San Diego Union-Tribune

RESTAURANT OWNERS PROTEST IN ROME

Demonstrat­ors clash with police, demand permanent reopening

- BY FRANCES D’EMILIO

Italian restaurant owners and others angry at having their businesses shut for weeks due to a virus lockdown clashed with police Tuesday during a protest outside Parliament in Rome, while in the south, hundreds of demonstrat­ors blocked a major highway.

One officer was injured in the scuffling, the Italian news agency LaPresse said. RAI state TV said seven protesters were detained by police.

Many in the crowd of a few hundred protesters outside the Chamber of Deputies lowered their masks to shout “Work!” and “Freedom!” Some hurled smoke flares or other objects.

Dining and drinking at restaurant­s, bars and cafes is currently banned through at least April. Only takeout or delivery services are permitted.

Officers charged some protesters after they tried to breach a police cordon. Members of a farright political group joined the business owners at the protest, according to the Italian news agency ANSA.

Among the demonstrat­ors was Hermes Ferrari, owner of a restaurant in Modena, a city in northern Italy. He boasted that he has defied authoritie­s for months in opening his establishm­ent to diners in breach of government decrees.

Even as the fines piled up “I was able to pay my workers,” Ferrari said, by keeping the business open.

Ferrari shouted to fellow restaurant owners at the protest to follow his lead.

“You have to open because nobody can tell you to close,” he yelled.

Italy’s current and previous government­s have allocated millions of euros in aid to categories particular­ly hard-hit by pandemic restrictio­ns.

The business owners insist they need to reopen permanentl­y. Restaurant­s and cafes in regions with lower incidence of cases and less critically impacted hospital ICUs — so-called yellow zones — have been allowed at times to have sit-down dining and drinking before evening.

But a current surge in infections, driven mainly by virus variants, has seen daily new caseloads in the tens of thousands and hundreds of COVID-19 deaths a day now for months. That prompted the Italian government to temporaril­y eliminate the yellow zone designatio­n from before the Easter holidays through the rest of April.

Expressing solidarity with the injured police officer, Interior Ministry Undersecre­tary Carlo Sibilia said “violence won’t be tolerated.”

Still, Sibilia, from the populist 5-Star Movement, called on the government, besides concentrat­ing on the vaccine rollout, to provide “immediatel­y, new compensato­ry funds for economic activities closed or penalized by the recent restrictio­ns.”

Sibilia pressed for government guarantees of loans, a moratorium on mortgage payments, a stop to evictions, and compensati­on for income lost due to COVID-19 measures.

Hours earlier, near the southern city of Caserta, another protest blocked traffic on the A1 Highway. Among the hundreds of demonstrat­ors were those who work in outdoor markets and owners of gyms and restaurant­s, the Italian news agency LaPresse said. Gyms have been closed for months.

Interior Minister Luciana Lamorgese decried as unacceptab­le protests that turn violent or that inconvenie­nce citizens.

 ?? ANDREW MEDICHINI AP ?? Protesters in Rome voice their frustratio­ns after a ban on dining and drinking at restaurant­s and bars cafes through April.
ANDREW MEDICHINI AP Protesters in Rome voice their frustratio­ns after a ban on dining and drinking at restaurant­s and bars cafes through April.

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