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Covid pass protests criticised
ITALY’S president strongly criticised the violence that has erupted amid protests over the country’s new coronavirus workplace health pass requirement, saying it appeared aimed at its economic recovery.
President Sergio Mattarella spoke out as riot police again clashed with protesters at the port in the northern city of Trieste, at times using water canons to push them back.
The protesters, who have included right-wing agitators in previous episodes, oppose Italy’s Green Pass requirement.
Italy on Friday became the first major European economy to require all workers, from hairdressers to factory workers, to present proof of vaccination, a negative test within the past 48 hours or proof of having recovered recently to enter workplaces.
The pass had already been required to enter indoor venues such as restaurants, museums and theatres, or for long-distance domestic travel. The government says the measure is necessary to ensure workplaces are safe so that
Italy’s economy, which shrank 8.9% last year, can recover. Opponents say the requirement violates their rights and imposes unfair burdens on workers and employers alike.
In a speech opening the academic year at the University of Pisa, Mattarella praised the civic sense of duty that Italians showed when their country became the first in the west to be slammed by the virus.
As a result, Mattarella said, it was “painful and surprising” that violent protests were erupting now, “not during the dark moments when we feared the collapse of the country, but now, today when we see an encouraging economic, social and cultural recovery”.