Premier Giuseppe Conte said
Friday that ArcelorMittal was "assuming a very great
responsibility" in shutting down the former ILVA works in
Taranto and quitting a deal to take over the group, and would
pay damages in court.
He said the government would not let the shutdown continue.
Conte said the decision to stop production in Taranto,
Europe's largest steelworks, "is a clear violation of the
contractual commitments and grave damage to the national
economy.
(ArcelorMittal) will answer for this in a judicial forum both
as far as compensation for damages is concerned and as far as
the urgent procedure is concerned.".
Conte said the government had filed its appeal against
ArcelorMittal's pullout bid and welcomed a probe by Milan
prosecutors into possible evidence of a crime in the planned
exit.
ArcelorMitttal CEO Lucia Morselli told unions it was now a
"crime" to work in the Taranto blast furnace areas, and that
"legally the contract must be dissolved".
"We'd like to have a magic wand but we haven't got one," she
said, reiterating that the lifting of a penal shield against
prosecution for a cleanup of the highly polluting works in the
Puglia city was grounds for the Franco-Indian giant, the world's
largest steel group, to pull out.
In the latest twist, she warned that the shutdown would boost
emissions in Taranto, where emissions have already been linked
to years of higher than normal cancer rates.
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