Meloni: ‘I’ll be called racist, but foreigners are overrepresented in violent crimes against women’

In 2023, there were 5,832 sexual assaults across Italy, and of these, 2,524 were committed by foreigners, i.e., 43.3 percent of the total committed by a representative 8 percent of the population

By Thomas Brooke
4 Min Read

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has brushed off anticipated cries of racism to highlight the stark reality that a disproportionate number of foreign nationals are responsible for violent crimes against women in Italy.

Speaking on the World Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, Meloni said, “Now I will be defined as racist, but there is a greater incidence, unfortunately, in cases of sexual violence, by immigrant people, especially illegally, because when you have nothing, a degeneration occurs which can lead everywhere.”

The Italian premier cited alarming statistics to support her claim. “Foreigners in our country represent 8 percent of the entire population, and in our country in 2023, there were 5,832 sexual assaults, and of these, 2,524 were committed by foreigners, i.e., 43.3 percent of the total committed by a representative 8 percent of the entire population.”

Meloni insisted the issue was a matter of public safety, highlighting steps her government has taken to address crime. “We have sent very important signals,” she said, citing “hiring in the police forces” and new criminal laws designed “to combat the rampant insecurity in our cities.”

She also stressed the need for consequences for offenders. “We need to guarantee the presence of the police, guarantee that when someone commits a crime he pays for that crime, which is another theme we have in Italy,” she stated.

On supporting victims of violence, Meloni underscored the importance of specialized training. “What more can be done for the training of magistrates and police forces who deal with cases of violence against women? It is very difficult to understand how a person reacts or can react. There is a theme of fear, of shame, it is an extremely intimate sphere, so specific training is needed.”

She also acknowledged the strides Italy has made in legislation, praising her administration for concluding “a final law approved unanimously by the political forces a year ago. One of the few things we managed to approve unanimously.”

Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini echoed Meloni’s concerns and honored victims of gender-based violence in a poignant social media post. Sharing a list of women killed by both Italian and foreign aggressors, Salvini emphasized that uncontrolled immigration has exacerbated violence, especially from individuals coming from countries with different cultural norms.

Salvini highlighted the case of Saman Abbas, an 18-year-old killed by her Pakistani family for rejecting an arranged marriage, and Pamela Mastropietro, an 18-year-old brutally murdered by a Nigerian national.

These examples, he argued, underscore the urgent need for tighter immigration policies.

“We must defend our women and protect the values of safety and dignity that our society holds dear. Violence knows no nationality, but recognizing patterns is essential to crafting effective solutions,” Salvini said.

“Defending girls, however, also means recognizing the inevitable and growing incidence of foreign aggressors, a worrying fact which in no way diminishes the Italian cases but highlights the dangerous consequences of uncontrolled immigration, often coming from countries that do not share Western principles and values,” he added.

Share This Article

Polish FM’s wife talks about ‘regulating social media’ and attacks Musk for ‘favoring the far right’

How far does Tusk-led Poland really want to antagonize relations with the U.S.?

By Liz Heflin
5 Min Read

American journalist Anne Applebaum, the wife of Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski, continued to vent her frustration over the U.S. presidential election results in an interview with Redaktions Netzwerk Deutschland. Despite being seemingly obsessed with hating Trump, as well as Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, this time, reports wPolityce, she takes special aim at Elon Musk. 

Still promoting her new book, “Autocracy, Inc: The Dictators Who Want to Run The World,” the author spoke, among other things, about the need to look for “new solutions” and “new alliances” after Trump’s victory.

RND asked how liberals can wrest the idea of ​​”freedom of speech” away from the right. Applebaum replied that it was by calling out the “hypocrisy” of those referred to throughout the interview as called either “far right” or “populist.”

“There’s nothing more hypocritical than Elon Musk saying he wants to practice ‘free speech’ on X, then changing the algorithm to favor the far right,” said the wife of Polish diplomat Radosław Sikorski.

“Elon Musk blocks accounts when foreign leaders or dictators ask him to. He does anything but defend free speech,” she stated.

Asked about Musk calling the German vice-chancellor, Robert Habeck, a fool for advocating regulating social media, Applebaum said: “And he will continue to ridicule him and others until we regulate social media,” insisting that this is not about content moderation or censorship but structuring platforms to make them legally responsible or somehow demonetizing “outrage and anger.”

“Maybe that’s the motto for the next four years: don’t be afraid of extremist American billionaires,” RND stated. 

Regarding Trump, she did focus on how he and other “far right” leaders from Putin to PiS’ Kaczynski run on a campaign of ‘catastrophism,” saying that “they use this image of catastrophe and failure because they want us to sweep away the institutions and replace them with a single leader.”

Before the U.S. election, Sikorski’s wife did a podcast for Bloomberg entitled “Applebaum says Trump 2.0 could be good news for dictators.” An Atlantic article she wrote was titled, “Trump Is Speaking Like Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini. The former president has brought dehumanizing language into American presidential politics.”

She has also made note of Trump’s “praise” for Orbán.

Aside from his foreign minister’s wife’s rage against a Trump administration and any parties that helped him get back to the White House, PM Tusk himself is in no way off the hook, given the dossier of insults his government has hurled at the president-elect. The question is how far Poland wants to antagonize relations with the U.S. 

And just last week, FM Sikorski appointed Bogdan Klich to serve as head of mission in Poland’s embassy in D.C. Klich was formerly senator and defense minister. 

Due to opposition from President Andrzej Duda over his serving as ambassador, Klich will be chargé d’affaires at the embassy. “It is reckless that Mr. Klich, who made completely irresponsible statements about the future President of the United States, Donald Trump, is to become the head of the embassy in Washington,” Duda told reporters.

“I believe it is unwise from a diplomatic standpoint. I don’t know if this is some kind of provocation against President Donald Trump or his collaborators. It’s hard for me to answer that question,” he added.

In an X post from 2022, Klich called the president-elect “unbalanced” and undemocratic: ”The testimony before Congress that #Trump wanted to join the rebels occupying the Capitol is terrifying, but not surprising. Let us remember that it was friendship with this unbalanced politician who did not respect democracy that was supposed to be, according to #PiS, a guarantor of Poland’s security.”

In yet another, he went after Trump for being a “convicted criminal.” 

Share This Article

Bankruptcies in Germany expected to hit 20,000 in 2024

Bankruptcies jump in October compared to last year

By Remix News Staff
2 Min Read

An increase in bankruptcies is expected year-over-year in 2024, with this number expected to hit 20,000 by the end of the year. Figures in October show bankruptcies filed rose by 22.9 percent compared to the same month last year, according to data released by the Federal Statistical Office on Thursday.

“The current wave of insolvencies is the result of a perfect storm of long-term economic weakness and drastically increased costs,” said economist Steffen Müller from the Halle Institute for Economic Research (IWH).

The development is “worrisome,” said the German Chamber of Industry and Commerce (DIHK). “Falling demand from home and abroad, high costs for energy and skilled workers, considerable burdens from taxes and bureaucracy. All of this is putting pressure on business prospects and the financial situation,” said DIHK SME expert Marc Evers.

Last year, there were 17,814 bankruptcies. At the current rate, there will be approximately a fifth more bankruptcies in 2024. However, these numbers need to be put in context. Historically, there were often far more bankruptcies over the last three decades. For instance, during the 2008 financial crisis, there were 33,000 bankruptcies.

A cause for future concern is the high number of companies that say they are “acutely” concerned about their economic existence, which according to the Munich-based Ifo Institute, reached 7.3 percent in an October poll.

However, bankruptcies are not the only issue. Many top firms, including VW, Bosch, Ford Germany, and ZF are enacting massive cuts on their workforce and operations in Germany.

Share This Article