Cape Argus

Salvini’s stance irks EU and prosecutor­s

Many believe his hardline posture makes him a martyr in Italy

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ITALY’S hardline interior minister, Matteo Salvini, is surfing a wave of public support after his latest showdown over immigratio­n with the EU, a row that also pitted him against a new foe: his country’s own judiciary. The 10-day stand-off ended in southern Catania port at the weekend after EU member Ireland and Albania, an EU aspirant, agreed to take some of the 150 migrants who had been rescued at sea and denied permission by Salvini to come ashore.

Salvini, though, remains under investigat­ion from a Sicilian magistrate for alleged abuse of power and holding people against their will, a challenge which appears to have only strengthen­ed his public appeal and political hand.

“He had tried to do the right thing by us and now they investigat­e him,” 76-year-old pensioner Sebastiano Pittera said outside Catania’s main cathedral after the home minister allowed the migrants to disembark from a rescue ship.

About 650 000 people have reached Italian shores since 2014, mostly from Africa, and the country houses 160 000 asylum-seekers.

The pensioner’s remarks chime with a straw poll of TV viewers on the same day by broadcaste­r Sky, which showed 80% support for Rome’s hard line, and with political experts who say the investigat­ion helps Salvini in his anti-EU campaign.

A survey by pollster SWG, carried out at the end of July, showed 30% backing for Salvini’s right-wing League party, compared with its 17% support at the March general election and outstrippi­ng its bigger coalition partner, the 5-Star Movement, which won almost twice as many seats in parliament.

The stronger Salvini becomes at home, the more pressure he can apply on his EU partners, not only on immigratio­n but over EU fiscal rules, the experts say. The coalition is pushing Brussels to approve a big-spending Italian budget for 2019.

“The prosecutor has done Salvini a gigantic favour. It turns him into a martyr,” said Francesco Galietti, head of political risk consultanc­y Policy Sonar.

Prosecutor Luigi Patronaggi­o, who travelled to Rome on Saturday to question interior ministry officials as part of his criminal investigat­ion, declined to be interviewe­d by Reuters.

He opened his inquiry last week against “unknown persons”, but Salvini later said he was responsibl­e for his ministry’s actions, challengin­g the prosecutor to arrest him.

“I am not afraid of anything; investigat­e, interrogat­e me, arrest me. I am proud to fight to defend our borders and the security of Italians and protect the future for our children,” he tweeted at the height of the stand-off.

Salvini has effectivel­y closed ports to asylum-seekers rescued at sea, demanding his EU partners accept a proportion of Africans who are intercepte­d by rescue ships off Italy.

Though arrivals by boat into Italy are down 81% so far this year, EU nations have not committed to take those rescued at sea. At a meeting on Friday, EU officials failed again to go beyond the bloc’s current reliance on voluntary, ad hoc help.

Lorenzo Pregliasco, head of pollster and political analysis firm YouTrend, said the investigat­ion into Salvini would boost his support, just as former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi used judicial challenges to garner voter sympathy in the 1990s.

Salvini’s political appeal has been nationwide despite his League having been born in Italy’s wealthy north with an avowed aim of splitting from the poor south, a goal since abandoned.

In Catania, even those who are not Salvini supporters believe he should not face criminal investigat­ion for his refusal to allow migrants to come ashore.

“He (the prosecutor) has not done well, and nor has Salvini. But if I were to have to choose between the two, I would choose Salvini. It’s not right that Italy is the only point of disembarka­tion,” said Michela Musumarra, 24, who works in a tourist office in Catania.

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? GREENER PASTURES?: A migrant is helped by Red Cross members after disembarki­ng from Italian coastguard vessel “Diciotti” at the port of Catania, Italy, on Monday.
PICTURE: REUTERS GREENER PASTURES?: A migrant is helped by Red Cross members after disembarki­ng from Italian coastguard vessel “Diciotti” at the port of Catania, Italy, on Monday.

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