The Senate on Wednesday approved a
controversial bill introducing the crime of torture with 195
votes in favour, 8 against and 34 abstentions.
The bill was amended with respect to the version approved by
the Lower House in April 2015 and must now return there for
fresh approval.
Before the vote, Luigi Manconi, President of the Senate Human
Rights Committee and the bill's first signatory, said he would
not take part in protest at the way his original draft had been
"turned upside down".
"On the first day of the current parliament, March 15, 2013,
I presented a bill on torture. Over the following years the
text, which followed the deep spirit that animated the
Conventions and international treaties on this subject, has been
turned upside down," he said.
Italy is required to introduce the crime of torture under the
terms of the 1984 UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment, which was ratified by the
Italian parliament in 1988.
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