Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

G-20 leaders draw criticism at protesters’ march in Rome

- ELISABETTA POVOLEDO AND EMMA BUBOLA

Several thousand protesters marched in Rome on Saturday afternoon, dancing, drumming and singing “Bella Ciao,” a song identified with the resistance movement during World War II.

They vented their rage and disenchant­ment with the current world order. “You are the G-20; we are the future,” they chanted as they wound down a Rome avenue, setting off red and green flares.

At least 5,000 people joined the march, according to police officials, although organizers said the number was more than twice that.

This year is the 20th anniversar­y of the Group of Eight major industrial­ized nations summit in Genoa, Italy, that was marred by rioting. It is also a moment of tension between authoritie­s and opponents of the Italian government’s coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts, which have resulted in violent clashes.

“The level of attention is maximum,” said Giovanni Borrelli, a local government official, adding that 5,500 extra law enforcemen­t officers had been deployed this weekend in response to the protests.

Protesters on Saturday represente­d a broad range of groups and causes: students and vaccine skeptics, labor union members and climate change activists, Romans opposing the government health pass required for workers, and representa­tives of groups such as Greenpeace and Amnesty Internatio­nal.

“It’s Oct. 30, and it’s super hot. And that scares me,” said Valeria Cigliana, 18, one of the many people voicing discontent over what they see as inaction on climate change. Wearing a T-shirt on a warm autumn afternoon, Cigliana spoke in front of a banner that read “The alternativ­e to G20 is us.”

That sentiment was expressed time and again by protesters.

Holding a handmade cardboard placard that read “No [money] for instructio­n, no future for the country,” Sara Degennaro, a 20-year-old archaeolog­y student, said the G-20 leaders did not “represent the concerns we face in our future.”

Naida Samona, 39, who traveled from Sicily to attend the protest, said, “In a locked-down city behind closed doors, they decide on our skin.”

Sicily was ravaged by a cyclone in the past week, she noted.

“The climate crisis is happening under my eyes every day,” she said. “We are clearly on the brink of collapse.”

Felipe Gonzalez, 27, who arrived from Spain to join the protest, was dressed in a skeleton costume and held an inflamed paper planet and a banner that read “Capitalism is death.”

“We are destroying the planet, and the leaders do not do anything to address that,” he said.

Some protesters had more optimistic views. Sara Mastrogiov­anni, a librarian from Rome, brought her 8-year-old daughter Ambra to the march.

“I want her to better understand the world,” she said, adding: “And I want her to see that we all have a right to express our ideas. It’s the only way to arrive at solutions.”

His face streaked with green, Mauro Cioci, a 19-year-old high school student, arrived with friends from the Tuscan city of Pistoia to march. Many days, he said, he is pessimisti­c about what lies ahead.

“But on days like today,” he said, looking around at the thousands in the crowd, “I am optimistic.”

 ?? (AP/LaPresse/Cecilia Fabiano) ?? A demonstrat­or shouts Saturday during a march in Rome where protesters voiced their discontent on a wide variety of issues.
(AP/LaPresse/Cecilia Fabiano) A demonstrat­or shouts Saturday during a march in Rome where protesters voiced their discontent on a wide variety of issues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States