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ID115090
Title ProperEntitled to fail
Other Title Informationinside Italy's downward spiral
LanguageENG
AuthorCasertano, Stefano
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)October 15, 2011, was the day when recent Italian history changed course. After twenty years of Berlusconian torpor, Italians staged a large demonstration in Rome to voice their woes. It was not so much the "bunga bunga" sex scandals as the tangible perception of financial distress that drove citizens into the streets. Of course, there had been similar events previously in the Eternal City, most notably a recurring "No Berlusconi Day," but none had had such broad participation. There were families, youngsters, pensioners, blue and white collars, union representatives and entrepreneurs, all chanting and yelling. There were also some who wore black helmets and marched in columns, and some parading with a different uniform of hood and a scarf covering the face. It was just a minority, yet it was motivated enough to turn the half-million-people march into a long afternoon of urban warfare. A Carabinieri (military police) van burst to flames, as paving stones rained on police units. Seventy people had to be treated in the hospital. Television viewers were shocked at the Felliniesque image of a boy carrying a woman in his arms, then throwing her to the ground and kicking her head. It was a statue of the Holy Mary, stolen from a nearby church, and it broke into pieces under his assault.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Affairs US Vol. 175, No.2; Jul-Aug 2012: p.66-73
Journal SourceWorld Affairs US Vol. 175, No.2; Jul-Aug 2012: p.66-73
Key WordsItaly ;  Urban Warfare ;  Berlusconi ;  Italian Economy