(ANSA) - ROME, MAY 12 - The Lower House on Wednesday gave
definitive approval to a decree banning cruise ships from
mooring in Venice.
The decree was passed by 370 votes to 16 with 29 abstentions.
Cruise ships have been stopped from landing in the centre of
Venice for good thanks to the decree the government approved,
Culture Minister Dario Franceschini said last month.
The decree says a plan for the berth of the cruise ships outside
the Venice lagoon must be drawn up and implemented.
In the meantime, big ships will keep docking at the city's
industrial port, which has been the landing site for them since
last December.
There have long been calls for cruise ships to be banned from
Venice because of their impact on the city's delicate historic
buildings and on the lagoon's unique ecosytem.
The drive to ban them intensified after a cruise ship crashed
into a quay in June 2019.
"Everyone who has been to Venice in recent years, whether they
be Italian or a citizen of the world, has been astounded by the
sight of these ships that are hundreds of metres long and as
tall as apartment buildings passing through places as fragile as
the Giudecca Canal or in front of St Mark's," said Franceschini.
"That is why the decision by cabinet to definitively
plan and implement the docking of the ships outside the lagoon,
as UNESCO has long asked Italy to do, is so important". (ANSA).
Venice cruise ship ban passed
Mooring outside lagoon to be set up after long calls