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  • 22
    May
    2013
    2:53pm, EDT

    American tourist, 68, stabbed in main square of Florence, Italy

    Fabrizio Giovannozzi / AP, file

    The Duomo in Florence is the fifth largest in Europe.

    By Claudio Lavanga, Correspondent, NBC News

    ROME, Italy - An American tourist underwent emergency surgery after being stabbed in the Italian city of Florence on Tuesday, a hospital doctor and media reports said.

    The 68-year-old was in front of the city’s famed Duomo cathedral listening to a street musician with his wife when someone tried to mug him and he resisted, according to a report by Italian news agency, ANSA.

    The report said he suffered knife wounds to a kidney and a lung.

    Armando Sarti, head of the emergency care department at the Santa Maria Nuova Hospital, said by phone on Wednesday that the man was recovering after an operation.

    “The patient underwent surgery overnight and his condition has now improved and ... seems to be stable, although it is too early to release him from intensive care,” he said.

    A hospital spokesman said the man's kidney was removed during surgery.

    Local media reports in Florence said a 37-year-old Italian man from Bari was arrested shortly after the mugging and remained in custody, although this could not immediately be confirmed with police.

    • More NBC News coverage of Italy

    87 comments

    This was an terrorist attack on an American citizen and the republican house needs to find out what the WH knew about this and if there was any way this could have prevented it.

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  • 12
    May
    2013
    11:10am, EDT

    A saint-making record is also a diplomatic headache for Pope Francis

    Franco Origlia / Getty Images Contributor

    Pope Francis waves to the crowd as he leaves at the end of the Holy Mass and Canonization Ceremony at St. Peter's Square. Sunday.

    Editor's note: This story includes a correction.

    By Claudio Lavanga, Correspondent, NBC News

    ROME -- Pope Francis canonized more than 800 Catholics in Saint Peter’s Square Sunday – the largest number to be elevated to sainthood at once in the history of the Catholic Church.

    The choice of some of the new saints was also striking, touching on the already-fragile relationship between Christianity and Islam.

    The new saints included hundreds of laymen from the southern Italian port town of Otranto who were slain in the 15th century by the invading Ottoman Turkish army after they refused to convert to Islam.

    In 1480, after conquering Constantinople – modern day Istanbul - the Ottoman Sultan Mohammed II planned to invade Rome, and Otranto became his army’s port of entrance into Italy.

    The local population fought back in a week-long siege, putting up a brave but hopeless resistance. When Ottoman soldiers finally overrun the town, they were ordered to kill every man over the age of 15 who refused to convert to Islam.

    More than 800 resisted, locking themselves up into the town’s Cathedral. Their ringleader, local shoemaker Antonio Primaldo, was first to be beheaded. According  to local legend, his headless body remained standing until the last of his fellow townspeople was killed.

    Since then, Primaldo and his townsfolk, who chose to die rather than betray their Catholic faith, have been hailed as martyrs. Their bones and skulls – proudly on display behind glass walls in the Cathedral of Otranto – are well-known Catholic relics and a popular pilgrimage destination.

    But the choice to highlight their sacrifice may put a strain on the already fragile relationship between the Catholic Church and Islam.

    Ever since his election, Pope Francis has called for greater dialogue between Christianity and other religions, in particular Islam. And so far, he has acted on that promise. He washed the feet of a young Muslim woman jailed in a juvenile prison on Holy Thursday, and reached out to the many “Muslim brothers and sisters” during his first Good Friday procession.

    So why risk creating yet another inter-faith row with a celebration which some in the Muslim world may be seen as a provocation?

    The answer is that it wasn’t Pope Francis’ choice in the first place. The decision to canonize the hundreds of Otranto martyrs was rubber-stamped by his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, on Feb. 11 - the same day he announced his resignation.

    Slideshow: The election of Pope Francis

    /

    Cardinals from around the world gathered in the Vatican to elect the next leader of the Roman Catholic Church.

    Launch slideshow

    It was a departing act of a pontiff that had become concerned about the mounting discrimination suffered by Christian minorities living in the Middle East in the wake of the Arab spring.

    Pope Francis shares his predecessor’s concern. “By venerating the martyrs of Otranto” he said at Sunday’s canonization mass, “We ask God to protect the many Christians who in these times, and in many parts of the world, are still victims of violence”.

    The Vatican’s relationship with Islam took a nosedive in 2006 when Benedict – now the Pope Emeritus - enraged Muslims by quoting the 14th-century byzantine emperor Manuel II Palaiogolos, who said: “Show me just what Muhammad brought that was new and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached.”

    It was an uncomfortable parting gift for his successor, who now faces an uphill struggle to rekindle ties with Islam.

    Related: 

    • Pope condemns 'slave labor' conditions in collapsed Bangladesh factory

    591 comments

    So, we would offend Muslims by reminding them that THEY killed over 800 in the 15th century because THEY wanted to force Catholics to convert to Islam or die? Offend away.

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  • 6
    Mar
    2013
    10:59am, EST

    American cardinals fall silent amid Vatican concern at media leaks

    There will be no more press conferences from U.S. Cardinals in Rome. A series of press briefings were a popular way of providing information, but provoked ire in some quarters.  NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    By Anne Thompson and Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

    VATICAN CITY – American Roman Catholic cardinals canceled their program of daily media briefings Wednesday amid concern at the Vatican over leaks ahead of the conclave that will elect the next pope.

    None of the 11 cardinals from the United States will be giving any interviews until after the conclave ends, according to Sister Mary Ann Walsh, media officer for the US Conference of Catholic Bishops.

    Some 153 cardinals are gathering to discuss the new leader for the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics following the Feb. 11 decision of Benedict XVI to abdicate on Feb. 28.

    Slideshow: Pope Benedict XVI's departure

    /

    The pope delivers his final audience in St. Peter's Square as he prepares to stand down.

    Launch slideshow

    A daily briefing planned for reporters at the North American College, a seminary near the Vatican, was canceled hours before it was due to take place.

    The open approach of the U.S. cardinals in recent days had been in contrast to the limited media contact from other quarters of the church, and their comments have been widely reported.

    Walsh said concerns had been expressed at Wednesday morning’s Congregation of Cardinals meeting at the Vatican about leaks of confidential discussions at meetings that precede the start of the conclave.

    A Vatican official added that there was a tradition of media silence among during sede vacante – the period during which the church chooses a new pope.

    Meanwhile, there was still no date set for the start of the conclave – the process of repeated secret ballots by which cardinals elect the new pontiff.

    The Cardinals begin meeting next week and a big item on their agenda is to choose a start date for the conclave. Meanwhile the man who was Pope began his new life of prayer and meditation. NBC's Anne Thompson reports from the Vatican.

    Of the 115 cardinals eligible to take part and who will attend, all but two had arrived in Rome by Wednesday, Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi announced.

    A cardinal from Poland was expected to arrive later Wednesday, while another from Vietnam was due Thursday, Lombardi told reporters.

    He said the theme of Wednesday’s pre-conclave discussion among cardinals had been "the church in the world today" and "new evangelization."

    A profile of the next pope also began to emerge as the cardinals discussed what they expect from him, Lombardi said.

    Related:

    Europe's most Catholic country seeks modern pope

    'Jesus Christ with an MBA': Cardinals' differing hopes for next pope

    Full coverage of papal abdication from NBC News

    30 comments

    "We're going to be electing a Pope here, and how we do it is none of the little peoples' business. If we made the process as public as a U.S. political election, the little people might not believe that the Pontiff gets invested with mystical powers." Great plan.

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  • Updated
    1
    Mar
    2013
    8:40am, EST

    Vatican: Cardinals will meet Monday to discuss papal conclave date

    Now that Benedict XVI has officially stepped down from his reign as pope, the speculation about who will be next begins. NBC's Keir Simmons reports on some of the frontrunners, including Cardinal Scola of Milan and Cardinal Turkson of Ghana.

    By Claudio Lavanga and Carlo Angerer, NBC News

    ROME -- Roman Catholic cardinals will next week take the first step toward setting a date for a conclave that will elect a new pope, Vatican officials confirmed Friday.

    The cardinals will begin informal discussions of church issues, known as "general congregations," at 9:30 a.m. local time (3:30 a.m. ET) on Monday, a Vatican press spokesman said.

    At the top of their agenda will be the announcement of a date for the cardinals to enter the conclave – a closed, secret voting session held inside the Sistine Chapel that continues until they agree on a new leader for the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics.

    General congregations are the preliminary talks at which cardinals identify the key tasks facing the church, prior to the conclave at which they choose the best candidate suited to those tasks.

    The first general congregation will take place in the Vatican’s Paul VI hall, according to Cardinal Angelo Sodano, Dean of the College of Cardinals. 

    A second will take place at 5:00 p.m. local time (11 a.m. ET), he told reporters.

    The Vatican's announcement came a day after the papacy of Benedict XVI formally ended with his departure by helicopter to a temporary residence at Castel Gandolfo.

    It means the church is without a leader until the conclave has chosen a successor. 

    Benedict XVI is now officially known as the pope emeritus.

    Related:

    Cheers and tears as Benedict flies to temporary home in hilltop town

    Inside Castel Gandolfo, Benedict's spectacular temporary retirement home

    How the pope's retirement package compares to yours

    This story was originally published on Fri Mar 1, 2013 7:26 AM EST

    42 comments

    Papal Enclave Agenda: 1) Vote for new Pope. 2) Hide more pedophiles. 3) Keep women pregnant in the kitchen. 4) Deny gay rights. 5) High fives all around and break for lunch.

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  • 11
    Feb
    2013
    7:13am, EST

    Pope Benedict XVI, citing deteriorating strength, will step aside Feb. 28

    Mentioning no specific ailment other than 'advanced age,' Pope Benedict's parting came as a shocking announcement for many – except for the Pope's brother, who said he knew Benedict had been thinking about stepping down for months. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    By Claudio Lavanga, Erin McClam and Alastair Jamieson, NBC News

    Updated at 2:57 p.m. ET: Pope Benedict XVI shocked Catholics around the world Monday by saying that he no longer had the mental or physical strength to carry out his job and would become the first pope since the Middle Ages to give up the title.

    The pope, speaking in Latin, informed a small gathering of cardinals at the Vatican of his decision. The abdication will take effect on Feb. 28, and cardinals could gather as early as March to elect a successor.

    Benedict, 85, said later in a statement that the papacy required “strength of mind and body,” and that both had deteriorated in recent months. He said that he had made the decision “after having repeatedly examined my conscience before God.”

    The abdication closes an eight-year pontificate widely recognized as deeply conservative. The church also spent much of Benedict’s term grappling with sexual abuse scandals.

    The pope’s decision shot quickly through the dioceses of the world, and some of the 1.2 billion faithful — from laity to the very cardinals who were in the room — expressed profound surprise.

    “I’m as startled as the rest of you and as anxious to find out exactly what’s going on,” Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York, said on TODAY. “Except for prayer, I don’t know what else to do. I’ll await instruction with everyone else.”

    In an announcement that stunned Catholics around the world, Pope Benedict XVI revealed he will be stepping down from his position, citing failing strength. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports on his eight years as pope.

    Monsignor Oscar Sanchez of Mexico, who was at the Vatican for the announcement, was quoted by The Associated Press as saying that the cardinals “remained shocked and were looking at each other.”

    President Barack Obama said in a statement that he and first lady Michelle Obama “warmly remember our meeting with the Holy Father in 2009, and I have appreciated our work together over these last four years.”

    Canon law says that the pope may relinquish his office provided that the decision is “made freely and properly manifested” — language to which Benedict appeared to allude in his statement.

    Because there is no one in the church higher than the pope to accept a resignation, the renouncement is technically an abdication.

    The last pope universally recognized to have abdicated was Celestine V, who was elected in July 1294 and gave up the job five months later after feeling that he was being manipulated by the King of Sicily and Naples. He was declared a saint in 1313.

    During a period of division known as the Great Western Schism, from 1378 to 1415, there were three rival claimants to the papacy. The legitimate pope, Gregory XII, abdicated to make way for an undisputed pope.

    Benedict’s abdication clears the way for the College of Cardinals to gather at the Vatican to elect a successor, a process in which the United States is expected to have unprecedented sway.

    The U.S. will have 11 votes, almost 10 percent of the electorate and the second-largest voting bloc behind Italy, which will have 28 votes. Germany, the home country of the current pope, will have six.

    It appears highly unlikely that an American will be elected Benedict’s successor. Dolan, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, is considered a longshot for the job.

    The archbishop of New York, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, explains the "mixed emotions" he feels about the news that Pope Benedict XVI will resign on February 28, saying he feels a "special bond" with the pope.

    Among the cardinals mentioned as possible successors are Angelo Scola of Italy, Peter Turkson of Ghana, Marc Ouellet of Canada and Francis Arinze of Nigeria and Christoph Schoenborn of Austria.

    Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington, told reporters that the cardinals would be looking for an “articulate voice” for the church and would keep in mind Benedict’s tradition.

    “He has called all of us to focus on the spiritual mission of the church, proclaim the gospel and once again begin this personal relationship all of us are capable of having with God back to the foreground,” he told reporters at St. Matthew’s Cathedral.

    Benedict, then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, was elected April 19, 2005. He was the 265th pope and the successor to John Paul II, who had served since 1978 and was wildly popular among the faithful.

    Born in 1927, he had been conscripted into the Hitler Youth during World War II, but he never joined the Nazi Party, and his family opposed the regime of Adolf Hitler, Reuters reported.

    Ratzinger, before being elevated to pope, headed the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which oversees church doctrine. His strict approach to theology earned him the nickname “God’s Rottweiler.”

    NBC New Vatican analyst George Weigel gives his thoughts on Pope Benedict XVI's announcement of his resignation, and explains how a new pope will be selected.

    He sought to rekindle the faith of Catholics and bring them closer to the teachings of the church. He worried that too many had strayed, and said in 2005 that the parts of the world suffered from “a strange forgetfulness of God.”

    During Benedict’s papacy, thousands of people came forward to report that priests had raped or molested them as children and that bishops had covered it up.

    It was Benedict’s old office that dealt with abuse cases, yet Benedict never admitted failure himself or of the Vatican, and never punished bishops who ignored or covered up the abuse.

    “He could go around and minister to victims, which he did, and I think that was a brave and profound thing to do, but he couldn’t change the definitive elements of the Catholic Church that enable abuse,” said Michael D’Antonio, author of “Mortal Sins: Sex, Crime, and the Era of Catholic Scandal.”

    “He would have had to pick up the church and drag it into the 21st century, but you know he could have,” he said. “He might have died trying, the stress of that might have been even more profound, he would have faced tremendous intrigue and opposition but I suspect that instead he may go down in history as a caretaker, an interpersonally kind pastor who made no mark when he had the chance to.”

    Bill Donahue, president of the Catholic League, said that Benedict had tackled the abuse problem much more aggressively than John Paul II, who he said had let the issue languish.

    “Nobody clearly did more to counter this problem in the Catholic Church” than Benedict, Donahue said. “I think history will treat him very well in terms of dealing with the problem.”

    Benedict continued the outreach to Jews of his predecessor, John Paul II, and was the second pope to enter a synagogue. His relationship with Muslims, however, was much more complex.

    He generated outrage among Muslims when, in 2006, he gave a speech in Germany and quoted a Byzantine emperor who had characterized some of the Prophet Muhammad’s teachings “as evil and inhuman.”

    Benedict also stirred an uproar in 2009 when, en route to Africa and discussing the AIDS epidemic with reporters, he said that the distribution of condoms “increases the problem” rather than preventing the spread of the disease.

    A year later, in an interview, he said that a male prostitute who used a condom to avoid passing HIV to his partner might be taking a step toward more responsible sexuality.

    James Salt, executive director of Catholics United, which claims 40,000 members and wants the church to focus more on social justice and poverty, praised the abdication as a “sign of humility from the aging Holy Father” and encouraged the church to reflect on the “challenges of this papacy.”

    He suggested that the church open itself to a pope from Latin America or Africa.

    Slideshow: The life of Pope Benedict XVI

    Joseph Ratzinger became Pope Benedict XVI in 2005. Look back at his life from childhood through his papacy.

    Launch slideshow

    NBC News staff writer Miranda Leitsinger, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related:

    'Heavy heart but complete understanding': Pope's resignation stuns leadership

    Archbishop Dolan of New York: I'm startled, anxious at pope's resignation

    From prisoner of war to pontiff: A timeline of Benedict XVI's life

    US will have unprecedented voice in electing new pope

    1491 comments

    When is the last time this has happened? Seems in my lifetime it was always "feet first" retirement. Now, if we could only get half of congress to do the right thing.

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  • 29
    Jan
    2013
    4:50am, EST

    Italy's comeback kid Berlusconi defends wartime fascist Mussolini

    Vincenzo Pinto / AFP - Getty Images

    Italy's former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, seen giving a speech during a campaign rally in Rome Friday, appears to have shrugged off recent scandals.

    By Claudio Lavanga, Producer, NBC News

    ROME — He is the comeback kid of Italian politics, but Silvio Berlusconi's attempt to revive his career is under the spotlight after he defended fascist wartime leader Benito Mussolini at a ceremony for victims of the Nazi Holocaust. 

    The former prime minister said Mussolini's decision to echo Nazi Germany's anti-Jewish laws had been his "worst fault" as a leader "who in so many other ways did well."


    He said: "It is difficult now to put yourself in the shoes of people who were making decisions at that time. Obviously the government of that time, out of fear that German power might lead to victory, preferred to ally itself with Hitler's Germany rather than opposing it."

    The remarks, given to reporters in Milan on Sunday, prompted outrage from many quarters in Italy and overseas.

    “He has lost the plot," said David Patsi, president of the Italian school Dante Alighieri in Jerusalem and whose father was killed in a concentration camp. "He is an idiot. But I am not surprised. Sometime he even reminds me of Mussolini."

    He added: "But I don’t think he is the problem. The problem is that a large number of Italians agree with him.” 

    That helps explain why Berlusconi could still make his comeback, despite a track record would have forced almost any other politician to retire from public life.

    In November 2011, he was forced to resign as prime minister after it became clear that his denial of the economic crisis was bringing Italy to the brink of disaster.

    In October last year, he was sentenced to four years in prison for an epic offshore tax fraud, put off pending appeals to higher courts.

    And, if that weren't enough, he is still on trial for allegedly paying an underage exotic dancer for sex.

    His popularity hit an all-time low and the 76-year-old with a net worth of almost $6 billion -- according to Forbes magazine -- might have been expected to retire to one of his many mansions.

    But he was simply waiting for the chance to strike back in the flamboyant style that won him three terms as prime minister.

    Following the resignation of Mario Monti -- the technocratic prime minister who replaced him in 2011 promising to reinvigorate Italy's languishing economy -- Berlusconi has done what he does best: He carpet-bombed the Italian media with guest appearances, clocking up an impressive 63 hours of airtime in only 21 days.

    In essence, it's as if during the recent U.S. presidential election, former president George W. Bush was given more airtime than Barack Obama and Mitt Romney combined.

    Crisis 'wasn't my fault'
    Seems inconceivable, but then Italy has always been an exception in the Western world, and flamboyant and media-friendly Berlusconi, even as an outsider, draws a bigger audience than his closest competitors combined.

    Officially, Berlusconi is not actually running as a candidate prime minister -- because this was the price it took to persuade the Northern League party to join Berlusconi's People of Freedom party in a coalition.

    But a good result in the elections could mean that all bets are off.

    Karima el Marough, better known as "Ruby the Heart Stealer," was called to testify over allegations that former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi paid to have sex with her when she was still a minor. NBC's Claudio Lavanga reports.

    “Italy’s economic crisis wasn‘t my fault. It was the consequence of the wider international crisis,” a defiant Berlusconi recently told a TV host, before he refused to apologize for previously denying the extent of the crisis.

    It would seem to be an uphill task for Berlusconi to win the premiership for a fourth time -- in polls his coalition is trailing the center-left Democratic Party by at least 12 points.

    But, after his TV onslaught, Berlusconi's bloc saw its poll rating rise by 3 percentage points.

    Berlusconi 'very clever'

    Italians are tired of painfully high unemployment rates, rising taxes, tax-evasion clampdowns and plummeting spending power.

    But it remains to be seen whether they really believe Berlusconi when he claims that the economic crisis wasn't his fault and that his tax-cutting strategy is the solution.

    “Berlusconi has been very clever. He stepped aside when the new government introduced very unpopular austerity measures and has come back in the limelight only now, saying that the cure was worse than the illness,” Maurizio Caprara, a journalist for the daily Corriere della Sera, said.

    “Now he is trying to rally again his troops. Many became disillusioned following his many scandals, but many, as the polls show, may decide to give him one more try,” he added.

    Monti recently called Berlusconi the "Pied Piper of Hamelin," who “leads the mice to drown in the river, having fooled Italians three times already.”

    And yet, at least according to his recently rising popularity, many Italians seem to find his tune irresistible.  

    Related:

    Italy's 'bunga bunga' man Berlusconi, 76, unveils girlfriend, 27

    Witness: Italian ex-PM Berlusconi hosted strippers dressed as nuns

    Woman dressed as burlesque Obama for Berlusconi, court told

    97 comments

    He is a buffoon, how can you hold a clown responsible for being a fool? He makes Italy even more of a laughing stock than they deserve! The idea that this guy has the backing of any party is an embarrassment to the country!

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  • 5
    Oct
    2012
    5:38am, EDT

    Snacking tourists fined after Rome declares 'War on the Sandwich'

    Andreas Solaro / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Tourists seek shade from the sun on the steps of Piazza di Spagna in central Rome on July 30.

    By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

    ROME -- It’s one of the highlights of any trip to Rome: Sitting on the Spanish Steps eating a real Italian gelato. But on Oct. 1, it became a potentially costly vacation memory.

    The mayor of the "eternal city" has made it illegal to eat snacks and junk food on or around its monuments.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Tourists will still be allowed to eat while they walk, but stop with a bag of chips in your hands or sit down while chewing on your panino, and you are eligible for a fine of 25 to 500 euros ($32 to $650). An Italian daily newspaper dubbed it the “War on the Sandwich.”

    Dressed in their white and blue uniforms, local police officers Alessio Valentini and Magdi Adib were on patrol Thursday looking for anyone daring to flout the new law.

    They shoved away a group of young Dutch tourists who sat next to the Colosseum to enjoy their pizzas. “Go, go,” Adib told the bemused boys, who didn’t know which crime they had committed.

    'Out of control'
    The officers told NBC News they had fined seven tourists -- all foreigners -- since the morning. The standard penalty was 50 euros ($65).

    “We could have given tickets to many more, but you have to apply some reason,” Adib said. “If they drink a bottle of water it’s OK, but if they camp out, we fine them.”

    “Eating on monuments can really get out of control,” he added. “Once I caught a group of tourists who set a table on the Spanish Steps, with table cloth and cutlery! This has to stop.”

    Andreas Solaro / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Tourists enjoy ice cream in central Rome on July 30, before the new decree came into force.

    Valentini agreed with his partner. “I once caught a tourist chopping a watermelon in the fountain at Piazza Navona,” he told NBC News. “Now we have a way to stop them.”

    Rome's leaning Colosseum has experts worried

    A young German tourist, who was sitting nearby and eating a sandwich, couldn’t believe it at first when told about the decree.

    “What? It’s full of food carts around here … where am I supposed to eat?” he said.

    Tourists sitting on the Spanish Steps shared his bewilderment.

    Both a Chinese tourist eating ice cream from a cup and a Romanian digging from a bag of chips while admiring the sunset over Via Condotti pointed out that there were no signs explaining the new law and asked how were they supposed to know about the rule.

    When asked about this complaint, three local policemen patrolling the area told NBC News that there was no need for a sign.

    “It’s common sense,” one officer said. “You can’t dirty such a beautiful and historical monument with ice cream and bread crumbs just because you can sit on it.”

    They too had handed out many fines, but worried that in the end the penalty would not be paid.

    “Most of them are foreigners, so I doubt they will pay the ticket before they go back to their countries," the officer said. "It’s more likely they’ll keep it as a souvenir."

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Tourists fined as Rome declares 'War on the Sandwich'
    • Venezuela vote: Oil wealth to trump calls for change?
    • Scientists: Great Barrier Reef coral seeing 'major decline'
    • Saudi Arabia's Ikea catalog is missing something: women
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    450 comments

    “It’s common sense,” one officer said. “You can’t dirty such a beautiful and historical monument with ice cream and bread crumbs just because you can sit on it.” This officer should take a walk through the nearby district of Trastevere to see all the graffiti, dog …

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  • 26
    Sep
    2012
    4:14pm, EDT

    Italy rocked by corruption, drug scandals

    By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

    ROME – Franco Fiorito, a member of the regional council of Lazio, the Italian region that includes Rome, was known ironically among his friends as Batman. It was a nickname he earned when he managed to fall off a Harley Davidson still on a kickstand.

    But rather than a superhero, he looks like an actor out of “The Sopranos” with his slicked-back hairstyle, striped double-breasted suit, bulky figure and bigger than life personality.   

    Fiorito, a member of Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party (PDL), was accused earlier this month of embezzling at least $1.5 million of public funds to pay for everything from oyster dinners, to hotels, aides and apartments.

    Fiorito, who has since resigned, fought the allegations by telling investigators that fellow party members behaved worse than he did – putting the spotlight on regional president Renata Polverini.

    The scandal proved too much for Polverini, who resigned on Monday, and damaged the reputation of Berlusconi’s already weakened party.

    She denied allegations of any wrong-doing on her part, but admitted that the scandal had exposed infighting within the PDL party and had stripped the regional council of some legitimacy.   

    But most importantly, it stands as a symbol of a political class that has lost touch with the electorate, and carries on living a lavish lifestyle financed with public funds at a time when most Italians struggle to get by.

    “Why did they call him Batman? He sounds more like the joker to me,” said Carla Cecchini, a receptionist from Rome who was waiting at a bus stop in Rome on Wednesday morning. “He is not even that smart. We know they are all thieves, but this guy didn’t even try to hide it. He is shameless.”


    Toga party photos
    Apparently Fiorito is not as brazen as another member of the regional council.


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    Only days ago, pictures emerged of a lavish toga party organized in 2010 by Carlo de Romanis, a 32-year- old member of Berlusconi’s party.  

    Romanis organized the party to celebrate his election to the regional council and his return to Rome after eight years working at the European Parliament in Brussels.

    The theme of the party, “Ulysses returns home and fights his enemies,” was taken seriously by his 2,000 guests. They showed up dressed up as ancient Roman maidservants, gladiators, patricians in laurel wreaths and minotaurs, drinking from ancient-looking jars. Pictures emerged of guests feeding each other grapes, as well as men wearing pig masks fondling female guests.

     A party worthy of the last days of ancient Rome, when the narcissistic and decadent elite kept enjoying a lavish lifestyle while the empire was falling apart all around them.

    The similarities might not be so far-fetched. Even though Carlo “Ulysses De Romanis” insists the $30,000 he paid for the party came from his own pocket, it still upset many Italians who are tired of seeing the political elite enjoying the lifestyle of emperors while they feel the strain of the recent austerity measures and the economic crisis.

    Alex Biasco, a DJ in Milan, told NBC News that the Italian public is partly to blame as well. He said they like to complain about the widespread abuse of office, without acting to bring about any changes.

    “Look at the Spanish: they fill the squares in Madrid to demand the resignation of unfit politicians,” said Biasco.  “While in Italy we have had politicians who stole for decades, who are corrupt to the core…and yet, Italians only fill their squares when their soccer teams win.”

    Luca Orsenigo, a 38-year-old telecom manager from Milan, had a similar complaint. 

    “We got to this point because we deserve it. Instead of going to prison, these people are invited to defend themselves on talk-shows," said Orsenigo, referring to the many TV appearances Fiorito enjoyed after the scandal broke. "As long as these people go unpunished, nothing will change”

    Cocaine bust
    More proof of widespread corruption among Italian governmental institutions came on Tuesday, when the head of the postal service in the Italian Senate was arrested for cocaine trafficking, police said.

    Orlando Ranaldi, 53, is accused of being part of a criminal gang 10 Italians and Albanians who ran a cocaine ring in southern Rome. While not a politician, Orlando held a managerial position in Italy’s upper house of parliament.  

     "I only hope that he didn't push inside the Senate," Senator Felice Belisario of the Italy of Values party told Reuters.

    Roberta, a housewife from Rome who gave only her first name, jumped to her own conclusions.   

    “They are all living the high life, and I can’t believe the guy wasn’t doing ‘favors’ to the political elite,” she said.  

    The recent revelations of Champagne-filled toga parties, embezzlement of public funds and cocaine heists have only contributed to widening the gap between the political elite and the electorate. 

    “Once again we are showing the world how corrupt we are.  But Italians, thank God, are not all like Batman and Ulysses,” Alessandra Scolaro, a website designer and member of the People of Freedom party from the Veneto region, told NBC News. “The best Italians are those who wake up every morning and go to work. And those who make us proud by raising the bar of Italian creativity in the arts and fashion industries. This is the real Italy.”

    While Italians aren’t likely to descend to the squares to protest and try to get rid of the political class the hard way, they will have the opportunity to bring change in the general elections next spring. 

     

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    51 comments

    These 1%ers are going too destroy this World if continued to be left unchecked....

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  • 14
    Sep
    2012
    6:25pm, EDT

    Lebanese hope pope can 'bring peace' to the region

    Mohamed Azakir / Reuters

    Billboards and flags erected by Hezbollah depicting Pope Benedict XVI decorate a bridge on the main airport road in Beirut in preparation for the pope's arrival tomorrow. The billboard reads: "Hezbollah welcomes the Pope to the country of co-existence."

    By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

    BEIRUT – Pope Benedict XVI was all over Beirut before he even landed there. 

    Billboards, posters and flags bearing his image pave line the road that connects Rafic Hariri International Airport to the city center. “Welcome,” the signs say, in both Arabic and French, the two predominant languages here. 

    But among all the greetings, one stands out. 

    Hanging from a bridge next to a picture of a smiling Pope Benedict, one billboard in French reads: “Hezbollah welcomes the pope to the country of co-existence." 


    Lebanese people of all faiths - from Muslims, to Greek Orthodox and Christians - welcome the visit of Pope Benedict XVI to Beirut.

    Hezbollah, the Shiite Islamic political and paramilitary party classified by the United States as a terrorist group, is the most powerful of a myriad of religious groups in a country that has become an example of religious co-habitation after decades of sectarian violence and civil war.


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    For the 85-year-old pope, Hezbollah’s blessing was probably just what the Vatican was praying for.  

    With civil war still raging only a few miles across the border in Syria, and the recent wave of violence in the Middle East caused by the anti-Islamic video produced in the United States, this is probably the most sensitive trip ever attempted by the pope.

    Largest Christian community in the Middle East
    The choice of Lebanon for the pope’s fourth trip to the Middle East since 2005 is strongly symbolic. 

    About 40 percent of Lebanon’s population of 4.1 million is Christian, making it the country with the largest Christian community in the Middle East.  

    Ali Hashisho / Reuters

    A Muslim Hezbollah supporter crosses a street as people wait for the car carrying Pope Benedict XVI outside Beirut international airport on Friday.

    It’s also an example of how Sunni, Shiite and Christians can not only live side by side in peace, but also share power in the government – an aspect the pope has not missed.  

    “The successful way the Lebanese all live together surely demonstrates to the whole Middle East, and to the rest of the world that, within a nation, there can exist cooperation between the various churches,” Benedict said upon his arrival at Beirut’s airport Friday. 

    In downtown Beirut, Lebanese from all religious backgrounds seem to be united in their excitement about his visit. 

    “I think the pope’s visit is going to make a big difference, especially in the view of what’s happening these days, like the protests,” said Mustafa Zaher, a Muslim student. “He is coming for peace and bringing Muslims and Christians closer, that’s the important thing. Peace… we need peace.”

    Nancy Sayah, a Maronite Christian agreed: “We are very excited about the pope’s visit because it brings all Christians together from the political parties, as well as the Muslims,” said Sayah. “It’s a peaceful visit and hopefully will bring peace for the region.”

    Danger zone
    Instead of spreading his usual message of peace from the safety of a Vatican window, this time the pope will deliver it only a few miles from a major conflict zone. The border with neighboring Syria is only 30 miles from Beirut, and expectations are mounting about what Benedict might say to try to ease violence there. 

    Mohamed Azakir / Reuters

    Banners erected by Hezbollah depicting Pope Benedict XVI as well as Lebanese and Vatican flags decorate a main airport road in Beirut. These banners read:

    While it is widely expected that he’ll wait until the open-air mass he’ll lead on Beirut’s waterfront on Sunday to make his most vocal calls for peace in Syria, Benedict already told reporters on the plane from Rome that weapons imported into the war-torn country are “a grave sin.”     

    “The import of weapons has to finally stop,'' Benedict told journalists on the plane, according to Reuters. “Without the import of arms the war cannot continue. Instead of importing weapons, which is a grave sin, we have to import ideas of peace and creativity.”

    He also told reporters that the Arab Spring uprisings against authoritarian regimes were "a positive thing. There is a desire for more democracy, more freedoms, more cooperation and renewal.”

    But the uprisings could also be a double-edge sword for Christians in the Middle East. 

    While the Arab Spring has brought a glimpse of democracy in countries that were run by dictators, the Islamist governments that replaced them have so far raised cause for concern for Christians. 

    For instance, Syrian Christians had enjoyed relative religious freedom under President Bashar al-Assad’s secular regime, but now they are reporting increasing waves of sectarian violence and discrimination, and are starting to flee en masse. 

    Coptic Christians in Egypt have similarly complained about being discriminated against and being the target of several attacks on their churches. (ADD LINK) 

    “The visit to Lebanon is important because it shows Christians they still matter, they are part of this Middle East,” said Tony Restom, a Greek Orthodox from Beirut. “So for him to make a stop in Lebanon does mean a lot for Christians – and does show Muslims that the world and the Vatican still keep an eye on this region.” 

    Violence in Lebanon, too

    As if the war in neighboring Syria wasn’t enough to raise concern over the pope’s safety, he lands in the Middle East only days after an anti-Islamic movie released in the U.S., believed to be produced by a California-based Coptic Christian, led to violent clashes all across the region. 

    Thousands of people protesting the film in the northern Lebanese town of Tripoli clashed with police Friday. One protester was killed and at least 14 people were wounded after Islamist protesters set fire to a Kentucky Fried Chicken and tried to attack a government building. 

    Not the welcome the pope probably hoped for, on the day he came in peace.  

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Violent anti-West protests in Muslim countries
    • Americans killed in US consulate attack honored at Andrews
    • NBC's Jim Maceda answers questions about the Mideast protests
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    • Life-threatening surf for Mexico, Baja Calif. coasts
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    191 comments

    So the pope, who tried to cover up a priest's rape and murder of the 16 year old daughter of a vatican employee, is going to bring peace?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, lebanon, protests, mideast, pope-benedict, beirut, claudio-lavanga
  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    2:56pm, EDT

    'We won’t have anywhere to go': Angry workers occupy Italy mine

    Giuseppe Ungari / EPA

    Some of the 100 Sardinian miners armed with explosives barricaded themselves nearly 400 meters underground in Italy's only coal mine, Monday.

    By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

    The miners laugh at the sight of worried journalists, who are used to elevators stopping on the ground floor. This one, instead, is descending about 400 yards underground, to the site of the last coal mine in Italy.


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    The gate opens to an underworld where conditions are almost unbearable. It's hot and humid, and it doesn't take long before we chew on the bitter taste of coal dust.

    Just a few miles away, thousands of tourists sunbathe on the Italian island’s pristine beaches, but the miners' skin has been darkened by ash and soot. They joke that they are the only Sardinians who got a tan in the dark.

    The mine looks like hell, but to the miners, this is a second home.


    Some have been working in these mines for decades, much like their fathers and grandfathers before them. In this impoverished region, there's no other option. The coal mines have given work to generations of migrants from all over Italy since the 1930s. No wonder the biggest town in the area is called Carbonia.

    Now, the company running the mine is planning to take the carbon out of Carbonia.

    Coal is now considered outdated and unprofitable, and it is rumored that the mine could close by the end of the year.

    The miners' reaction was quick and simple: if you want to kick us out, we won’t come up to the surface.

    EPA

    Union spokesman Stefano Meletti is being helped by fellow miners after having slashed one of his wrists during a press conference of 100 Sardinian striking miners barricaded inside a coal mine in Sardinia, Italy, on Aug. 29, 2012.

    At least 30 workers have been occupying the mine as they await reassurances that they can keep their jobs, and the other 417 are taking turns to show their support. Living conditions in the mine are hard, they say, but they’d rather live in the familiar darkness than try to look for other jobs.

    Lorenzo Congia is on his fourth consecutive day underground. He says he has no options but to cling to the only job available to him: “We will stay here until we have the certainty that we can bring the bread back home to our families. We work underground to feed our families. Outside of this mine, we are doomed,” he said.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    His colleague, Andrea Pinna, agrees: “Our children are all unemployed and with no job prospects. If this mine closes, we won’t have anywhere to go. There’s nothing out there for us.” 

    On Wednesday, another miner, Stefano Meletti, slashed his wrists in front of television cameras shouting: “Is this what we have to do?” before he was wrestled to the floor by his startled colleagues. While they didn’t expect his sudden act of desperation, they say they, too, are ready to resort to “extreme measures” to keep their jobs.

    They put up a white sheet with a warning, written in red letters in the Sardinian dialect: “This is the time for gunpowder." And the threat might not be entirely metaphorical.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

    A few feet away from where they are stationed, an iron gate is plastered with yellow warning signs. That’s the storage room for almost 1,600 pounds of explosives, and more than a thousand detonators. They are there for mining purposes, but authorities fear that in the hands of miners who pledged to fight for their cause to the bitter end, the explosives could turn into a dangerous weapon.

    Union leader Gianfranco Sau says the miners don’t want to resort to violence, but he is finding it hard to restrain them.

    “It’s difficult to retrain 447 workers. We keep guard of the explosives day and night, we don’t want an exasperated worker to do something crazy," Sau said.

    A miners' delegation will meet government representatives in Rome on Friday to try to give the mine a new lease on life as a storage site for carbon dioxide in order to mitigate global warming and produce clean energy.

    The miners are hoping for some good news. In the permanent darkness, any ray of light will do. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Assad stays cool amid reports of bread-line slaughter
    • Ex-Marine on her journey from homelessness to the Paralympics
    • Red Cross halts most Pakistan aid in wake of beheading
    • Unexploded WWII bomb disrupts Amsterdam airport
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    12 comments

    Italian Terrorism for Dummies: (1) Take yourself hostage. (2) Threaten to blow up the hostages if your demands aren't met.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: life, featured, economy, jobs, italy, miners, claudio-lavanga, sardinia
  • 30
    Jul
    2012
    12:05pm, EDT

    Rome's leaning Colosseum has experts worried

    Authorities are investigating whether Rome's Colosseum is in need of repair because it is slanting. TODAY.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

    ROME – The ancient amphitheater has lasted as an iconic landmark of Rome for almost  2,000 years. It survived the fall of the Roman Empire, countless invasions, World War II bombings and hordes of tourists, who regularly try to nip off pieces of it to take home as souvenirs.

    The Colosseum, it has seemed, was just like the city of Rome: eternal.

    But a careful and lengthy examination of its structural stability, carried out by Italian geologists, provided a damning verdict: the Colosseum is in fact slanting on one side by 16 inches, and might need urgent repairs before it starts leaning like the Tower of Pisa.  


    Researchers at Rome's La Sapienza University and the environmental geology institute IGAG first noticed the anomaly one year ago. They now fear there may be a crack in the base below the amphitheater.

    "The slab of concrete on which the Colosseum rests, which is like a 13 meter (42 foot) thick oval doughnut, may have a fracture inside it," Giorgio Monti, from La Sapienza's construction technology department, told Italy’s daily newspaper Corriere della Sera. 

    The study will continue for another year, but critics are already taking note of the unruly and busy traffic that flows by just a few feet from the Colosseum on a daily basis.

    The Colosseum sits in the middle of an important artery that connects the Roman Forum to the Circus Maximus. Tourists and Romans use it heavily, and have turned it into the biggest and most glorified roundabout in the world.  

    Fabio Fumagalli, a research coordinator at La Sapienza University, said cars produce more damage than the nearby subway.

    Alessandro Bianchi / Reuters

    Tourists walk in front of Rome's ancient Colosseum on Monday. The ancient Colosseum of Rome, where gladiators fought for their lives, is slanting about 16 inches lower on the south side than on the north, and authorities are investigating whether it needs urgent repairs.

    “Cars subject the monument to constant vibrations, and speed up its decay, while subway trains at least pass by with intervals of many minutes.”

    News of the slanting monument re-ignited criticism over delays in long-planned renovation. There hasn’t been an overall refurbishing of the Colosseum in 73 years, and recent attempts by private sponsors to pay for its re-styling have been met with fierce resistance by government officials, who fought their bid as fiercely as the lions that once roamed in the arena.


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    Diego della Valle, the Italian designer behind the shoe brand Tod’s, offered to pay $34 million for a face-lift of the Colosseum in exchange for exclusive rights to its image for 15 years.

    Despite the initial reluctance by the officials, who felt that selling off the monument to a shoemaker would make gladiators turn in their graves, the deal was finally granted for the sake of the monument.  

    Since the beginning of the year, several stones have fallen off the Colosseum, proving it is in urgent need of repair. Following many delays the restoration works were set to start on July 31, but the date has already been moved once, this time to December.

    If the Colosseum has been standing there for 2,080 years almost 2,000 years*, officials seem to reason, it can survive another few months.

    Correction: Thanks for your comments. We stand corrected. The Colosseum was built around 70-80 AD (not B.C.) so it is almost 2,000 years old - not 2,080 years old. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Military drafted in to fill empty seats at London Olympics
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    148 comments

    Maybe they could raise money by staging an "Ancient Times" weekend. Italy could provide the lions and we could give them the Westboro Baptists.

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  • 13
    Jul
    2012
    11:07am, EDT

    Costa Concordia disaster spawns shipwreck tourism for Italian island

    Gregorio Borgia / AP

    Tourists take photographs of the Costa Concordia wreckage as they arrive on a ferry to the Giglio Island, Italy, Thursday.

    By Claudio Lavanga, NBC News

    GIGLIO, Italy - Six months after it capsized off Italy’s Giglio island, the Costa Concordia still lies on its side – a monument to what prosecutors say was reckless navigation.

    The 122,000-ton, 1,000 foot long cruise liner, which hit a rock and partially sank on January 13, claiming the lives of 32 people including two Americans, has become part of Giglio’s skyline.

    For locals it has become an eyesore that stops them enjoying the view of the Tuscan shore. But for tourists it represents a perfect photo opportunity for their summer albums.


    Every day, hundreds of tourists fill the regular ferries that connect the island from Porto Santo Stefano, the closest mainland port. It’s an hour-long crossing under the scorching summer sun - the roof deck becomes so hot you could cook pizza on its white floor - and yet everyone heads for the open top.

    Slideshow: Luxury cruise ship runs aground

    Remo Casilli / Reuters

    The Costa Concordia, carrying more than 4,200 passengers, ran aground Jan. 13 off the coast of Italy killing 32 people - including two Americans.

    Launch slideshow

    Armed with hats, sun cream and camera phones, they hope to glimpse the Costa Concordia even before they reach Giglio. “Can you see it from here?”, a tourist from Naples asks, excited. Yes, he can. The stricken ship lies only a few hundred yards from the port entrance, and the ferry sails right past its bow.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Once on shore, tourists head to the dock for a picture opportunity. But islanders are growing tired of this shipwreck tourism.

    87-year-old Cecilia Cavero was born on the island and has lived there all her life. While sitting in the shade of a palm tree of the tiny port beach, she gives the tourists an angry look. “Every day I come here and that thing is there”, she says, pointing at the Concordia. “It’s heartbreaking. And those tourists come here for the day, take a picture and then leave.”

    Costa Concordia captain admits he was 'distracted' by phone call

    Her friend, Adele Ansaldo, 80, says she can’t avoid seeing it every single day. “It lies right in front of my house. Every day I open my windows and I see it. It’s sad to know there are still people in there,” she said, referring to the bodies of the last two victims yet to be found. “It’s heartbreaking”.

    But others are not so bothered by the new landmark: “It has now become a symbol of the island”, fisherman Italo Arienti told msnbc.com. “But they forbid us to make souvenirs out of it”.

    Norwegian tourist Jan Moe agrees. From a rock overlooking the Concordia, he says he didn’t even know it was there until he got to the island. But he doesn’t mind. “It’s good for tourism, isn’t it?”

    Six months after the Costa Concordia cruise ship disaster, some of the survivors say that they have learned the cruise industry has a "lack of oversight." Hundreds of survivors are challenging the settlements offered to them and calling for an overhaul of the industry. Rock Center's Harry Smith reports.

    Before the Concordia tragedy, Giglio was a hangout for the rich and powerful. But the wreck happened right where luxurious yachts, too big to enter the tiny port, used to dock. The yachts have now been replaced by packed ferries of tourists looking for a quick snap and a bite to eat. 

    Some businesses have benefited: restaurants have never been so full, especially for lunch, and shops are selling out of souvenirs. But some locals say that the exploitation of the Concordia tragedy has already gone one step too far.

    “Someone tried to print the wreck on t-shirts and postcards, and at some point they tried to make sell models of it”, Costanzo Basini, a former captain and souvenir shop owner, said. “It’s shameful, especially towards the relatives of the victims”.

    The complicated process of removing the wreck has already started, but it will take at least 12 months before experts will be able to right the ship and tow it away.

    On Friday, a memorial service will be held in the island’s church in the presence of survivors and relatives of the victims, and a concert will take place at 9:42 p.m. local time (3:42 p.m. ET) - the exact time the ship struck the rocks, six months ago.

    In the meantime, Concordia remains its side awaiting its final voyage.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    • Ex-pats rush to aid Syrian students abroad
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    47 comments

    MSNBC have you seen the typos in this article?? Don't you employ editors?? Shameful.

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