Protests against new coronavirus measures in Italy turn violent | Italy

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Demonstrations break out across the country, with clashes in two cities, as daily COVID-19 cases soar to fresh records.

Protests against new anti-coronavirus restrictions have broken out across Italy, with violence reported in Turin and Milan, in the country’s north.

On Monday night, some protesters in Turin broke away from a peaceful demonstration, smashing shop windows, ransacking luxury shops, and clashing with police, who fired tear gas in return.

Molotov cocktails were thrown at the police who in return used tear gas to restore order in Turin, the capital of the wealthy Piedmont region [Massimo Pinca/Reuters]

Several hundred protesters assembled in Milan – the capital of the Lombardy region which was the epicentre of the global pandemic in March, at the regional government’s headquarters, with some throwing stones, petrol bombs and fireworks.

Protesters chanted “Freedom, freedom!”, the same slogan used two days earlier by demonstrators in the southern city of Napoli.

According to ANSA news agency, 28 people are being detained in Milan; three police officers were injured amid the clashes in the two cities.

At least 37,479 people have died with coronavirus in Italy since the start of the pandemic.

People took to the streets after Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte on Monday imposed a new round of rules aimed at stemming the spread of coronavirus. He announced the early closure of restaurants and pubs at 6pm (17:00 GMT) and shut down theatres, gyms and cinemas.

Most high schools were ordered to hold online classes and a number of regions imposed night curfews.

A police officer stands in front of a damaged window as people protest against the new restrictions introduced to reduce the number of coronavirus cases, in Turin, Italy [Massimo Pinca/Reuters]

The tough, but still partial restrictions, came as the government strives to avoid a nationwide lockdown such as the measures enforced in March.

While Italians went through one of the world’s strictest lockdowns in the first wave with a sense of solidarity and compliance, the new measures have provoked an angry response.

Business owners, still recovering from the first closure, are exasperated amid fears that closing shops again would send them into bankruptcy.

Taxi drivers, restauranteurs, bar owners, and people who work in cultural industries protested peacefully in about several cities from north to south, including Viareggio, Trieste, Rome, Naples, Salerno, Palermo, Siracusa and Catania.

Shop owners protest against restrictive measures in Naples as new coronavirus cases soar to new records in Naples, Italy [Ciro De Luca/Reuters]

Trying to defuse the anger, Conte met protesters in Rome on Monday night to assure them that funds were on the way for business owners.

The government has promised financial aid to workers and businesses affected by mandatory closures, and relief measures were expected to be approved in a cabinet meeting on Tuesday.

“The primary objective is to regain control of the epidemiological curve to avoid that its steady rise can compromise the efficacy of our health sector, as well as the resilience of the social and economic system as a whole,” Conte said in an open letter published on Tuesday, by the Corriere della Sera newspaper.

Italy is witnessing a resurgence of coronavirus infections, reporting on Sunday its highest number since the beginning of the pandemic with more than 21,200 cases – double compared with the previous week. As of Tuesday, 14,281 people had been hospitalised.



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