Now Reading
Italy scraps ‘abuse of office’ crime; opposition cries foul
Dark Light

Italy scraps ‘abuse of office’ crime; opposition cries foul

AFP

ROME—Italy’s magistrates and opposition parties denounced the repeal of the crime of abuse of office on Thursday, calling it a gift to the mafia and corrupt officials.

The decriminalization measure was part of a package of justice reforms that passed the Chamber of Deputies by 199 votes to 102 on Wednesday.

The reform was spearheaded by Forza Italia, the party founded by former premier Silvio Berlusconi who died last year—whose long political career was marked by endless legal cases, and accusations of cronyism and corruption.

Promoters of the reform argued that the law deterred public officials from making decisions involving tenders out of fear of being accused of abuse of office.

They also pointed to the fact that 80 percent of legal proceedings involving the crime were dismissed, and innocent officials disgraced.

Laws retained

The Italian legal code will retain anticorruption laws linked to public contracts, though more restrictively worded.

“Illicit behavior will continue to be prosecuted—there are still instruments in the penal code,” said Mariastella Gelmini, a former minister under Berlusconi who is now in a small centrist party.

Also voting for the reform was the far-right Brothers of Italy and League parties, headed by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, respectively.

Three centrist parties also voted for the reform.

The Democratic Party, the Five Star Movement and the Greens and Left Alliance voted no, holding up posters in parliament Wednesday reading “Impunity for white-collar workers, shame on you!”

See Also

Whistleblowers unprotected

The respected former antimafia prosecutor Federico Cafiero De Raho told the Corriere della Sera daily on Wednesday that citizens reporting public corruption “will no longer be protected by the law.”

“The citizen who must report the violation of the rules of a competition, or going around the waiting lists of a hospital or the illegal concession given to a neighbor to build where he couldn’t will no longer have criminal protection,” he said.

He said that while serving as a prosecutor in Calabria—a poor southern region whose powerful ‘Ndrangheta mafia is notorious for infiltrating public institutions and rigging tenders—“the mayors told us that thanks to the abuse of office (crime), they could say no to the ‘Ndrangheta.’”

“They said they couldn’t break the rules or they would be convicted.”


© The Philippine Daily Inquirer, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Scroll To Top