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Italy ramps up police checks over Easter to prevent Covid-19 surge

Italy has announced it will reinforce police patrols to clamp down on movements over the Easter weekend, when the whole country will be placed in a national "red" zone.

Italy ramps up police checks over Easter to prevent Covid-19 surge
Police presence will be increased over the Easter weekend. (Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP)

The Italian government will put an extra 70,000 police officers in the field over Easter in a move to intensify controls and checks.

Areas deemed as the highest risk of spreading Covid-19 are particularly targeted: parks, the coast, stations, streets, highways, ports and airports are all placed under extra surveillance.

“This is not the time to lower our guard, and to let go of that sense of responsibility shown so far – because the progress recorded by the campaign for vaccines finally give a glimpse of a different horizon that will allow us to gradually return to normal,” Italy’s Interior Minister, Luciana Lamorgese, told newspaper Il Messaggero.

“In this very delicate social context, the police forces continue to carry out a careful vigilance and for this I want to thank all the men and women engaged with professionalism in our cities,” she added.

The Ministry of the Interior confirmed the plans on Thursday, who agreed more stringent measures were needed to enforce citizens to comply with the rules of the red zone.

Italy’s Interior Minister Luciana Lamorgese, said the extra police power is ‘rigorous’ but balanced. (Photo by Sven Hoppe / dpa / AFP)

Speaking at the National Committee for Public Order and Safety, Lamorgese said the monitoring throughout the country is “rigorous” but balanced.

READ ALSO: Covid-19: What can you do this Easter in lockdown Italy?

The boost in police presence aims to ensure people don’t bend the slight amendment to the red zone rules over the Easter weekend.

From April 3-5th, people across all of Italy are allowed to move within their region to visit friends and family once a day, between 5am and 10pm. Travel is limited to two adults plus children under 14.

An extra 70,000 agents will be checking people’s movements over the Easter weekend. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)

The decision to bolster police checks came after examining the state of public safety and the effects Covid-19 has on the economy.

It’s not the first time Italy has increased security over a national holiday. All major holidays have been granted distinct rules since the pandemic broke out in Italy just over a year ago. Christmas and New Year 2021 saw the country move in and out of lockdown in a bid to curb the spread of the virus at peak times of movement.

READ ALSO: UPDATE: What are Italy’s rules for travel over Easter?

Since the pandemic began, the state has checked 3,894,431 people and 9,795,830 businesses (March 11th 2020 – March 28th 2021).

The police, in conjunction with military operation “Strade Sicure” (Safe Streets), are deployed to Covid-19 hotspots to implement the national lockdown measures. This has also included stepping up checks in areas particularly affected by the virus such as Bergamo.

EXPLAINED:

Some regions face further levels of restrictions. In Tuscany, several cities will see reinforcements with access to beaches denied and entrances to the coast blocked. Liguria, meanwhile has forbidden using boats over the Easter weekend.

READ ALSO: Italy to remain in partial lockdown until end of April

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POLICE

Dozens of Italian neo-fascists arrested in Greece

21 people reportedly belonging to the Italy's CasaPound neo-fascist group were arrested in Athens airport late on Tuesday night. Police said they posed a "major risk to public safety".

Dozens of Italian neo-fascists arrested in Greece

Greek police said Wednesday they had detained 21 members of the Italian far-right and banned gatherings planned in the memory of two members of neo-Nazi group Golden Dawn slain a decade ago.

The Italians were detained late Tuesday at Athens airport and were to be deported, a police source told AFP.

The police also said they were banning any public gatherings linked to the Golden Dawn anniversary, because they constituted a “major risk to public safety” owing to planned anti-fascist counter-gatherings.

Italian neo-fascist party CasaPound in a posting on Telegram said 21 of its members had been “loaded into armoured cars without receiving any explanation” and taken to a police station.

On November 1, 2013, two armed assailants riding a motorbike shot dead the two members of the Golden Dawn party, 22 year-old Manolis Kapelonis and 27-year-old Giorgos Fountoulis, outside the party offices in the Athens suburb of Neo Iraklio.

A third party member was also seriously injured in the drive-by attack.

Golden Dawn, under criticism at the time for beating migrants and political opponents, turned the two men into martyrs.

A few months later, Fountoulis’ father was elected as a Golden Dawn lawmaker in the European Parliament.

The shooting came just weeks after a Golden Dawn member had fatally stabbed anti-fascist rapper Pavlos Fyssas, a crime that eventually proved the party’s undoing.

The 2013 attack on the Golden Dawn members was later claimed by a little-known far-left group. No arrests were made and the case remains open.

Once the third-ranked party in parliament at the height of Greece’s debt crisis, Golden Dawn collapsed after its leaders and other senior members were jailed in 2020 over crimes including Fyssas’ murder.

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