Italy’s PM Meloni sues Gomorrah writer Saviano

Italy’s new prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, is suing one of the world’s best-known journalists, the anti-mafia and human rights campaigner Roberto Saviano, for criminal defamation, over remarks he made regarding her policy towards migrants drowning in the Mediterranean sea.

This is the second time in just under four years that senior government ministers have targeted Saviano, 43, with criminal proceedings, despite a duty to protect him after the Neapolitan Camorra issued a death threat following publication of his book Gomorrah in 2006.

Saviano was charged with criminal libel by the then interior minister Matteo Salvini in 2019 – and is now summoned to court in Rome on Tuesday to answer Meloni’s charges.

Saviano appeared on an Italian television programme, Piazzapulita, after a six-month-old baby from Guinea drowned in the Mediterranean in November 2020. He was one of 111 migrants rescued by a ship sailed by an NGO called Open Arms, but died before he could be taken to Malta for medical attention.

The case became notorious in Italy, after the Roman Catholic newspaper Avvenire showed a video of the baby’s mother weeping: “Where’s my baby? I’ve lost my baby,” and published a searing editorial about the state’s inability to aid migrants at sea.

On the programme, Saviano targeted Meloni, the leader of the neo-fascist Brothers of Italy party, and Salvini, the leader of the right-wing Northern League party.

Saviano, visibly upset by images of the attempted rescue shown, told an interviewer: “All I can say is: they’re bastards – Meloni, Salvini … How is it possible, over such desperation? They have a policy, legitimately, which opposes that of reception [of migrants] – but surely not in the case of an emergency in mid-sea.”

Saviano praised Open Arms for “a heroic act” in trying to save the drowning migrants, adding of Meloni’s declared policy at the time: “How is this thinkable?”

Meloni had argued in July 2019, on the same TV channel, La7, that the law of the sea directed the rescue of drowning people only in “occasional” circumstances, involving ships engaged in “inoffensive passage, as distinct from passage prejudicial to the peace and security of nations”. She said that ships engaged in “the illegal transport of human beings” into Italian waters “are not inoffensive passage”, and that rescue was therefore not a legal requirement.

Meloni, then leader of the opposition, issued her writ for criminal defamation in November last year, under article 595 of the Italian penal code. Although libel would constitute a civil law case in many countries, in Italy it carries – under this article – a potential jail sentence of up to three years.

Meloni became Italy’s prime minister last month after her coalition won a general election. Many thought the case would disappear once she was in government.

Photo: Italian author and screenwriter Roberto Saviano . EPA-EFE/ETTORE FERRARI

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