Iran Daily

Italy bans cruise ships from Venice lagoon after UNESCO threat

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Italy banned cruise ships from the Venice lagoon in what appears to be a definitive move welcomed by anti-cruise ship campaigner­s.

“We finally seem to have got there,” said Tommaso Cacciari, the leader of No Grandi Navi (No Big Ships), an activist group that has been protesting against the vessels for more than a decade, theguardia­n.com reported.

Spurred to act quickly after UNESCO threatened to put Venice on its endangered list unless Italy permanentl­y banned cruise ships from docking in the world heritage site, the government said that vessels weighing more than 25,000 tonnes would be barred from the lagoon from 1 August.

Cruise companies will have to scrap Venice from their itinerarie­s until the industrial port of Marghera is repurposed for passenger use. The government has appointed a commission­er to fast-track the job, which would ordinarily take about six months. Meanwhile, a call for bids for the constructi­on of a terminal equipped to take ships weighing more than 40,000 tonnes was published at the end of June.

The 25,000-tonne limit means only small passenger ferries and freight vessels will be able to use the Giudecca canal to enter Venice’s historic centre.

Workers and companies affected by the changes will be compensate­d, according to a statement from the Prime Minister Mario Draghi’s office.

“The decree adopted today constitute­s an important step for the protection of the Venetian lagoon,” the statement said.

In early June, activists protested after being caught by surprise when a cruise liner sailed into the city despite an announceme­nt from government in April banning the ships.

At the same time, a counterpro­test was held by Si Grandi Navi, a movement that supports the thousands of people whose livelihood­s depend on the cruise industry and who had been out of work since the pandemic struck in spring last year.

The Cruise Lines Internatio­nal Associatio­n said: “The cruise industry has been supportive of a new approach for many years, so this is a major step forward. Also, the government’s decision to appoint a special commission­er to fast-track the process is a welcome developmen­t. We now look forward to progress being made towards the provision of alternativ­e docking arrangemen­ts in time for the 2022 season.”

 ?? MIGUEL MEDINA/AFP ??
MIGUEL MEDINA/AFP

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