Europe asks us. And the gag law against journalists and magistrates has served. The Minister of Justice Marta Cartabia has already approved a legislative decree in the Council of Ministers that severely limits the communicative powers of the magistrates and greatly hinders the judicial news.
With the provision it will become a difficult if not impossible task to know wiretapping, precautionary custody orders and other measures of public relevance that concern politicians, members of the government, magistrates and other institutional representatives. The prosecutors, for example, will be able to speak “exclusively through official press releases or, in cases of particular public relevance of the facts, through press conferences”.
The direction of the “best” emerges clearly from the set of measures: to succeed where those who preceded them – from Berlusconi to Renzi – had failed. In recent days, the Order of Journalists and the National Federation of the Press were convened for a hearing in Montecitorio, but they declined the invitation …
Continue reading the article in the weekly The Post Internazionale-TPI, click here.
Europe asks us. And the gag law against journalists and magistrates has served. The Minister of Justice Marta Cartabia has already approved a legislative decree in the Council of Ministers that severely limits the communicative powers of the magistrates and greatly hinders the judicial news.
With the provision it will become a difficult if not impossible task to know wiretapping, precautionary custody orders and other measures of public relevance that concern politicians, members of the government, magistrates and other institutional representatives. The prosecutors, for example, will be able to speak “exclusively through official press releases or, in cases of particular public relevance of the facts, through press conferences”.
The direction of the “best” emerges clearly from the set of measures: to succeed where those who preceded them – from Berlusconi to Renzi – had failed. In recent days, the Order of Journalists and the National Federation of the Press were convened for a hearing in Montecitorio, but they declined the invitation …
Continue reading the article in the weekly The Post Internazionale-TPI, click here.
Europe asks us. And the gag law against journalists and magistrates has served. The Minister of Justice Marta Cartabia has already approved a legislative decree in the Council of Ministers that severely limits the communicative powers of the magistrates and greatly hinders the judicial news.
With the provision it will become a difficult if not impossible task to know wiretapping, precautionary custody orders and other measures of public relevance that concern politicians, members of the government, magistrates and other institutional representatives. The prosecutors, for example, will be able to speak “exclusively through official press releases or, in cases of particular public relevance of the facts, through press conferences”.
The direction of the “best” emerges clearly from the set of measures: to succeed where those who preceded them – from Berlusconi to Renzi – had failed. In recent days, the Order of Journalists and the National Federation of the Press were convened for a hearing in Montecitorio, but they declined the invitation …
Continue reading the article in the weekly The Post Internazionale-TPI, click here.
Europe asks us. And the gag law against journalists and magistrates has served. The Minister of Justice Marta Cartabia has already approved a legislative decree in the Council of Ministers that severely limits the communicative powers of the magistrates and greatly hinders the judicial news.
With the provision it will become a difficult if not impossible task to know wiretapping, precautionary custody orders and other measures of public relevance that concern politicians, members of the government, magistrates and other institutional representatives. The prosecutors, for example, will be able to speak “exclusively through official press releases or, in cases of particular public relevance of the facts, through press conferences”.
The direction of the “best” emerges clearly from the set of measures: to succeed where those who preceded them – from Berlusconi to Renzi – had failed. In recent days, the Order of Journalists and the National Federation of the Press were convened for a hearing in Montecitorio, but they declined the invitation …
Continue reading the article in the weekly The Post Internazionale-TPI, click here.