot of cases in the areas around Nembro and Alzano, towns in the Bergamo province, but the government had failed to act.
 
Conte replied that “if Lombardy had wanted to, it could have made Alzano and Nembro red zones”.
 
But a scientific committee advising the government and the national health institute had warned on March 3 that these towns should be locked down, according to the Corriere della Sera.
 
The Bergamo prosecutors will also speak to the head of Italy's national health institute (ISS) Silvio Brusaferro, and the World Health Organization's Italian government adviser Walter Ricciardi, the reports said.
 
As opposition politicians attacked the government on Wednesday, Andrea Orlando of the centre-left Democratic Party (PD), part of the government coalition, said it was normal procedure for prosecutors to speak with institutional representatives.
 
Fifty relatives of coronavirus victims – members of a committee called “Noi Denunceremo” (We Will Report)  – filed complaints with the Bergamo prosecutors earlier on Wednesday over the handling of the pandemic. It is the first such legal group action in Italy.
 
Bergamo prosecutors are conducting a wide-ranging investigation into the health crisis. Local families blame tardiness in enforcing a red zone, as well as years of cuts to healthcare across the northern Lombardy region.
 
While in other countries legal action is being taken against specific entities — citizens against the government in France, doctors against theirs in Zimbabwe — the Italian complaints are against “persons unknown”.
 
Members of the “Noi Denunceremo” (We will report) committee outside the Bergamo's prosecutor building on June 10th. Photo: AFP

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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.

READ ALSO: Italy marks liberation from Fascism amid TV censorship row

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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