this post was submitted on 04 Jun 2025
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Europe

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[–] Zacryon@feddit.org 11 points 3 days ago (1 children)

With some good will and good intentions I might be able to understand some of the measures, like penalites for injuring police officers. Imo, people shouldn't harm each other. I wonder, how this will be like in practise though. Officer tries to move protester, who just stands still. Officer fakes fall and injury. "Mamma! La evil protestor has made me la bua!!!"

Anyway, even when trying to find something good in this new bill, in this, I can't:

The law introduces stricter penalties for protest-related offences, including [...] disruptive sit-ins

Especially, if I assume that "stricter" means there were already penalties in place before

[–] talkingpumpkin@lemmy.world 10 points 3 days ago

Basically, peaceful protest (from what I've heard in Italian media, defined as anything that disrupts the regular activities in the prison) is now a felony punishable with incarceration (not penalty cell time, mind you, actual additional years in prison).

This not only applies to actual inmates (whether found guilty or awaiting trial) but also irregular migrants detained in what are called "identification and expulsion centers" (CIE) but are basically just much worse prisons than regular ones.

Note that Italy's prisons (both the "real" ones and CIEs) are quite overcrowded (prisons have 120% occupation on average with peaks of 190% - I don't have data about CIEs but it's a known fact they are often overcrowded).

Prison overcrowding is sadly a historical problem in Italy, but it's gotten worse under Meloni's government (especially when it comes to minors), as they have instituted several new kinds of felonies and aggravating circumstances, without any new investment in prisons.