Tag: Italian

  • Coronavirus: Italian beach nudists fined as police crack down

    Six people who dared to go bare on the shores of an Italian lake have been given big fines for outraging public decency.

    The naturists were spotted by police patrolling the beaches of Abbadia Lariana in an attempt to enforce social distancing measures.

    The six, all men aged 43 to 68, were each given fines of €3,333 (£3,000; $3,750).

    Local police combed beaches in Lake Como by foot and with patrol boats.

    Italian media said the men were spotted from a carabinieri police boat on Sunday.

    Authorities in the northern region of Lombardy have been struggling to stop people converging on local beaches in the summer weather.

    Some 70 people were spotted on the beaches, mainly visitors from South American and Eastern Europe as well as neighbouring provinces.

    Lombardy has been hit harder by Covid-19 than any other Italian region. Although the lockdown is gradually being lifted it is compulsory to wear a mask, even outdoors.

    The Corriere website noted that it was not just masks that the six nudists had failed to wear.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Italian study shows 40% of cases in town showed no symptoms

    A total of 40% of people infected with coronavirus in the quarantined north Italian town of Vo experienced no symptoms, according to a new study.

    The study, led by a scientist at Italy’s Padua University and Imperial College London, also provided evidence that mass testing and localised lockdowns can help slow the spread of the virus.

    Vo, which has a population of nearly 3,200, was put on lockdown for two weeks following the country’s first coronavirus death on 21 February. Almost the whole town was then tested.

    Results showed that at the beginning of quarantine, 2.6% of the town – or 73 people – were positive. After two weeks, just 29 tested positive. Both times, around 40% of positive cases were asymptomatic.

    However, the virus was controlled as those who tested positive – including those who had no symptoms – were quarantined straight away.

    “Despite ‘silent’ and widespread transmission, the disease can be controlled,” said Andrea Crisanti, a professor at Padua and Imperial who co-led the work.

    “Testing of all citizens, whether or not they have symptoms, provides a way to … prevent outbreaks getting out of hand.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Italy begins to emerge from world’s longest nationwide lockdown

    Stir-crazy Italians will be free to stroll and visit relatives for the first time in nine weeks on Monday as Europe’s hardest-hit country eases back the world’s longest nationwide coronavirus lockdown.

    Four million people — an estimated 72 percent of them men — will return to their construction sites and factories as the economically and emotionally shattered country tries to get back to work.

    Restaurants that have managed to survive Italy’s most disastrous crisis in generations will reopen for takeaway service.

    But bars and even ice cream parlours will remain shut. The use of public transport will be discouraged and everyone will have to wear masks in indoor public spaces.

    “We are feeling a mix of joy and fear,” 40-year-old Stefano Milano said in Rome.

    “There will be great happiness in being able to go running again carefree, in my son being allowed to have his little cousin over to blow out his birthday candles, to see our parents,” the father-of-three said.

    “But we are also apprehensive because they are old and my father-in-law has cancer so is high risk”.

    ‘Moment of responsibility’

    Wuhan, the Chinese city where the virus emerged in December, led the world with an unprecedented lockdown on January 23 that lasted 76 days.

    Weeks later Italy followed suit, becoming the first Western democracy to shut down virtually everything in the face of an illness that has now officially killed 28,884 — the most in Europe — and some fear thousands more.

    The lives of Italians began closing in around them as it became increasingly apparent that the first batch of infections in provinces around Milan were spiralling out of control.

    Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte began by putting a quarter of the population in the northern industrial heartland on lockdown on March 8.

    The sudden measure frightened many — fearful of being locked in together with the gathering threat — into fleeing to less affected regions further south.

    The danger of the virus spreading with them and incapacitating the south’s less developed health care system forced Conte to announce a nationwide lockdown on March 9.

    “Today is our moment of responsibility,” Conte told the nation. “We cannot let our guard down.”

    The official death toll was then 724.

    More waves of restrictions followed as hundreds began dying each day.

    Almost everything except for pharmacies and grocery stores was shuttered across the Mediterranean country of 60 million on March 12.

    Conte’s final roll of the dice involved closing all non-essential factories on March 22.

    Italy’s highest single toll — 969 — was reported five days later.

    ‘Worried about reopening’

    The economic toll of all those shutdowns has been historic.

    Italy’s economy — the eurozone’s third-largest last year — is expected to shrink more than in any year since the global depression of the 1930s.

    Half of the workforce is receiving state support and the same number told a top pollster that they were afraid of becoming unemployed.

    And some of those who are out of a job already say they do not entirely trust in Conte’s ability to safely navigate the nation out of peril.

    Conte’s popularity has jumped along with that of most of other world leaders grappling with the pandemic thanks to a rally around the flag effect.

    But a Demos poll conducted at the end of April found some of Conte’s lustre fading.

    Confidence in his government has slipped by eight percentage points to a still-strong 63 percent since March.

    Psychological toll

    Italy’s staggered reopening is complicated by a highly decentralised system that allows the country’s 20 regions to layer on their own rules.

    Venice’s Veneto and the southern Calabria regions have thus been serving food and drink at bars and restaurants with outdoor seating since last week.

    The area around Genoa is thinking of allowing small groups of people to go sailing and reopening its beaches.

    Neighbouring Emilia-Romagna is keeping them closed — even to those who live by the sea.

    All this uncertainty appears to be weighing on the nation’s psyche.

    A poll by the Piepoli Institute showed 62 percent of Italians think they will need psychological support with coming to grips with the post-lockdown world.

    “The night of the virus continues,” sociologist Ilvo Diamanti wrote in La Repubblica daily.

    “And you can hardly see the light on the horizon. If anything, we’re getting used to moving in the dark.”

    Source: france24.com

  • Italian Football Federation hopes to test players for coronavirus in May before season restart

    The Italian Football Federation hopes that players can be tested for coronavirus at the start of May in preparation for the season to restart.

    Serie A has been suspended since 9 March because of the global pandemic.

    There is no set date for when the campaign can resume in Italy, with 12 full rounds and four outstanding fixtures still to play.

    “As soon as the conditions are right, we’ll finish the championship,” said federation president Gabriele Gravina.

    Speaking to Sky Sports Italia, he added: “Soon, there will be a meeting. We will establish the procedure which we will then communicate.

    “We will start, I hope, at the beginning of May with tests to ensure that players are negative and training can follow.

    “Will we play through the summer? We don’t have a deadline but the idea is to finish the championships.”

    Italy has been one of the countries hardest hit by the coronavirus crisis, and players at a number of clubs have been infected.

    Juventus lead the Italian top flight, one point ahead of Lazio and nine clear of third-placed Inter Milan.

    Brescia president Massimo Cellino, whose side are bottom of the table, has said he is ready to forfeit the club’s remaining games if the season resumes.

    Last week, German teams became the first from Europe’s top leagues to return to training, with precautions in place.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Italian nurse strangles doctor girlfriend, claims she gave him coronavirus

    A nurse who strangled his doctor girlfriend told police he did it because she gave him coronavirus.

    Newly qualified medic Lorena Quaranta, 27, was found dead by cops after her partner Antonio De Pace called them to say he had murdered her.

    Both had been working in a local hospital in Messina, on the Italian island of Sicily, and were drafted in to help out with the coronavirus pandemic.

    Cops burst into their apartment after De Pace, 28, called to confess that he had murdered Lorena.

    Paramedics were called when the police found him on the floor of his apartment having cut his wrists.

    Lorena’s colleagues at the hospital were able to save her boyfriend’s life.

    De Pace was later taken to local prosecutor Maurizio de Lucia where he told stunned investigators: “I killed her because she gave me coronavirus.”

    A police source said: “She was a doctor who was working hard to save others. It’s such a tragedy.”

    Tests were last night being carried out on both but early indications were neither Lorena or De Pace had the virus.

    Just days before she died, Lorena had told of her anguish at how 41 doctors had died during Italy’s coronavirus epidemic that has left more than 12,000 dead.

    Posting a news report on the figures which highlighted how doctors had died from lack of personal protection equipment, she wrote online: “Unacceptable”.

    She added: “Now more than ever we need to demonstrate responsibility and love for life. You must show respect for yourselves, your families and the country.

    ”You must think and remember those that dedicate their lives daily to looking after our sick.

    “Let’s stick together everyone staying at home. Let’s avoid the next one falling sick is a loved one or ourselves.”

    Last month De Pace had posted a tribute to her after she qualified and said: “To reach our dreams you have to work hard with determination and you are proof.

    “I wish you to keep chasing your dreams, always live the life you always imagined. Well done!

    “Congratulations on your brilliant graduation doctor.”

    Source: www.graphic.com.gh

  • Italian PM tells EU to ‘show more ambition, unity, courage’

    Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte on Friday extended his feud about coronavirus money with EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen in the pages of a Roman newspaper.

    Conte wrote a letter to Italy’s La Repubblica in response to an apology that von der Leyen had published in the same paper on Thursday.

    “I am sorry,” von der Leyen had told Italians. “The EU is with you now.”

    Conte sounded unimpressed in his letter.

    “Dear Ursula,” he wrote. “I hear ideas (from you) not worthy of Europe.”

    He told her it was time for the EU “to show more ambition, more unity and more courage”.

    At issue is billions of euros that Italy wants from the European Union to help fight the novel coronavirus pandemic that has killed nearly 14,000 people in Italy and shattered the country’s economy.

    Conte wants the EU to start issuing lots of joint debt dubbed “coronabonds” — that could let countries such as Italy address the crisis more cheaply.

    Von der Leyen has sided with Germany and some other northern European countries’ suspicion of pooled risk because it could raise their own borrowing costs at the expense of more indebted countries.

    Von der Leyen is backing an EU-wide guarantee that could raise 100 billion euros ($108 billion) to aid strained national unemployment schemes.

    She told Italians said these EU-backed loans were “demonstrating European solidarity”.

    Conte said he “welcomed” the EU’s unemployment initiative.

    But the Italian leader also made it clear that he still wanted the coronabonds.

    “When fighting a war, you must do everything possible to win and equip yourself with all the tools needed for the (subsequent) reconstruction,” he wrote.

    Conte said this required “innovative tools such as the European Recovery Bonds.”

    He said these bonds are “useful to finance the extraordinary efforts that Europe will have to put in place” and “are in no way aimed at sharing the debt that each of our countries has inherited from the past”.

    EU leaders failed to find a common response last week and gave finance ministers until next Thursday to draft a new strategy.

    Italy’s world-leading toll from the new disease reached 13,915 on Thursday.

    Its three-week lockdown to stop the spread has been extended through at least mid-April and its economy is expected to suffer its biggest peacetime shock since World War II.

    Source: France24

  • 2 more Fiorentina players test positive for coronavirus

    Italian football club Fiorentina announced Saturday that its players Patrick Cutrone and German Pezzella tested positive for coronavirus.

    The club said that its physiotherapist Stefano Dainelli also contracted the virus after coming in contact with the players.

    “All 3 resulted positive and are in good health at their homes in Florence,” the club said on its website.

    Fiorentina confirmed Friday that Serbian forward Dusan Vlahovic also tested positive for the virus.

    Italy has been the worst-affected in Europe by COVID-19 with more than 1,400 deaths.

    All domestic sports events in Italy have been suspended until April 3 and the entire country is under near-total lockdown.

    In a related development, the Serbian Football Federation confirmed Saturday that its president, Slavisa Kokeza tested positive for coronavirus.

    The federation said on its website that the president of the football organization is under medical observation after he was diagnosed with the COVID-19, adding that the “the football association is continuing its regular activities.”

    Serbia has reported 33 confirmed cases from the virus so far.

    After emerging in China last December, the novel coronavirus, officially known as COVID-19, has spread to over 135 countries and territories.

    The global death toll from the virus has crossed 5,300 with more than 142,000 cases confirmed worldwide, according World Health Organization, which has termed Europe as the new epicenter of the virus.

    A vast majority of those who get infected recover from the illness.

    Source: www.aa.com.tr

  • Italian prisoners revolt over virus rules

    Inmates in four Italian prisons have revolted over new rules meant to help contain the coronavirus, reported Reuters, quoting prison rights group Antigone.

    The introduction of the new rules – which include a ban on family visits – resulted in chaos across prisons in Naples Poggioreale, Modena, Frosinone and Alexandria.

    Antigone said at least one inmate had died in Modena – though it is not clear what happened.

    Several prison officers were injured as a result.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Bright Addae dedicates last winning goal to Italian Ambassador to Ghana

    Ghanaian International and former Under 20 World Cup medalist, Bright Addae scored a spectacular goal for Juve Stabia against FC Crotone in the Italian serie B at the Stadio Romeo Menti, Castellammare di Stabia.

    The goal was his second of the season. Addae dedicated his first to his close pal and friend Alhaji Salamu Amadu.

    Scoring his second goal of the campaign, the versatile player has dedicated the goal to the Italian Ambassador.

    In an interview after the match, he expressed his gratitude to the supporters of SS Juve Stabia, the technical team and his team mates.

    “I will say this goal is a special one because it is going for a special person like no other in the Italian Ambassador to Ghana.

    “I dedicate this special goal against Crotone to His Excellency Giovanni Favilli, the Italian Ambassador to Ghana” he ended.

    Addae scored the winning goal for his side to clinch all three points. Juve Stabia are now pegged on 11th spot on the league table with 32 points.

    Source: thepressradio.com