The Scotsman

European Parliament president and migrant champion David Sassoli dies

- By MARGARET NEIGHBOUR newsdeskts@scotsman.com

European Parliament president David Sassoli has died aged 65 in Italy.

The former journalist, who worked his way up in politics while defending the downtrodde­n and repressed, died in hospital in Aviano, northeast Italy, early yesterday, his spokesman Robert Cuillo said.

Mr Sassoli had been in hospital since December 26 due to abnormal functionin­g of his immune system.

EU Council president Charles Michel called Sassoli a "sincere and passionate European. We already miss his human warmth, his generosity, his friendline­ss and his smile".

The Italian was first elected at the European Parliament in 2009. He won another term in 2014 and served as the Parliament's vice-president, before taking the top job five years later. He had decided not to run for re-election, with a new president to be appointed later this month.

The socialist had been struggling for months with poor health, yet stayed on the job, where his vigour and easy smile were a trademark.

Mr Sassoli had suffered pneumonia caused by the legionella bacteria in September.

His health steadily declined afterwards and he was forced to miss several important legislativ­e meetings.

He was at his strongest when he took up the cause of migrants who died crossing the Mediterran­ean or dissidents such as Alexei Navalny, who is taking on the Kremlin from a jail cell.

In recent months, his condition had improved enough to preside over a European Parliament session in December to give the EU'S main human rights award, the Sakharov Prize, to Mr Navalny's daughter.

High in symbolism, this act became his political testament.

EU Commission president Ursula von der Leyen wrote on Twitter: "I am deeply saddened by the terrible loss of a great European & proud Italian. David Sassoli was a compassion­ate journalist, an outstandin­g President of the European Parliament and, first & foremost, a dear friend. My thoughts are with his family."

Mr Sassoli is survived by his wife, Alessandra Vittorini, and his children, Livia and Giulio.

Italian premier mario drag hi sent condolence­s on behalf of the Italian government and paid tribute to Mr Sassoli as "a man of institutio­ns, a profound pro-european, a passionate journalist - Sassoli was a symbol of balance, humanity, generosity".

The head of Mr Sassoli's Democratic Party and a longstandi­ng friend, Enrico Letta, praised Mr Sassoli's European passion and vision and vowed to carry them forward, though "we know we're not up to it".

In a tweet, Mr Letta called Mr Sassoli "someone of extraordin­ary generosity, a passionate European" and a man of "vision and principles, theoretica­l and practical".

Roberta Metsola, the Christian Democrat who was set to take over from Mr Sassoli next week, said: "I am heartbroke­n. Europe has lost a leader, I have a lost a friend, democracy has lost a champion."

She said Mr Sassoli "dedicated his life to making the world a better, fairer place".

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