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Home Globe Coronavirus: Italy prosecutors quiz PM Conte on crisis
Globe

Coronavirus: Italy prosecutors quiz PM Conte on crisis

by editor June 12, 2020
June 12, 2020

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

The citizens’ group Noi Denunceremo (We Will Report) demands justice for Covid-19 victims

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte is being questioned by prosecutors from northern Italy after relatives of Covid-19 victims demanded an inquiry into alleged government negligence.

The prosecutors have travelled to Rome from Bergamo, the city near Milan worst hit by coronavirus before the whole country was locked down in March.

Mr Conte said he was “not at all worried” about the questioning.

Relatives argue that virus hotspots should have been isolated earlier.

Fifty legal complaints have been filed at the Bergamo prosecutor’s office by a citizens’ group called Noi Denunceremo (We Will Report).

The group consists of bereaved relatives of Covid-19 victims, who say two Lombardy towns – Alzano and Nembro – should have been declared “red zones” as soon as the outbreaks were detected there.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Noi Denunceremo members show the legal complaint they filed in Bergamo

It is the first legal group action in Italy triggered by the pandemic. But the Lombardy region is governed by the right-wing opposition League party, and many have blamed them, rather than the central government, for alleged failures in the coronavirus response.

In addition, the prosecutors will question Italian Interior Minister Luciana Lamorgese and Health Minister Roberto Speranza on Friday.

The prosecutors aim to determine if there are grounds for any charges of criminal negligence, and whether the decision on a lockdown should have been taken by politicians in Rome or Lombardy.

Lombardy was where the virus first started spreading in Europe and more than half the victims in Italy died in the region.

On Thursday, Italy’s official coronavirus death toll stood at 34,114 – the second highest figure in Europe after the UK, and fourth-highest in the world.

But Italy’s infection rate has been brought down, enabling the authorities to gradually ease draconian restrictions.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Media captionItalian PM Giuseppe Conte told the BBC in April how the lockdown could be eased

Rome’s responsibility or Lombardy’s?

Mr Conte said: “I will conscientiously set out all the facts of which I have knowledge. I am not at all worried.

“All investigations are welcome. The citizens have the right to know and we have the right to reply.”

In a BBC interview in early April, Mr Conte denied claims that he had underestimated the crisis. He said that if he had ordered a lockdown at the beginning, when the first virus clusters were detected, “people would have taken me for a madman”.

He dismissed the suggestion that Italy could have rapidly imposed a big lockdown like the one in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

Lombardy officials say locking down virus hotspots was a central government responsibility. The region’s Health Minister Giulio Gallera has said it was clear from 23 February that Alzano and Nembro had many cases.

But Mr Conte, who heads a centre-left coalition government, hit back by saying “if Lombardy had wanted to, it could have made Alzano and Nembro red zones”, AFP news agency reported.

The prosecutors have already questioned senior Lombardy officials.

How did the crisis unfold in Lombardy?

The little town of Codogno was first to be locked down, on 21 February. Then Lombardy and 14 provinces in the neighbouring regions of Veneto, Piedmont and Emilia Romagna were locked down on 8 March. Two days later the lockdown was extended to the whole of Italy.

In early March it was clear that hospitals in the Lombardy crisis zone were overwhelmed with Covid-19 patients and struggling with shortages of protective kit, beds and medical staff.

BBC footage from a hospital in Brescia, near Bergamo, showed how doctors struggled with “staggering” numbers of Covid-19 patients, without medication to fight the virus.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Covid-19 victims are buried in a new section of the Monumental Cemetery in Bergamo

The widow of one victim, Monica Plazzoli, said: “If it hadn’t been so disorganised, if [the province of] Bergamo had been made into a red zone earlier, perhaps the hospitals would not have been driven to collapse”.

How the crisis has taken a toll on mental health:

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Media captionThe mental health toll as Italians struggle to cope with Europe’s strictest and longest-running lockdown

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