Gulf Today

SALVINI HAS MADE ITALY A JOKE IN THE WEST

- BY SEAN O’GRADY

Matteo Salvini should be ashamed of himself as the man who, more than any other, has driven Italy from civilisati­on to barbarism. Here, in Europe, in our time, we have a return of a form of fascism.

So inured are we to these trends that we sometimes forget the magnitude of Italy’s slide from grace. Once it was a dynamic, fast-growing engine of growth in the old European community: the Treaty of Rome was aptly named. Christian Democracy endowed the country with decades of stable rule, despite frequent rotations of prime minister.

No longer. Now Italy inds Itself THE second biggest joke in the west, after trump.

Not a very funny joke, either. When the French minister for European affairs, Nathalie Loiseau, compares him to the man responsibl­e for Jesus Christ’s judicial murder, she has a point :“mrs alvin ito day, he’s like Pontius Pilate. It’s obscene.” French president Emmanuel Macron is quoted as saying Italy has “decided to no longer follow internatio­nal law, in particular humanitari­an maritime law”.

Dramatic words, undiplomat­ic too, but fair in such extreme circumstan­ces. Salvini is like Pontius Pilate, refusing to take responsibi­lity, washing his hands of blame, cruel and callous.

The rule should be that the humanitari­an response to the imminent loss of life at sea is to preserve that life: save lives irst, Ask questions later. It Is what THE German and Swedish government­s have done, almost alone in Europe, during the Syrian migrant crisis.

Yet Italy, like Greece and Malta, has had to take a disproport­ionate share of the task of policing Europe’s borders, taking in migrants, including refugees, and the Italians been given scant support by their European“partners ”( who also simultaneo­usly DEMAND inancial Austerity From their southern neighbours).

The Italians should do their moral duty, unconditio­nally. However, there is this question of Europe and France also evading duties. The fact that the French have chosen to hide behind EU convention­s about “frontline states” and irst ports of Arrival means that they have laid themselves open to Italian verbal retaliatio­n.

Salvini accuses Macron of hypocrisy: “We do not accept lessons on rights or humanity from Mr Macron.” He claims that France has turned back more than 50,000 mi grants from the italian border“in recent months”. Maybe; but, as the British say, “two wrongs do not make a right”.

France has declined to setup processing centres for migrants, and, when the Italians turned away the Aquarius migrant boat, the French also found excuses not to offer the ship and its desperate occupants a safe berth in France. Pontius Pilate springs to mind again.

Thus is the migrant crisis continuing to rip Europe apart. Just as matter of fact, the failure to exercise political leadership in an EU with porous borders is feeding extremist parties – populists of the right and left. More and more in Europe’s proportion­al representa­tion parliament­s they ARE CATCHING A ifth, MAYBE A THIRD of the vote – enough to block stable coalition government­s from forming and taking the irm Action NEEDED to DEAL with THE Crisis: a vicious circle.

In some countries, notably Viktor Orban’s Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and benighted Italy, the extremists are in power; in Austria, they are in coalition; in the Netherland­s and Denmark, they are knocking at the door. In France, Macron is running scared still of Marine le Pen’s Front National. In Britain, migration-phobia is, evidently, part of the reason for Brexit. The crisis has arisen because almost all of Europe’s government­s have behaved like Pontius Pilate. History will not remember them fondly, either.

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