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French refusal to extradite Genoa G8 militant final

Ex-anticapitalist protester Vincenzo Vecchi to stay in France

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - ROME, MAR 28 - A French court's rejection of Italy's extradition request for a former anti-capitalist militant who has been sentenced to 10 years in jail for criminal damage and affray during the riots that marred the Group of Eight summit in Genoa in 2001 became final Tuesday when prosecutors decided not to appeal against Friday's verdict.
    AFP reported that Lyon prosecutors declined to appeal against a court of appeal in the French city which on Friday rejected the request by the Italian judicial authorities to extradite Vincenzo Vecchi, an 'altermondialist' militant convicted in Italy for the violence at the summit in the northern Italian port city.
    The European arrest warrant was issued in 2016 so that Vecchi, who had been living in France for many years, could return to Italy to serve his 10-year prison sentence.
    In the ruling seen by Agence France Presse, the French judges considered, among other things, that handing Vecchi over to Italy "would represent a disproportionate outrage against respect for his private and family life".
    Militant anti-globalists rioted for days in the Ligurian capital and a protester, Carlo Giuliani, was shot dead by a Carabiniere he was attacking with a fire extinguisher a day before a night-time raid on a school used by protesters which earned Italy a condemnation for torture from a European court and which Amnesty International called the worst suspension of democracy in western Europe since WWII.
    Several police were punished for the police brutality at the July 2001 summit in the northwestern Italian city, which was marred by mayhem by extremists and, according to anti-globalists, agents provocateurs.
    But some of the officers in charge escaped punishment and were promoted. (ANSA).
   

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