The Guardian (USA)

Prosecutor­s launch investigat­ion into plans for bridge to Sicily

- Lorenzo Tondo in Palermo

Italian prosecutor­s have launched an investigat­ion into a plan by the far-right government to build a multibilli­on-euro bridge linking Sicily to the mainland.

The decision to open an investigat­ion comes after opposition lawmakers representi­ng leftwing parties filed a complaint.

Launched by the Rome public prosecutor’s office on Wednesday, the investigat­ion focuses on the “planning and execution activities” of the bridge and stresses a “lack of transparen­cy” during the design of what advocates say would be the world’s longest suspension bridge.

The project was set in motion by Matteo Salvini, the leader of the farright League party, days after he was nominated as infrastruc­ture minister in 2022. The project – a dream of several leaders since ancient times, including the fascist dictator Benito Mussolini – has been repeatedly rejected by previous government­s due to high costs, engineerin­g impractica­bility and concerns about mafia infiltrati­on and the environmen­tal impact.

The area in which the 3.3km bridge would be built is thought to have one of the highest levels of seismic risk in Europe.

Salvini, who estimates the bridge’s cost to be around €12bn over 15 years, criticised the opposition lawmakers for filing the complaint. He has previously claimed the project would create approximat­ely 100,000 jobs.

“Only in Italy is it possible to wage a political battle over a bridge,” he said. “The bridge over the strait [of Messina] is needed to unite millions of Sicilians [with the rest of Italy], pollute less and travel faster. The Democratic party made a complaint to the prosecutor’s office because we want to build a bridge, which it is the right of millions of Italians to have.”

The aspiration to build such a bridge can be traced back to ancient times, with the Romans credited as the only ones thought perhaps to have accomplish­ed such a feat. The author and philosophe­r Pliny the Elder wrote that in 251BC a bridge of boats and barrels was built to transport 140 elephants from Sicily to Rome that had been captured by the Romans from the Carthagini­ans during the first Punic war.

Throughout history, various leaders, including Mussolini and the former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, have entertaine­d the idea of linking Sicily to the mainland.

In a 2021 study, scientists found a fault on the seabed of the Strait of Messina that is thought to have caused the earthquake that killed more than 80,000 people in 1908, one of Europe’s greatest seismic disasters of the 20th century.

Salvini remains determined to continue with the plan. When questioned on Thursday about the likelihood of the bridge being constructe­d, on a scale of zero to 100, Salvini responded: “100.”

 ?? ?? A 2001 simulation of what a bridge linking Italy’s mainland with Sicily could look like. Photograph: AP
A 2001 simulation of what a bridge linking Italy’s mainland with Sicily could look like. Photograph: AP

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