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State won't be intimidated, Meloni says on anarchists

Wave of violent action linked to case of jailed leader Cospito

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - ROME, JAN 30 - Premier Giorgia Meloni said Monday that the State would not allow itself to be bullied in relation to a wave of violent actions staged by extremist groups to protest against the plight of jailed anarchist leader Alfredo Cospito.
    "The State must not be intimidated by those who threaten its officials," Meloni said on the sidelines of the presentation of Poste Italiane's 'Polis' digital-services project.
    Cospito, 55, is in poor health after being on hunger striker for over 100 days to protest against being held under the tough 41 bis jail regime usually reserved for mafia bosses.
    Italian diplomatic offices in Berlin and Barcelona were subjected to vandalism last week and anarchist groups were engaged in violent clashes with police in the Trastevere district of Rome on Saturday night.
    A policeman was injured in those clashes and 41 people have been cited over them.
    Anarchists are also thought to have been behind a Molotov cocktail attack on a Rome police station at the weekend.
    These are only the latest in a series of such acts in Italy and abroad linked to anarchists in recent months.
    "This violence and these protests are being repeated and the situation will have to be examined with the maximum attention," said Italy's Chief of Police Lamberto Giannini on Monday, commenting on the Rome clashes.
    "We are investigating to find out who is responsible.
    "Over 40 people have been identified and reported to the judicial authorities".
    The Cospito case and the related protests are set to be among the issues addressed at a meeting of Meloni's cabinet later on Monday.
    On Sunday Meloni's office put out a statement saying that "the State does not make pacts with threat-makers".
    Cospito is serving 20 years for a bomb attack on a Carabinieri police training academy at Fossano near Cuneo in Piedmont in 2006 and a further 10 years and eight months for kneecapping Ansaldo Nucleare Managing Director Roberto Adinolfi in Genoa in 2012. (ANSA).
   

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