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Clashes in Florence as Italy’s government eyes new lockdowns

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Rome

Skirmishes between police and protestors in Florence and other Italian cities are due to “violent fringe elements” seeking to exploit the coronavirus emergency, the country’s interior minister said on Saturday.
Protestors have taken to the streets in the past week in cities across Italy, including Rome, Naples and Turin, to criticise a new series of restrictions to stop an alarming rise in coronavirus cases, even as the government considers more stringent measures.
An unauthorised protest late Friday in the Renaissance city of Florence turned violent after police sought to prohibit about 200 people gathered in the city centre from entering the Piazza della Signoria, newspapers reported. Clashes broke out between police in riot gear and protesters, some of whom hurled Molotov cocktails, bottles and rocks, overturning trash bins and breaking security cameras.
“Unfortunately there are violent fringe elements trying to infiltrate the plazas in order to exploit the social and economic discomfort of this difficult moment,” Interior Minister Luciana Lamorgese told Il Foglio newspaper.
Lamorgese said the protestors included young people with criminal records, football hooligans and extreme-right activists who “find an opportunity to exploit legitimate demonstrations.” Florence Mayor Dario Nardella wrote on Facebook the city had undergone a “surreal, terrible and painful night.” “This is not how you protest your grievances, this is not how you voice your suffering,” Nardella wrote.
“Those who scar Florence must pay for what they have done.” In Bologna some 80 kilometres (50 miles) away, a few hundred people also protested on Friday evening, most of them young men, including football hooligans and some giving the fascist salute, La Repubblica daily reported.
– Second lockdown? – The protests come as Italy reported over 31,084 new cases of the virus on Friday, breaking a daily record.
Italy’s government is eyeing a lockdown of the country’s major cities, including Milan, Rome and Naples, to try to slow the alarming rise in infections, news media reported. “We are meeting with experts and considering whether to intervene again,” Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte told Il Foglio.—AP

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