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Salvini pelted with eggs on visit to southern Italian virus hotspot

An angry crowd greeted Italy's far-right leader Matteo Salvini when he visited a coronavirus-hit town in the Naples region on Monday, with some heckling and pelting him with eggs and water.

Salvini pelted with eggs on visit to southern Italian virus hotspot
Police hold back protestors as Matteo Salvini speaks outside quarantined apartment blocks in Mondragone. Photo: Filippo Monteforte/AFP
The confrontation took place when Salvini visited a neighbourhood of Mondragone, the scene of tensions last week between some residents and foreign workers following an outbreak of the coronavirus in the area.
 
 
When Salvini arrived an hour later than scheduled there was a hostile crowd waiting for him, many of them shouting insults.
 
Salvini, wearing a face mask in the colours of the Italian flag, quickly lowered it to begin his speech, but could scarcely be heard over the heckling.
 
“Salvini is worse than the Covid,” some shouted, with others calling him a “jackal” or a “clown” and telling him to leave.
 
Salvini, as he tried to continue his speech from behind a police line, was forced to dodge eggs and water thrown from the crowd, which was held back by riot police.
 
 
Matteo Salvini in Mondragone on Monday. Photo: Filippo Monteforte/AFP
 
Some 700 residents of five apartment blocks on a council estate, mostly home to Bulgarian workers, were placed under quarantine after a cluster of cases was detected there last week.
 
After protests by residents, many of whom said the lockdown left them without money for food, violence broke out between the protestors and Italians liviing nearby who threw stones at the migrants, who they blamed for the outbreak.
 
Television footage also showed several vehicles belonging to Bulgarians damaged, their windscreens smashed and the Bulgarian-registered plates taken as trophies.

 
Last Friday, riot police and soldiers were sent to the town to restore order.
 
Italy's far-right aimed to capitalise on the drama. As Matteo Salvini organised a visit, his League party issued a press statement calling the town a “social bomb”. Giorgia Meloni, head of Brothers of Italy, lashing out at the government for failing to “control the migrants”.
 
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Salvini served as interior minister and deputy prime minister in the last coalition government, pursuing hardline policies that were hostile to immigrants.
 
His party – formally known as the Northern League, and previously also hostile to southern Italians, as well as non-Italians – has in recent years begun to attract voters in the south after its rebrand.
 
However, his visits to Naples and other parts of southern Italy regularly spark protests.
 
With the collapse of that administration last year after his failed bid to take power, and the coronavirus crisis this year, his profile – and his standing in the opinion polls – has fallen.
In brief comments to television crews at the scene, he denounced what he claimed were agitators who had come in from outside.
 
“We have to guarantee the rights of Italians, and expel foreigners without papers,” he told AFPTV. “We need to invest more in the Naples region, in resources and in the forces of order,” he added.
 
He left the scene after half an hour, but promised to return.

Member comments

  1. More trouble in Italy caused by migrants, i have just watched a video of another migrant scumbag who had killed and cooked a cat, this is just unbelievable what is going on in Italy?

  2. “Italians living nearby who threw stones at the migrants, who they blamed for the outbreak.

    “Television footage also showed several vehicles belonging to Bulgarians damaged, their windscreens smashed and the Bulgarian-registered plates taken as trophies.”

    but let’s blame migrants for some reason? get out of here.

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BREXIT

‘We are desperate’: Why the UK must help Britons with Italian healthcare charges

A 74-year-old British woman has explained the "frustration and fear" Britons in Italy are facing when trying to access healthcare and appealed to the UK government for help.

'We are desperate': Why the UK must help Britons with Italian healthcare charges

Pat Eggleton, a teacher and writer from the UK, appealed to the UK’s Foreign Secretary David Cameron in the letter sent April 9th about the “desperate” situation faced by UK citizens entitled to free healthcare in Italy – but unable to access it.

British nationals residing in Italy before Brexit, and covered by the Withdrawal Agreement (WA), are in many cases being told by Italian health authorities that they must pay steep new fees at a minimum of 2,000 a year – even though they are exempt from paying at all.

READ ALSO: ‘Life or death situation’: Brits facing high Italian healthcare costs amid rule change uncertainty

In her open letter seen by The Local, Ms. Eggleton, who has lived in Italy since 2005, highlighted that the current minimum is a huge jump from the previous €387, and said that the sum was “difficult, or even impossible, for some to find when there had been no prior notification and there is no option to pay in instalments.”

“A great deal of undeserved worry, frustration and even fear has ensued,” she wrote.

“Some of our group have serious, ongoing health conditions. All we require is for one sentence from the Italian government confirming that Withdrawal Agreement beneficiaries do not have to pay for healthcare access to be circulated to all regional health authorities.

“We implore you to act before this becomes even more serious. As someone put it, “This is a matter not only of money, but of health.” 

Ms Eggleton’s letter came exactly one month after the British government confirmed that all WA agreement beneficiaries are exempt from paying the 2,000 fee, provided they were living in Italy before January 1st 2021.

But there were no details available at the time from the Italian government setting out how the rules would be implemented or communicated to local health authorities around Italy.

Since then, there has been no further information released by the Italian government on any official platform. 

One Withdrawal Agreement beneficiary, Graham Beresford, told The Local last week how he was having trouble accessing healthcare, even though he has a right to it.

Mr. Beresford suffers from blood cancer and needs access to the Italian healthcare system to obtain his medication. 

“Every time I go to my ASL (local health unit) office, I always feel like I’m dismissed,” Graham said. “I told the ASL worker I need medication for my cancer and she replied lots of people come in here with sob stories.

“There genuinely seems to be no compassion whatsoever.”

The Local has written to the Italian health ministry for comment.

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