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TODAY IN ITALY

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

Italy faces G7 pushback over abortion rights, opposition plans Rome protest after parliament brawl, EU set to approve Lufthansa deal with ITA, and more news from around Italy on Friday.

Today in Italy: A roundup of the latest news on Friday
Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni (C) reportedly faced pushback from the US and France over her government’s stance on abortion rights as G7 leaders gathered in southern Italy this week. (Photo by Ludovic MARIN / AFP)

Italy’s top story on Friday:

The Italian government faced pushback from the US and France on Thursday against a reported attempt by Italy to water down a G7 leaders’ declaration on abortion rights by removing a reference to “safe and legal” terminations.

US President Joe Biden “felt very strongly” that the statement must reiterate statements made in Japan, AFP reported, while French President Emmanuel Macron noted the French parliament’s vote earlier this year to enshrine the right of abortion in his country’s constitution.

Meloni’s office denies abortion rights have been slashed from the draft final summit statement, saying negotiations are ongoing with Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Japan and the US.

On Wednesday, a source close to the negotiations told AFP that since 2021 there has “been a mention of ‘safe access'” in the G7 leaders’ statement, but “Meloni doesn’t want it”.

“She’s the only one, she’s isolated on the issue. But since it’s the host country, the others have decided not to make it a casus belli,” the source said, using the Latin term for an act that provokes a war.

Opposition parties to stage Rome protest over parliament brawl

Italy’s opposition parties on Thursday announced that they will stage a protest in Rome next week after a brawl in the lower house of parliament on Wednesday resulted in a Five-Star Movement MP being injured and needing medical attention, Ansa reported.

The fight broke out after Five-Star Movement deputy Leonardo Donno tried to tie an Italian flag around the neck of regional affairs minister Roberto Calderoli, from the populist League party, in a stunt intended to denounce contested plans to grant regions more autonomy.

In response, Calderoli’s fellow League deputies left their benches en masse to mob Donno, with the debate quickly descending into chaos.

READ ALSO: Shameful’: What’s behind the punch-ups in Italy’s parliament?

“After the physical attack by the ruling majority in parliament, we cannot accept that the country is also hostage to this climate of continuous intimidation,” a joint statement from the Five-Star Movement, the Democratic Party, the Green-Left Alliance and More Europe read on Thursday. 

The statement invited “citizens, political and social groups and the civic and democratic forces of this country” to join the protest, which was scheduled to take place on Tuesday, June 18th, in Rome’s Piazza Santissimi Apostoli.

Employment rate up 400,000 on last year, report finds

Italy’s national statistics office Istat on Thursday said that the number of people in employment in the first quarter of 2024 was up by some 394,000 (1.7 percent) compared to the first quarter of last year, Ansa reported.

Istat’s report also said that employment figures for the first quarter of this year were up by 75,000 (0.3 percent) against the previous quarter.

The rise drove Italy’s employment rate to 62 percent – up by 0.1 percent against the previous quarter.

The country’s unemployment rate fell from 7.4 to 7.2 percent, but the inactivity rate (this refers to people not available for or not actively seeking employment) for individuals aged from 15 to 64 rose to 33.1 percent – up by 0.1.

EU Commission set to approve ITA-Lufthansa deal

European Commission sources on Thursday said that they expected the EU body to authorise German carrier Lufthansa’s acquisition of a 41-percent stake in ITA Airways in the coming days after both airlines provided the necessary reassurances over the deal, the Corriere della Sera newspaper reported

Last March, the European Commission raised objections to Lufthansa’s plan to buy a stake in Italy’s flag carrier, citing competition concerns including the strengthening of ITA’s already dominant position at Milan’s Linate airport.

But the parties edged closer to an agreement last week after Lufthansa made as-yet unknown concessions over long-haul flights from Rome’s Fiumicino airport to the United States.

The deal between the two airlines was expected to be worth some 325 million euros, reports said.

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TODAY IN ITALY

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

Coastguard recovers 12 more bodies after shipwreck, over a third of Italians aged over 65 by 2050, two English women verbally assaulted for bathing in burkinis, and more news from around Italy on Friday.

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

Italy’s coastguard recovers 12 more bodies after shipwreck

Italy’s coastguard said on Thursday it had recovered 12 more bodies including women and children after a migrant boat sank off the country’s southern coast earlier this week, with more than 60 people reported missing, AFP reported.

The confirmed death toll stood at 20, it said, after six were recovered on Wednesday.

Eleven people survived after the boat sank around 120 nautical miles off the coast of Calabria in the night between Sunday and Monday.

Some 3,155 migrants died or disappeared in the Mediterranean Sea last year, according to the UN’s International Organisation for Migration, and more than 1,000 have died or are missing so far this year.

The central Mediterranean – the area between North Africa and Italy and Malta – is the deadliest known migration route in the world, accounting for 80 percent of the deaths and disappearances in the Mediterranean sea, according to AFP.

Over a third of Italy’s population to be aged over 65 by 2050

Some 35 percent of Italy’s population will be aged over 65 by the middle of the century, the head of social security agency INPS Gabriele Fava said on Thursday according to Ansa.

“Citizens over 65 will represent up to 35 percent of the national population in 2050, and this determines a need to rethink the welfare system,” Fava said.

The average age of people in the country has been steadily rising since 2014 (it now stands at 46.4 years, with around one in four aged over 65), with the trend being driven by a plunging national birth rate. 

According to the latest report from the intergovernmental Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Italy’s total fertility rate is among the lowest in the OECD area, with an average of 1.2 children per woman – only 0.5 percent higher than lowest-ranking Korea, with 0.7.

Two English women verbally abused for bathing in burkinis in Sicily

Two English women were verbally abused for bathing in a Sicilian hotel’s swimming pool in their Islamic bathing costumes last weekend, local media reported on Wednesday.

The two tourists, aged 19 and 25, from London, were allegedly targeted by two male hotel guests, both Italian nationals, with one reported as saying “who knows what you’re hiding underneath them” in reference to the pair’s burkinis – all-in-one swimsuits worn by Muslim women. 

The two London women, which some reports said were sisters, have since filed defamation and harassment lawsuits with local police authorities.

The incident came little less than a year after the mayor of Monfalcone, Friuli Venezia Giulia, sparked outrage by saying that Muslim women should stop swimming “with their clothes on” when visiting Italian beaches as the practice was “dubious” in terms of “decorum and hygiene”.

Opposition MPs call on head of state to send regional autonomy law back to parliament

MPs representing Italy’s populist Five-Star Movement (M5S) said on Thursday they had penned a letter to head of state Sergio Mattarella asking him to revert a contested regional autonomy law back to parliament for a new vote, Ansa reported.

M5S MPs Francesco Silvestri and Stefano Patuanelli said the government had used an ordinary bill rather than a constitutional bill to “undermine the constitutional order” of the country. 

The regional autonomy law, which allows Italy’s richer regions to keep more of the tax revenue raised in their territories, was approved on Tuesday amid fierce protests that it will undermine Italy’s unity and worsen already stark north-south divides. 

Opposition groups including the M5S and the centre-left Democratic Party (PD) said they were collecting signatures to hold a public referendum on abolishing the law.

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