(ANSA) - ROME, NOV 19 - Elon Musk forced the Italian Left to
defend Italy's sovereignty after he called for the dismissal of
Italian judges who had nixed the detention of migrants taken to
new processing centres in Albania, Premier Giorgia Meloni said
Tuesday.
The premier said this contradicted the centre left's call for
the EU to open infraction proceedings against Italy for the
controversial new policy of offshoring migrant processing to a
non-EU country.
"The left is tearing its clothes over (Musk's) interference
after having, among other things, asked the EU to open an
infringement for Italy", said Meloni, in Rio de Janeiro for the
G20, during a press briefing.
"Among the many exploits that Musk has achieved is having forced
the left to defend national sovereignty", said the premier, who
is a personal friend of the world's richest man.
Last week, Musk said "these judges need to go" referring to a
decision by Rome magistrates not to validate the detention of a
second group of migrants taken to the controversial new
Italian-run centres in Albania.
He also slammed the decision on his X platform as
"unacceptable", wondering whether an "unelected autocracy make
the decisions".
"Do the people of Italy live in a democracy or does an unelected
autocracy make the decisions?", wrote the Tesla, X and SpaceX
owner, who has been appointed by US President-elect Donald Trump
to head a newly created government efficiency agency.
At the time, the Italian Left slammed Musk's intervention as
unacceptable interference.
The leader of the largest opposition group, Democratic Party
(PD) chief Elly Schlein, criticized the government's behaviour
as "embarrassing for letting an American billionaire dictate the
line.
"His repeated statements against the Italian judiciary are an
unacceptable attack against a constitutional institution", she
said.
"What is Meloni waiting for to defend national sovereignty?",
she said.
The leader of the populist Five-Star Movement (M5S) party,
two-time ex-premier Giuseppe Conte, also said Musk "doesn't know
the ABCs of democratic parliamentary systems.
"Who elected him?", he added, while expressing concern for his
"excessive power".
Speaking after Donald Trump's stunning comeback victory in the
US presidential election, Meloni called Musk, a big supporter of
the Trump campaign, "an added value and potential interlocutor".
On September 23 Musk had presented Meloni with the 'Global
Citizen Award 2024 from Washington-based think tank Atlantic
Council, praising her as "someone who is even more beautiful
inside than outside" and saying she had done "an incredible job"
as prime minister during a ceremony at the Ziegfeld Ballroom in
Manhattan.
Meanwhile on Tuesday, Meloni told reporters on the sidelines of
the G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro that illegal migration has an
impact on violence against women, together with other causes,
stressing the government's commitment to halt it.
"Women's empowerment and violence against women are different
things.
"Violence against women is a theme we are far from resolving.
"All causes must be dealt with.
"Figures show a significant impact of mass illegal migration and
Italy will continue to work to stop it.
"There are also other causes on which we will work", noted the
prime minister.
Meloni went on to say that "there are also cultural reasons"
behind gender-based violence which we "must continue to fight".
"It is a paradox that violence against women increases while
women conquer more space.
"This must induce us to reflect", added the premier, stressing
that the government is committed to fighting the phenomenon.
Later on Tuesday, Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi said 96
women have been killed between January 1 and November 3 this
year, including 82 who were murdered by a family member and
specifically 51 by a partner or an ex.
"From January 1 until November 3 this year, in Italy, 263
murders were registered: 96 victims were women, 82 killed within
the family or by someone close and 51 by a partner or
ex-partner", said the interior minister, speaking at the
presentation of the campaign against gender-based violence 'No
Excuse' at Rome's Luiss University.
Piantedosi went on to say that Italy "needs to promote an
unequivocal and courageous message: violence against women
continues to be an emergency to be fought with every possible
solution".
On Monday, Education Minister Giuseppe Valditara had said a rise
in rapes and sexual violence in Italy was linked to illegal
immigration.
Speaking in a video message during the presentation of the
Giulia Cecchettin Foundation dedicated to the memory of the
22-year-old student slain last year by her Italian ex-boyfriend,
Valditara said that "we must not pretend not to see that the
increase in sexual violence is also linked to forms of
marginalization and deviance that in some way derive from
illegal immigration".
And on Tuesday, the centre-left opposition Democratic Party (PD)
criticised Meloni's apparent defence of Valditara.
"I humbly remind President Meloni that 80% of femicides are
committed by Italians," said the national justice pointwoman of
the party, Debora Serracchiani.
"Stop making propaganda on the backs of women," she said,
slamming "the embarrassing ex officio defence by the Prime
Minister of the unacceptable words of Minister Valditara".
"The equation between violence against women and immigration is
not supported by data and only sows fear to support the
government's abhorrent policies against migrants", also said
Democratic Party (PD) Senator Valeria Valente.
Valente noted how evidence showed that "in 84% of cases" men who
were found guilty of gender-based violence "shared the same
nationality as the victim".
The leader of the progressive Più Europa opposition party
Riccardo Magi also accused Meloni of repeating Valditara's "fake
news" asking her to report to Parliament on the development of a
project to fight gender-based violence in schools, announced in
the wake of Giulia Cecchetin's murder.
"Apart from saying banal xenophobic things, it's time for Meloni
to do something concretely", said Magi.
The murder a year ago of 22-year-old Cecchettin by her ex
boyfriend shocked Italy, leading to the creation of the
foundation in her name.
Her ex, Filippo Turetta has admitted to stabbing Cecchettin to
death at Fossò, near Venice, on November 11, 2023, days before
she was due to graduate from Padua University in biomedical
engineering.
The case caused widespread dismay partly because of the
brutality of the killing and also because of the young age of
the perpetrator and victim.
And speaking at the presentation of the campaign against
gender-based violence ahead of the International Day for the
Elimination of Violence Against Women on November 25, Piantedosi
also announced that a meeting would be held later on Tuesday at
Palazzo Chigi to discuss the use of the electronic bracelet
monitoring system to fight violence against women.
"As of November 15 this year, 10,458 electronic bracelets are
active, 4,677 against stalking.
"Clearly, managing such a high number of bracelets is a major
commitment for police forces", said the minister, highlighting
"undeniable problems in the monitoring system". (ANSA).