skip to main content

Italy PM takes another investigative reporter to court

Giorgia Meloni rejected the claim that she tried to help a friend win a government contract and sued (file pic)
Giorgia Meloni rejected the claim that she tried to help a friend win a government contract and sued (file pic)

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is taking one of the country's best-known investigative journalists to court for alleged defamation, he said, in the second such trial since she took power last month.

Emiliano Fittipaldi, who works for left-wing daily Domani, and his editor Stefano Feltri stand accused of distorting facts in an article last year which suggested Ms Meloni had tried to help a friend win a government contract during the coronavirus pandemic.

Ms Meloni, whose far-right Brothers of Italy party was in opposition at the time, rejected the claim and sued.

A judge in Rome ruled last week that the case should go to court, Mr Fittipaldi said. Ms Meloni's lawyer confirmed the date had been set for 10 July, 2024.

"I only reported true news," Mr Fittipaldi told AFP, adding that he and Mr Domani would continue to report on the government, including on "thorny" issues.

The decision to proceed to trial coincided with the opening day of a court case pitting Ms Meloni against investigative journalist and anti-mafia author Roberto Saviano, who is accused of defamation for an outburst over her stance on migrants.

Mr Saviano, Mr Fittipaldi and Mr Feltri all face up to three years in prison, if convicted.

Watchdogs say such trials are symbolic of a culture in Italy in which public figures intimidate reporters with repeated lawsuits, threatening the erosion of a free press.

Italian journalist Emiliano Fittipaldi pictured during the 2016 'Vatileaks' trial

Mr Fittipaldi, known for revelations of murky affairs within the Vatican, said being sued "is the norm" for investigative journalists in Italy, and "luckily I have always won".

"But it is the first time that I will go on trial against a prime minister, who has a gigantic power compared to an opposition journalist," he said.

Ms Meloni took issue with Mr Fittipaldi's article in Domani on an inquiry into the purchase of masks by the government's Covid-19 commissioner.

The paper said commissioner Domenico Arcuri told investigators Ms Meloni had been copied in on an emailed bid for the tender.

It reported Ms Meloni had also called Mr Arcuri ahead of the emailed bid, and said she had "put in a good word" for a friend.

According to Domani, Ms Meloni confirmed she had made a call but denied trying to influence the bid.

Her legal suit against Mr Fittipaldi and Mr Feltri accuses them of "scheming to arrive at a misleading and defamatory headline", the paper said.

The bid was made by Fabio Pietrella, a Brothers of Italy MP, it said.

Ms Meloni's lawyer, Luca Libra, said the trial "was an expected outcome in the light of an article skilfully constructed to advance defamatory and baseless allegations".

In 2017, the latest available data from the National Statistics Institute (ISTAT) showed nearly 9,500 defamation proceedings were initiated against journalists in Italy.

Defamation through the media can be punished in Italy with prison sentences from six months to three years.

But Italy's Constitutional Court urged lawmakers in 2020 and 2021 to rewrite the legislation, saying jail time for such cases was unconstitutional and should only be resorted to in cases of "exceptional severity".