Rome prosecutors on Tuesday
requested confessed killer Vincenzo Paduano, 27, remain behind
bars on stalking and premeditated murder charges.
A hearing will be held sometime this week to determine
whether or not he remains in jail, and an autopsy on the
victim's remains has been ordered.
Paduano was arrested Monday for killing his ex, 22-year-old
university student Sara Di Pietrantonio, in the early hours of
Sunday morning.
He reportedly broke down in tears as he confessed to lying
in wait for Di Pietrantonio at her new boyfriend's home,
following her by car, forcing her off the road, dousing her and
her car with alcohol and lighting it.
She managed to escape on foot, but Paduano ran her down and
set her on fire too.
Her mother, worried because the young woman failed to show
up after texting at 03:00 that she was on her way home, found
her charred body behind some bushes a couple of hours later.
She was still on fire.
Paduano and Di Pietrantonio began dating two and a half
years ago and separated several times, ultimately breaking up
for good last week.
"I couldn't stand it being over," Paduano reportedly told
interrogators.
Since January 2015 Italy has seen 155 femicides, 8,856
battered women cases, and 1,261 cases of stalking - however, 90%
of women and girls don't report their abusers in fear of
reprisal, according to Telefono Rosa (Pink Telephone) women's
hotline president Gabriella Moscatelli.
"The femicide of Sara Di Pietrantonio has shaken the
country - its cruelty and atrocity has left even us aghast,"
said Moscatelli.
"But this is exactly why it's time Italy fielded adequate
tools and resources. We call on (Reform Minister Maria Elena)
Boschi to apply the Istanbul Convention (on violence against
women, which was approved by parliament but is still a dead
letter".
The 2011 Council of Europe Convention aims to prevent and
combat violence against women and domestic violence, protect
victims, and do away with the impunity of perpetrators. As of
May 2016, it has been signed by 42 countries including Italy.
"We are talking about a commitment to...gender education,
gender equality, and fighting sexism in all its forms,"
Moscatelli added.
"There are no more extenuating circumstances for this male
chauvinist culture, with which language is often impregnated,"
she said.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © Copyright ANSA