Kuwait Times

Italy’s new PM Conte begins work

-

ROME: Italy’s new prime minister Giuseppe Conte attended a military parade on his first full day in office yesterday, while his outspoken deputy Matteo Salvini was to head to Sicily as part of his campaign against illegal immigratio­n. The military parade, which Conte attended alongside President Sergio Mattarella, marked Republic Day for the foundation of the Italian Republic in 1946. Conte was finally sworn in on Friday afternoon at the head of an anti-establishm­ent and euroscepti­c government, ending months of uncertaint­y since elections in March.

The 53-year-old academic heads a government of ministers from the anti-establishm­ent Five Star Movement (M5S) and the far-right League Party, the first populist coalition in a founding EU member. A political novice, he inherits a daunting list of issues from his predecesso­r Paolo Gentiloni, including the financial travails of companies such as Ilva and Alitalia, a Group of Seven summit in Canada and a key EU summit at the end of the month, as well as the thorny question of immigratio­n.

Immigratio­n is the bugbear of Conte’s interior minister, Salvini, the 45-year-old leader of the antiimmigr­ant, anti-Islam League, who announced Friday he would visit Sicily to see the situation for himself at one of the main landing points for refugees fleeing war, persecutio­n and famine across North Africa and the Middle East. “The immigratio­n question remains a hot-button issue, even if the number of new arrivals has fallen,” said Salvini, an ally of French far-right leader Marine Le Pen. “I’ll be in Sicily on Sunday. The situation is now calm but only because of the rough seas.” More than 150 migrants, including nine children, disembarke­d from a rescue ship late Friday in Sicily. Salvini had said after being sworn in that he would ask his ministry’s experts “how to reduce the number of arriving migrants and increase the number of expulsions.”

As premier, Conte will be responsibl­e for pushing through the anti-austerity and pro-security promises that the two populist parties campaigned on. Salvini and Economic Developmen­t Minister Luigi Di Maio, head of the M5S, also serve as deputy premiers to Conte. While Conte has hardly made any public statements since being appointed, both Di Maio and Salvini have been much more outspoken. EU Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker called yesterday for Conte’s new euroscepti­c Italian government to be treated with respect, having earlier told Italians to work harder and stop blaming the EU for the country’s problems.

“We should show respect towards Italy,” Juncker said in an interview with the German press group Funke Mediengrup­pe. Juncker said Italy must not suffer the same fate as thrice-bailed out Greece whose dignity was “trodden under foot” by its creditors when left-wing Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras took office in 2015. “That must not happen again in the present case with Italy,” Juncker said. “Italians have a clear understand­ing of what is good for their country. They will sort it out.” —

 ?? —AFP ?? ROME: Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte (right) shakes hands with President Sergio Mattarella during the swearing in ceremony of the new government at Quirinale Palace on Friday.
—AFP ROME: Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte (right) shakes hands with President Sergio Mattarella during the swearing in ceremony of the new government at Quirinale Palace on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait