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TODAY IN ITALY

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

Earthquakes shut schools and factories in Campi Flegrei area, climate activists target health ministry, seagull attacks on the rise in Rome, and more news from around Italy on Wednesday.

File photo of a road in the Campi Flegrei region, west of Naples, showing cracks following seismic tremors
File photo of a road in the Campi Flegrei region, west of Naples, showing cracks following seismic tremors in October 2023. Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP

Powerful seismic swarm shuts schools and factories in Italy’s Campi Flegrei

Factories and schools in Italy’s volcanic Campi Flegrei area remained closed on Tuesday to allow authorities to carry out safety inspections after a series of tremors including a 4.4-magnitude quake – the biggest in 40 years – rocked the area on Monday. 

“I’m scared. I opened this morning but there isn’t anyone because people are scared,” Gaetano Maddaluno, a 56-year-old hairdresser in the city of Pozzuoli, told AFP on Tuesday.

Naples mayor Gaetano Manfredi said on Tuesday that the situation was “under control” and there was “no risk of eruption,” but warned that tremors could continue “for months”, AFP reported.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni was set to preside over an urgent ministerial meeting in Rome on Wednesday to discuss the situation in the area, Italian media reported.

Climate activists spray orange paint over health ministry’s entrance

A group of activists from the Ultima Generazione (‘Last Generation’) collective sprayed orange paint over the entrance of Italy’s health ministry in Rome on Tuesday in what they said was an act of protest against “the deaths and conditions caused by the heat” linked to global warming, news agency Ansa reported.

“I’m here in front of the health ministry because citizens’ health must not continue to be sacrificed on the altar of profit,” said one of the protesters.

The group was later taken into custody by local police.

Ultima Generazione has staged multiple headline-grabbing acts of civil disobedience across the country in recent months. In mid-February, members of the same group targeted Florence’s Uffizi museum, pasting images of flooding in Tuscany on the protective glass of Botticelli’s Venus.

Snowy weather sparks rider protest at Giro d’Italia race

The 16th stage of the Giro d’Italia started three hours late on Tuesday after riders protested against organisers’ demands that they race through heavy snow.

Riders were supposed to start a parade around snow-covered Livigno, Lombardy, shortly before noon before heading to Prati allo Stelvio, where the stage was due to get underway at around 2.00pm – but no one appeared at the start line, news agency AFP reported.

“The riders are united on the issue,” Adam Hansen, president of the riders’ union, told broadcaster Eurosport, adding that the teams “have unanimously stated they will not participate in the stage under the current conditions.”

The start was then moved down to the valley and pushed back by three hours so riders did not have to take the Giogo di Santa Maria pass, where the snow was falling heavily, AFP reported.

Australian Ben O’Connor, who is fourth in the overall standings, called the Giro “one of the worst organised races”, telling Eurosport: “It’s just a shame that it is 2024 and you have dinosaurs who really don’t see the human side of things.”

Rome residents make over 30 calls a week over seagull attacks

Italian environmental association Earth has been fielding more than 30 distress calls per week from Rome residents over attacks from local seagulls, newspaper Il Messaggero reported on Monday.

Earth president Valentina Coppola told reporters that the recent uptick in the number of attacks is down to spring being nesting season, with roof terraces being a favourite spot for the birds to raise their young.

“Not much can be done because destroying or moving nests is prohibited by municipal regulations,” Coppola told Il Messaggero.

“All you can do is be patient and defend yourself by going out onto the terrace with an umbrella to protect yourself from low-flying strikes,” she added.

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For members

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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