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President of Italy’s Liguria region resigns after arrest over corruption probe

The president of the northwestern Italian region of Liguria resigned on Friday nearly three months after his arrest as part of a sweeping corruption investigation involving Genoa port operations.

Liguria region president Giovanni Toti delivers a speech during a commemoration ceremony for the Morandi Bridge collapse.
Liguria region president Giovanni Toti delivers a speech during a commemoration ceremony for the Morandi Bridge collapse. Photo by MARCO BERTORELLO / AFP

Giovanni Toti, 55, has been under house arrest since May as part of an investigation that has also implicated nine others, including the former head of the Genoa Port Authority, one of the largest in the country.

Contacted by AFP, a regional civil servant confirmed media reports of Toti’s resignation, who had been suspended from his post since his arrest.

Toti, a former member of the European Parliament elected as Liguria’s president in 2015 and again in 2020, has said he is innocent of accusations of bribe-taking.

Prosecutors allege he accepted 74,100 euros in funds for his election campaign between December 2021 and March 2023 from two prominent local businessmen, Aldo Spinelli and his son Roberto, in return for various favours.

These allegedly included efforts to privatise a public beach and speeding up the 30-year lease renewal for a Genoa port terminal for a Spinelli family-controlled company, which was approved in December 2021.

READ ALSO: Italy’s Liguria regional president arrested in corruption probe

Toti is a former journalist who was close to late PM Silvio Berlusconi. He is no longer aligned with a party but was backed by a right-wing coalition in the last election.

In a resignation letter published on the RaiNews website, Toti did not mention the accusations against him but instead listed his accomplishments as president and thanked his supporters.

“After three months of house arrest and the subsequent suspension from the office that voters have entrusted to me twice, I have decided that the time has come to tender my irrevocable resignation,” Toti wrote, according to RaiNews.

“I leave a region in order.”

Toti had more than a year remaining in his tenure as regional president. Under Italian law, new elections will have to be called within three months.

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CRIME

Former member of Italy’s Red Brigades armed group arrested in Argentina

A former member of Italy's Marxist-Leninist armed guerrilla group Red Brigades was arrested in Argentina on Thursday, Italian authorities said.

Former member of Italy's Red Brigades armed group arrested in Argentina

Leonardo Bertulazzi was detained after Argentinian authorities revoked the refugee status he had obtained in the country in 2004 following a new extradition request, Italian police said in a statement.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni also released a statement where she expressed her “deep gratitude to the Argentinian authorities” for the arrest.

Bertulazzi, who is in his 70s, was the target of an international arrest warrant for homicide and illegal confinement. He belonged to the Red Brigades’ March 28 Genoa section, which notably kidnapped and held Italian shipowner Piero Costa.

He was sentenced to a total of 27 years in prison in 1987 for joining a subversive association and belonging to an armed group.

Argentina first arrested him in 2002 in Buenos Aires but he was freed a few months later.

Founded in 1973 by Italian Renato Curcio, the Red Brigades wounded and killed dozens of judges, politicians, journalists and industry executives during the 1970s.

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