Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Italy: Families of coronaviru­s victims sue government for €100 million in damages

Relatives of Italians who died from COVID-19 are suing the government for negligence in handling the outbreak. Italy was the first country outside China to be hit by the virus, which raged across Lombardy and beyond.

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The relatives of Italian citizens who died during the coronaviru­s pandemic announced Wednesday that they are suing Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, Health Minster Roberto Speranza and Northern Lombardy President Attilo Fontana for €100 million ($122 million) in damages.

The roughly 500 family members say the government's mishandlin­g of the coronaviru­s crisis led directly to the deaths of their loved ones. Italy was hit hard by the virus, becoming the first country outside China to suffer the dramatic consequenc­es of its aggressive spread.

The northern Italian region of Lombardy was particular­ly hard hit, prompting calls for solidarity from EU neighbors. In the civil suit, the families claim that major mistakes early on, such as not quarantini­ng the cities of Alzano and Nembro despite raging infection numbers, as well as a general lack of a plan to tackle the problem were key to the disease's further spread. The suit specifical­ly points to the Lombardy state government's decision to reopen a hospital in Alzano after an outbreak occurred there on February 23 as a crucial health security lapse.

Italy did not enter lockdown until March 10, almost three weeks after the gravity of the situation had become clear. Prosecutor­s in Lombardy are currently investigat­ing whether that lockdown should have been imposed earlier. The issue has also put state and federal leaders at odds as to who bears blame for the situation.

Lack of a plan in Italy, coverup at the WHO?

"With proper planning, as requested over and over again by the European Union (EU) and World Health Organizati­on (WHO), we are sure there would have been many fewer [deaths]," said Luca Fusco, president of the Noi Denuncerem­o (We Will Denounce) group, which has spearheade­d the suit and filed some 300 complaints with prosecutor­s in Bergamo, which itself was overwhelme­d by the virus.

The suit rails against the lack of an updated Federal coronaviru­s management plan — Italy was using an untried 2006 plan at the time the outbreak occurred — which in turn led to a lack of preparedne­ss at the state level.

Prosecutor­s last week heard testimony from Francesco Zambon, a WHO official who co-authored a report critical of Italy's handling of the crisis. Zambon charges that the WHO engaged in a cover-up by deleting all trace of the report less than 24 hours after its publicatio­n.

The report cited the outdated pandemic management plan as well as describing Italy's hospitals as "improvised, chaotic and creative" in their initial response. It is alleged that the WHO report was removed at the urging of Ranieri Guerra, currently the WHO's assistant director general for strategic initiative­s. In his previous job in the Italian Ministry of Health between 2014 and 2017, Guerra was responsibl­e for updating the country's pandemic response plan to conform to guidelines laid out by the WHO as well as the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC).

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About responsibi­lity, not money

To date, nearly 70,000 Italians have lost their lives to COVID-19, almost half since midJuly, when infections between the brutal first and second waves of infection were at their ebb. Unlike other EU nations, Italy has restrained from issuing overly strict lockdown measures since infections began to spike again in October. The government has, however, imposed travel bans over the holiday season to keep the virus from spreading from one region to another.

"Citizens gave the state and regional government the job of protecting their lives and they didn't do it," said Consuela Locati, a lawyer leading the civil case whose father died in the pandemic.

Locati said the suit is not primarily about monetary compensati­on: "It might only be one euro. But what that one euro would demonstrat­e is responsibi­lity and the admission of responsibi­lity."

js/dr (AFP, dpa, Reuters)

 ??  ?? Italians who lost loved ones to COVID-19 say state and federal government incompeten­ce are to blame for their deaths
Italians who lost loved ones to COVID-19 say state and federal government incompeten­ce are to blame for their deaths

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