(ANSA) - ROME, DEC 21 - A court of first instance in Palermo
has acquitted Deputy Premier and Transport Minister Matteo
Salvini on charges of abduction and refusal to perform public
acts for halting the disembarkation of 147 migrants rescued by
the Spanish NGO Open Arms vessel in August 2019 as part of his
closed-ports policy when he was interior minister.
The three-judge panel ruled that Salvini had no case to answer.
"Defending the homeland is not a crime", the deputy premier said
after the sentence was read on Friday night.
"Those who thought they could use migrants for political ends
lost and will return to Spain with their hands in their
pockets", he added, referring to Open Arms, whose chief Oscar
Camps was a plaintiff in the trial.
Prosecutors had requested a six-year jail term for Salvini, who
was accused of illegitimately denying the disembarkation of the
147 migrants on Lampedusa for nearly three weeks as part of his
controversial policy to curb irregular arrivals when he was
interior minister.
Palermo State attorneys Marzia Sabella, Gery Ferrara and Giorgia
Righi contended that Salvini, in doing so, had violated national
and international law, stating that he had exceeded his powers
when national security was not at stake, Sabella said Friday in
her final statements prior to the verdict.
Earlier this year, the three prosecutors were given a security
detail after receiving insults and threats on social media amid
the high-profile trial. (ANSA).