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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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EUROPEAN UNION

Italian PM Meloni to stand in EU Parliament elections

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said on Sunday she would stand in upcoming European Parliament elections, a move apparently calculated to boost her far-right party, although she would be forced to resign immediately.

Italian PM Meloni to stand in EU Parliament elections

Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party, which has neo-Fascist roots, came top in Italy’s 2022 general election with 26 percent of the vote.

It is polling at similar levels ahead of the European elections on from June 6-9.

With Meloni heading the list of candidates, Brothers of Italy could exploit its national popularity at the EU level, even though EU rules require that any winner already holding a ministerial position must immediately resign from the EU assembly.

“We want to do in Europe exactly what we did in Italy on September 25, 2022 — creating a majority that brings together the forces of the right to finally send the left into opposition, even in Europe!” Meloni told a party event in the Adriatic city of Pescara.

In a fiery, sweeping speech touching briefly on issues from surrogacy and Ramadan to artificial meat, Meloni extolled her coalition government’s one-and-a-half years in power and what she said were its efforts to combat illegal immigration, protect families and defend Christian values.

After speaking for over an hour in the combative tone reminiscent of her election campaigns, Meloni said she had decided to run for a seat in the European Parliament.

READ ALSO: How much control does Giorgia Meloni’s government have over Italian media?

“I’m doing it because I want to ask Italians if they are satisfied with the work we are doing in Italy and that we’re doing in Europe,” she said, suggesting that only she could unite Europe’s conservatives.

“I’m doing it because in addition to being president of Brothers of Italy I’m also the leader of the European conservatives who want to have a decisive role in changing the course of European politics,” she added.

In her rise to power, Meloni, as head of Brothers of Italy, often railed against the European Union, “LGBT lobbies” and what she has called the politically correct rhetoric of the left, appealing to many voters with her straight talk.

“I am Giorgia, I am a woman, I am a mother, I am Italian, I am a Christian” she famously declared at a 2019 rally.

She used a similar tone Sunday, instructing voters to simply write “Giorgia” on their ballots.

“I have always been, I am, and will always be proud of being an ordinary person,” she shouted.

EU rules require that “newly elected MEP credentials undergo verification to ascertain that they do not hold an office that is incompatible with being a Member of the European Parliament,” including being a government minister.

READ ALSO: Why is Italy’s government being accused of helping tax dodgers?

The strategy has been used before, most recently in Italy in 2019 by Meloni’s deputy prime minister, Matteo Salvini, who leads the far-right Lega party.

The EU Parliament elections do not provide for alliances within Italy’s parties, meaning that Brothers of Italy will be in direct competition with its coalition partners Lega and Forza Italia, founded by Silvio Berlusconi.

The Lega and Forza Italia are polling at about seven percent and eight percent, respectively.

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