A request for Ilaria Salis to be
moved from prison to house arrest in Budapest, lawyers for the
39-year-old Monza elementary teacher and antifascist on trial
there for attacking two neoNazis on their Day of Honour in
February last year said Wednesday.
Salis, who had been candidated in the European elections for the
Green-Left Alliance (AVS) in a bid to get the long-sought house
arrest, saw her appeal upheld by a second-instance Hungarian
court on Wednesday.
Hungary's prison service said Tuesday Salis can vote in the June
8-9 European elections she is standing in for the AVS, rejecting
her father Roberto's claims are "baseless".
Salis is accused of attempted murder for allegedly being part of
a German-led hammer gang that allegedly targeted neo-Nazis on
their Day of Honour commemorating an SS regiment's "heroic"
resistance against the Red Army in February 2023.
The AVS candidacy was a bid to get Salis released, at least to
the house arrest she has been denied, with her hopeful EP
immunity from prosecution.
The Hungarian prosecutor has asked for a prison term of 11 years
but Salis's father says she risks as long as 24 years in jail on
charges of attempted murder.
The alleged victims of her alleged attack did not reportedly
complain to police.
Salis has been led into court on several occasions on a chain
with her hands and ankles cuffed, sparking shock in Italy,
although Budapest says it is standard procedure for its
prisoners.
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