Showing posts with label ITALIA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ITALIA. Show all posts

Monday, October 03, 2011

Historic Papal Flag returned to the Vatican



Published on Sep 30, 2011 by vatican

The papal flag that flew above Porta Pia on September 20th, 1870, was returned to the Holy See yesterday afternoon, in an impressive ceremony that took place in front of the Governor's Palace in the Vatican Gardens, near the top of the Vatican Hill. The flag, which had been in the possession of the Ruspoli family, was returned to the Vatican on the feast of the Gendarmerie, the Vatican police force. The ceremony was attended by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican's Secretary of State, and by Cardinal Giovanni Lajolo, the outgoing president of the Governorate of Vatican City State. Also present were representatives of the Vatican forces, a squad of Italian Lancers from Montebello, and the flag of t ...


Monday, September 26, 2011

Top cardinal slams moral decay in Italy


September 27, 2011 - 5:44AM


AFP

A senior Catholic cardinal has condemned Italian leaders whose behaviour violates public dignity, but did not name the prime minister who is accused of paying for sex with a 17-year-old pole dancer.

Silvio Berlusconi, who is 74, faces a series of legal cases, including one related to the dancer and alleged prostitute nicknamed Ruby.

An Italian court on Monday excluded 10 witnesses who had been scheduled to testify on his behalf in a fraud case.
Advertisement: Story continues below

Judges in this case said they blocked the witnesses because the trial had dragged on too long and statute of limitation complications were looming.

Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, head of the conference of Italian bishops, meanwhile condemned "behaviour that, if proven, is difficult to reconcile with institutional decorum".

"Anyone who chooses to be active in politics must be conscious of a measure of sobriety, discipline and of the honour that (politics) entails," the cardinal said.

Bagnasco also denounced "behaviour that is contrary to public dignity".

He scolded the media for reporting on "licentious behaviour and improper relations", and said continued coverage of scandals surrounding public figures could undermine Italy's image abroad.

Berlusconi has been previously criticised by the Catholic church over the Ruby scandal, which has created a media firestorm in Italy.

Pope Benedict XVI on Thursday called for "an increasingly intense ethical renewal for the good of beloved Italy" in a telegram to Italian President Giorgio Napolitano, sent as he set off on a four-day trip to Germany.

It is a tradition for the Pope to send a message to the Italian president when leaving on international visits.

The head of the Milan court judging the fraud charges involving Berlusconi's business empire Mediaset, Edoardo D'Avossa, said on Monday the trial risked running past the statute of limitations," and so there was no time for 10 additional witnesses.

The trial was suspended in April 2010 after the adoption by Berlusconi's government of a temporary immunity law.

It resumed on February 28 after the law was partially scrapped in January, and judicial officials said the statute of limitations could come into force in 2013.

Berlusconi is accused of artificially inflating the price of distribution rights for films bought by television companies belonging to him and then setting up slush funds abroad in order to pay less tax in Italy.

All 10 of the excluded witnesses were supposed to testify for the defence, but, according to the documents provided by Berlusconi's own lawyers, none of the prospective witnesses can be found, the judges also noted.

The billionaire tycoon turned politician has a long history of legal entanglements dating back to when he first entered politics in the early 1990s but has always either been exonerated or seen his trials expire.

Berlusconi, whose popularity ratings have dropped to a record low, also faces accusations of bribery, revealing court secrets.

AFP rs


Source
.

Thursday, September 01, 2011

The “conclave” of Catholic parliamentarians at Castel Gandolfo

09/ 1/2011

Three days behind closed doors: the International Catholic Legislators Network discussed non-negotiable principles and discrimination against Christians
andrea tornielli
castel gandolfo
The “conclave” of Catholic parliamentarians at Castel Gandolfo

A gathering behind closed doors, with no journalists, press releases, or published speeches, not even from the Pope: that was the meeting of the International Catholic Legislators Network, a network of Catholic parliamentarians from around the world - Europe, United States, Australia, Korea, and Latin America - held between 25 and 28 August at Castel Gandolfo, 500 meters from Benedict XVI’s summer home.

The network, started last year by Cardinal Christoph Schönborn, Archbishop of Vienna, and Lord David Alton of Liverpool (member of the British House of Lords known for his battles against abortion), brought together eighty people, including top-level politicians from various countries, to discuss urgent policy issues in different countries. Along with the defense of “non-negotiable principles,” the private “conclave” displayed a concern for persecution and discrimination against Christians and “criticisms and attacks against the Church in a time of economic crisis.”

There were some observers from the Secretary of State at the meeting (held at the Castelvecchio Hotel and ending with a private audience in the Apostolic Palace with Benedict XVI and Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone), but not from the Italian Conference of Bishops. In Italy’s delegation, there were three representatives of the UDC (Rocco Buttiglione, Luca Volontè, and Paola Binetti), and Massimo Introvigne, OSCE Representative for the Fight against Racism, Xenophobia and Discrimination - especially against Christians. Along with twenty members of the European parliament there was Hungarian minister Zoltán Balogh, former French minister Christiane Boutin, former Slovak Minister of Justice Ján Čarnogurský, Austrian Undersecretary Sebastian Kurz, and Secretary of International Relations for the Mexican ruling party PAN, Rodrigo Ivan Cortes. From Usa, Jeff Fortenberry republican deputy from Nebraska and father Frank Pavone, charismatic leader of pro life american movement

The four seminar sessions, which were mentioned by the Pope in his speech, reflect the Holy See’s priorities: life and family, persecution and discrimination against Christians, education, and finally the difficulties of Catholics in communications and the media.

“The general tone of the event,” explains a Vatican source who was present during the entire closed-door seminar, “was strongly anchored in the non-negotiable principles, especially abortion, euthanasia, gay marriage and freedom of education.” In particular, representatives from the United States strongly insisted that with regard to the upcoming elections “the first criterion for choosing a candidate must be his position on life and family.”

During the debate, a fourth principle was added to the three non-negotiables: “a commitment to oppose both the bloody persecution of Christians in many parts of the world, with specific actions taken by Western States and Parliaments to put a stop to what many see as a real humanitarian emergency,” and the discrimination that, according to meeting participants, is worming its way into the West as well. This is a theme that Benedict XVI already touched on in his speech to the diplomatic corps at the beginning of this year.

In particular, the participants repeatedly pointed out attempts “to strike at the Church, taking advantage of the economic crisis to attack its tax exemptions, as well as making generalizations that distract from the real problem of pedophile priests to attack the clergy in general, and laws against homophobia that limit the freedom of expression of Catholics and also, for example, the freedom of Catholic orphanages to exclude homosexual couples from adoptions.”

The members of the network of Parliamentary Catholics cited gay, feminist, and anticlerical organizations as the origins of these attacks. Along with the defense of the family, life, and freedom of education, they asked politicians to “take a stand on the very direct attacks on the Church that are being unleashed in numerous parts of the world.”

The closed-door seminar was presided over by Lord Alton and Cardinal Schönborn. The Austrian cardinal wanted the meeting to include time for prayer and adoration, and alternated participation in the International Catholic Legislators Network with the Schulerkreis, the traditional meeting of Pope Ratzinger with his former pupils, who were at the pontifical residence at Castel Gandolfo during those same days.


Source
.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Italian judge upholds seizure of Vatican assets



$30 million held in money-laundering investigation

The Associated Press
updated 12/20/2010 1:54:17 PM ET 2010-12-20T18:54:17

ROME — A judge has upheld the seizure of euro23 million ($30.2 million) in Vatican assets in a money-laundering probe involving the Holy See's bank, the second time the bank has been denied the return of the funds.

Italian authorities seized the funds in September as part of a probe into whether Vatican banking had violated Italian laws mandating transparency in money movement — a key weapon in the war against organized crime and political and business corruption.

News reports quoted Judge Maria Teresa Covatta as saying the intended beneficiaries of the transactions from the Vatican bank account at a Rome bank were still unclear. The Vatican bank is formally named Institute for Religious Works, or IOR, in Italian.

Covatta said that nothing had changed in the way the Vatican guards the identity of its clients since its initial appeal in late October. She added that Italian authorities lack "the possibility of checking" the identities of the beneficiaries of clients receiving checks or fund transfers through Italian banks while IOR continues to conduct business in this way.

Court documents indicate that prosecutors have alleged that clergy might have been front men for corrupt businessmen and mobsters. The Vatican has blamed the seizure on a "misunderstanding" and has said it can clear up the matter.

In September, Italian financial police seized assets from an IOR account at the Rome branch of Credito Artigiano SpA after investigators alleged that the Vatican had failed to provide information about the origin or destination of the funds.

Most of the euro23 million ($30.2 million) was destined for JP Morgan investment bank in Frankfurt, with the rest going to another Italian bank, Banca del Fucino.

In a separate case, police say they uncovered money laundering involving the use of a Vatican Bank account by a priest whose uncle was convicted of Mafia association.

Source
.

Vatican Bank mired in laundering scandal


By NICOLE WINFIELD and VICTOR L. SIMPSON - Dec 11, 2010 6:16 AM ET

By The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY (AP) — This is no ordinary bank: The ATMs are in Latin. Priests use a private entrance. A life-size portrait of Pope Benedict XVI hangs on the wall.

Nevertheless, the Institute for Religious Works is a bank, and it's under harsh new scrutiny in a case involving money-laundering allegations that led police to seize euro23 million ($30 million) in Vatican assets in September. Critics say the case shows that the "Vatican Bank" has never shed its penchant for secrecy and scandal.

The Vatican calls the seizure of assets a "misunderstanding" and expresses optimism it will be quickly cleared up. But court documents show that prosecutors say the Vatican Bank deliberately flouted anti-laundering laws "with the aim of hiding the ownership, destination and origin of the capital." The documents also reveal investigators' suspicions that clergy may have acted as fronts for corrupt businessmen and Mafia.

The documents pinpoint two transactions that have not been reported: one in 2009 involving the use of a false name, and another in 2010 in which the Vatican Bank withdrew euro650,000 ($860 million) from an Italian bank account but ignored bank requests to disclose where the money was headed.

The new allegations of financial impropriety could not come at a worse time for the Vatican, already hit by revelations that it sheltered pedophile priests. The corruption probe has given new hope to Holocaust survivors who tried unsuccessfully to sue in the United States, alleging that Nazi loot was stored in the Vatican Bank.

Yet the scandal is hardly the first for the centuries-old bank. In 1986, a Vatican financial adviser died after drinking cyanide-laced coffee in prison. Another was found dangling from a rope under London's Blackfriars Bridge in 1982, his pockets stuffed with money and stones. The incidents blackened the bank's reputation, raised suspicions of ties with the Mafia, and cost the Vatican hundreds of millions of dollars in legal clashes with Italian authorities.

On Sept. 21, financial police seized assets from a Vatican Bank account at the Rome branch of Credito Artigiano SpA. Investigators said the Vatican had failed to furnish information on the origin or destination of the funds as required by Italian law.

The bulk of the money, euro20 million ($26 million), was destined for JP Morgan in Frankfurt, with the remainder going to Banca del Fucino.

Prosecutors alleged the Vatican ignored regulations that foreign banks must communicate to Italian financial authorities where their money has come from. All banks have declined to comment.

In another case, financial police in Sicily said in late October that they uncovered money laundering involving the use of a Vatican Bank account by a priest in Rome whose uncle was convicted of Mafia association.

Authorities say some euro250,000 euros, illegally obtained from the regional government of Sicily for a fish breeding company, was sent to the priest by his father as a "charitable donation," then sent back to Sicily from a Vatican Bank account using a series of home banking operations to make it difficult to trace.

The prosecutors' office stated in court papers last month that while the bank has expressed a "generic and stated will" to conform to international standards, "there is no sign that the institutions of the Catholic church are moving in that direction." It said its investigation had found "exactly the opposite."

Legal waters are murky because of the Vatican's special status as an independent state within Italy. This time, Italian investigators were able to move against the Vatican Bank because the Bank of Italy classifies it as a foreign financial institution operating in Italy. However, in one of the 1980s scandals, prosecutors could not arrest then-bank head Paul Marcinkus, an American archbishop, because Italy's highest court ruled he had immunity.

Marcinkus, who died in 2006 and always proclaimed his innocence, was the inspiration for Francis Ford Coppola's character Archbishop Gilday in "Godfather III."

The Vatican has pledged to comply with EU financial standards and create a watchdog authority. Gianluigi Nuzzi, author of "Vatican SpA," a 2009 book outlining the bank's shady dealings, said it's possible the Vatican is serious about coming clean, but he isn't optimistic.

"I don't trust them," he said. "After the previous big scandals, they said 'we'll change' and they didn't. It's happened too many times."

He said the structure and culture of the institution is such that powerful account-holders can exert pressure on management, and some managers are simply resistant to change.

The list of account-holders is secret, though bank officials say there are some 40,000-45,000 among religious congregations, clergy, Vatican officials and lay people with Vatican connections.

The bank chairman is Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, also chairman of Banco Santander's Italian operations, who was brought in last year to bring the Vatican Bank in line with Italian and international regulations. Gotti Tedeschi has been on a very public speaking tour extolling the benefits of a morality-based financial system.

"He went to sell the new image ... not knowing that inside, the same things were still happening," Nuzzi said. "They continued to do these transfers without the names, not necessarily in bad faith, but out of habit."

It doesn't help that Gotti Tedeschi himself and the bank's No. 2 official, Paolo Cipriani, are under investigation for alleged violations of money-laundering laws. They were both questioned by Rome prosecutors on Sept. 30, although no charges have been filed.

In his testimony, Gotti Tedeschi said he knew next to nothing about the bank's day-to-day operations, noting that he had been on the job less than a year and only works at the bank two full days a week.

According to the prosecutors' interrogation transcripts obtained by AP, Gotti Tedeschi deflected most questions about the suspect transactions to Cipriani. Cipriani in turn said that when the Holy See transferred money without identifying the sender, it was the Vatican's own money, not a client's.

Gotti Tedeschi declined a request for an interview but said by e-mail that he questioned the motivations of prosecutors. In a speech in October, he described a wider plot against the church, decrying "personal attacks on the pope, the facts linked to pedophilia (that) still continue now with the issues that have seen myself involved."

As the Vatican proclaims its innocence, the courts are holding firm. An Italian court has rejected a Vatican appeal to lift the order to seize assets.

The Vatican Bank was founded in 1942 by Pope Pius XII to manage assets destined for religious or charitable works. The bank, located in the tower of Niccolo V, is not open to the public, but people who use it described the layout to the AP.


Top prelates have a special entrance manned by security guards. There are about 100 staffers, 10 bank windows, a basement vault for safe deposit boxes, and ATMs that open in Latin but can be accessed in modern languages. In another concession to modern times, the bank recently began issuing credit cards.

In the scandals two decades ago, Sicilian financier Michele Sindona was appointed by the pope to manage the Vatican's foreign investments. He also brought in Roberto Calvi, a Catholic banker in northern Italy.

Sindona's banking empire collapsed in the mid-1970s and his links to the mob were exposed, sending him to prison and his eventual death from poisoned coffee. Calvi then inherited his role.

Calvi headed the Banco Ambrosiano, which collapsed in 1982 after the disappearance of $1.3 billion in loans made to dummy companies in Latin America. The Vatican had provided letters of credit for the loans.

Calvi was found a short time later hanging from scaffolding on Blackfriars Bridge, his pockets loaded with 11 pounds of bricks and $11,700 in various currencies. After an initial ruling of suicide, murder charges were filed against five people, including a major Mafia figure, but all were acquitted after trial.

While denying wrongdoing, the Vatican Bank paid $250 million to Ambrosiano's creditors.

Both the Calvi and Sindona cases remain unsolved.

___

AP reporter Martino Villosio contributed from Rome.
.

.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Letter of the Pope for the World Meeting of Families 2012


Letter of the Pope for the World Meeting of Families 2012

VATICAN CITY, Sept. 27, 2010, 13:00 Hrs (VIS):

The Holy See Press Office Cardinal Ennio Antonelli, president of the Pontifical Council for the Family, presented Benedict XVI's Letter for the Seventh World Meeting of Families, which is due to be held in the Italian city of Milan from 30 May to 2 June 2012, on the theme: "The Family: Work and Rest".

Also participating in today's press conference were Bishop Jean Lafitte, Msgr. Carlos Simon Vazquez and Fr. Gianfranco Grieco O.F.M. Conv., respectively secretary, under secretary and bureau chief of the pontifical council; Bishop Erminio De Scalzi, auxiliary of the archdiocese of Milan and the archbishop's delegate for the organisation of the meeting, and Fr. Davide Milani, head of social communications for the archdiocese of Milan.

"Work and rest", writes the Pope in his Letter, "are intimately associated with the life of families. They influence the choices the family makes, the relationship between the spouses and among parents and children, and they affect the dealings the family has with society and with the Church".

The Holy Father further highlights how "In our own time, unfortunately, the organisation of work, which is planned and implemented as a function of market competition and maximising profit, and the concept of rest as a time for evasion and consumption, contribute to the break-up of families and communities, and to the spread of an individualistic lifestyle. It is therefore necessary to reflect and commit ourselves to reconciling the demands and requirements of work with those of the family, and to recover the true significance of rest, especially on Sundays, the weekly Easter, the day of the Lord and the day of man, the day of the family, of the community and of solidarity.

"The forthcoming World Meeting of Families", he adds, "is a propitious occasion to re-examine work and rest in the perspective of families that are united and open to life, well inserted into society and the Church, attentive to the quality of their relationships as well as to the economy of the family nucleus itself".

The Pope goes on to express the hope that "during the course of 2011 - thirtieth anniversary of the Apostolic Exhortation 'Familiaris consortio', the 'Magna Charta' of family pastoral care - valid initiatives may begin at the parish, diocesan and national level with the aim of identifying experiences of work and rest in their most authentic and positive aspects, with particular reference to their influence on the real lives of families".

At the end of his Letter the Holy Father explains how the Seventh World Meeting of Families, "like earlier such meetings, will last five days culminating on Saturday evening with a 'Feast of Witness' and on Sunday morning with solemn Mass. During these two celebrations, at which I shall preside, we will come together as 'a family of families'".

Commenting on the theme of the letter, Cardinal Antonelli mentioned the problems affecting the family which, he said, "is becoming privatised and reduced to a place of individual affections and gratification. It does not receive adequate cultural, juridical, economic or political support and suffers the negative conditioning of complex centrifugal dynamics, among which by no means the least important are the organisation of work and the degeneration of rest into 'free time'". In this context, the cardinal highlighted how the theme of the Milan meeting "could become an important contribution to the defence and promotion of authentic human values in today's world, beginning with a new style of family life".

"Within the family, it is important to encourage the redistribution of domestic tasks, and a lifestyle inspired by sobriety, concern for personal relationships, openness towards the ecclesial community and the needs of others. Finally", Cardinal Antonelli concluded, "feast days must be celebrated in such a way as to illuminate the significance of life and of work itself, strengthening the cohesion of the family and its insertion into the wider community, reviving the relationship with Christ, Lord and Saviour Who accompanies us on our daily journey".

For his part, Bishop Erminio De Scalzi observed that "it would be significant if we were able to welcome poor families from the South of the world to Milan. I am thinking," he said, "of people who live in counties where it is difficult to make their voice heard. It is important that the representatives of these families should have the chance to bring their testimony of life, and tell us how they understand work and rest as regards the family nucleus".
Source
.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Thousands flock to Vatican to back pope over abuse

Photo (Courtesy)


By NICOLE WINFIELD
May 16, 2010, 5:08PM



VATICAN CITY — More than 100,000 people filled St. Peter's Square on Sunday in a major show of support for Pope Benedict XVI over the clerical sex abuse scandal.

Benedict said he was comforted by such a "beautiful and spontaneous show of faith and solidarity" and again denounced what he called the "sin" that has infected the church and needs to be purified.

Citing estimates from Vatican police, the Vatican press office said 150,000 people had turned out for the demonstration organized by an association of 68 Italian lay groups.

Despite a drizzling rain, the balloon- and banner-toting faithful from around Italy overflowed from the piazza; banners hung up on Bernini's colonnade encircling the piazza read "Together with the pope," and "Don't be afraid, Jesus won out over evil."

"We are here to show both to other people and to ourselves our solidarity with the church in this difficult time," said Simone Pleticos, a 24-year-old student who traveled from Milan for the occasion.

Such large crowds are usually reserved for major holiday Masses and canonizations, not for Benedict's brief, 10-minute Sunday blessings from his studio window. The crowd interrupted Benedict frequently with applause and shouts of "Benedetto!" and the pontiff himself strayed from his prepared remarks to thank them again and again.

"Thank you for your presence and trust," he said. "All of Italy is here."

Benedict didn't refer explicitly to the scandal, but repeated his recently stated position that the scandal was born of sins within the church, which must be purified.

"The true enemy to fear and to fight against is sin, the spiritual evil that unfortunately sometimes infects even members of the church," he said.

The Vatican has been mired in scandal amid hundreds of reports in Europe, the United States and elsewhere of priests who raped and molested children while bishops and Vatican officials turned a blind eye. Benedict's own handling of cases has also come under fire.

Rome's center-right Mayor Gianni Alemanno was in the crowd, along with other pro-Vatican Italian officials.

"We want to show our solidarity to the pope and transmit the message that single individuals make mistakes but institutions, faith and religion cannot be questioned," Alemanno told Associated Press Television News. "We will not allow this."

Luca Colussi, from the farmers' union Coldiretti, said abuse allegations must be fully investigated. "But as far we're concerned, our members will always remain close to the Pope as we share the same values."

___

Associated Press reporter Alice Herford contributed to this report.

.
Source: http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/world/7007731.html
.

Thursday, May 06, 2010

Dow Plunges Most Since 1987 Before Paring Losses; Euro Tumbles


May 06, 2010, 3:26 PM EDT


By Michael P. Regan and Rita Nazareth

May 6 (Bloomberg) -- The Dow Jones Industrial Average posted its biggest intraday loss since the market crash of 1987, the euro slid to a 14-month low and yields on Greek, Spanish and Italian bonds surged on concern European leaders aren’t doing enough to stem the region’s debt crisis. U.S. Treasuries rallied.

“It’s panic selling,” said Burt White, chief investment officer at LPL Financial in Boston, which oversees $379 billion. “There’s concern that the European situation might cool down global growth and freeze the credit markets.”

The Dow lost as much as 998.5 points, or 9.2 percent, before paring its loss to 383.17 points at 3:17 p.m. in New York. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell as much as 8.6 percent, its biggest plunge since December 2008, before trimming its decline to 3.6 percent.

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet held interest rates steady at a record low of 1 percent today and said the bank didn’t discuss whether to purchase government bonds to stem the region’s debt crisis, defying market speculation that he would take such measures. The euro maintained losses even as Greece’s parliament approved austerity measures demanded by the European Union and International Monetary Fund as a condition of its 110 billion ($140 billion) bailout.

Market ‘Horrified’

“The ECB can fix this instantly by doing what the Fed has done -- instantly providing liquidity by buying bad fixed-income instruments and paying cash in U.S. dollars,” said David Kovacs, head of quantitative strategies at Turner Investment Partners in Berwyn, Pennsylvania, which manages $18 billion. “The reason the market is horrified now is Trichet said it’s not even being discussed. Smart investors are basically selling risk assets.”

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index today joined the MSCI World Index and the Stoxx 600 Index in erasing its advance for 2010. The Dow and S&P 500 briefly erased their yearly gains before paring losses.

Bank of America Corp., General Electric Co. and Boeing Co. tumbled more than 5 percent to lead declines in the Dow Jones Industrial Average as the 30-stock gauge.

The benchmark index for U.S. stock options surged as much as 62 percent, the most since February 2007, to 40.26. The VIX, as the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index is known, measures the cost of using options as insurance against declines in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.

Treasury Yields

Yields on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note plunged 14 basis points to 3.398 percent on demand for assets considered the most safe. The Dollar Index, which measures the currency against six major trading partners, jumped as much as 1.4 percent.

Yields on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage securities that guide U.S. home-loan rates jumped the most relative to Treasuries in almost a year as investors flocked to the safety of U.S. government notes on concern Europe’s leaders aren’t doing enough to halt their debt crisis.

Spreads on Fannie Mae’s current-coupon 30-year fixed-rate mortgage bonds widened about 0.1 percentage point to 0.89 percentage point more than 10-year Treasuries as of 2:45 p.m. in New York, the biggest jump since May 27, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The gap touched a record low of 0.59 percentage point on March 29 as the Federal Reserve that month completed its purchases of $1.25 trillion of agency mortgage bonds.

“Fear is taking over, and images of Greek mobs aren’t helping,” said Larry Peruzzi, equity trader at Cabrera Capital Markets in Boston, Massachusetts, referring to televised images of demonstrations against austerity measures in Athens. “Buyers are stepping aside and disregarding fundamentals.”

--With assistance from Mark Gilbert and Keith Jenkins in London, Simon Kennedy in Paris, Simone Meier in Dublin, John Detrixhe, Elizabeth Stanton, Inyoung Hwang and Michael Tsang and Mark Shenk in New York and Pham-Duy Nguyen in Seattle. Editors: Chris Nagi, Dan Hauck.

To contact the reporters on this story: Michael P. Regan in New York at Mregan12@bloomberg.net; Rita Nazareth in New York at rnazareth@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Chris Nagi at chrisnagi@bloomberg.net.

.

.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Roof in Nero's Roman Gallery Collapses



Roof in Nero's Roman Gallery Collapses

Tuesday, March 30, 2010 8:47 AM

ROME – A huge chunk of a 2,000-year-old gallery in the complex that includes the infamous Emperor Nero's fabled Golden Palace collapsed Tuesday, Rome's art officials said.

Officials said they believed nobody was inside when the collapse took place at around 10 a.m., bringing down part of a garden above, but firefighters cordoned off the area as they checked no one was trapped. Nero's Palace had been closed as workers were doing repairs.

Built by Roman emperor Nero in the first century A.D., the sumptuous palace is known to many by its Latin name Domus Aurea. With its frescoed halls and gold-encrusted ceilings, it was meant as a fabled residence for one of Rome's most depraved emperors.

Umberto Broccoli of Rome's artistic superintendency said the vaulted ceiling collapsed because of water damage.

"Think 2,000 years of history, think of all the rain of the past couple of months," Broccoli told reporters at the scene.

The ANSA news agency said around 60 square meters (645 square feet) collapsed from the vault in one of the galleries inside the complex.

Another art official, Antonello Vodret, was quoted as saying by Corriere della Sera that the collapse did not touch the main part of the palace but affected a gallery subsequently built at the site by Emperor Hadrian. Vodret said it was one of the biggest collapses in the area in the past 50 years, according to the Apcom news agency.

The site was reopened in 1999 following 18 years of closure because of structural concerns, and it soon became one of the capital's most popular tourist sites. But the monument remains plagued by structural problems and water infiltration, which have forced the monuments to shut down at times.

This latest incident rekindled doubts over its stability. Part of the ceiling already came crashing down a decade ago.

The palace originally sprawled across nearly 200 acres (80 hectares), occupying parts of four of Rome's seven ancient hills.

But Nero did not enjoy the palace for too long. It was completed in A.D. 68, the same year the emperor committed suicide.

The complex lay under tons of dirt in the bowels of a hill for centuries, before coming to light 500 years ago when Renaissance scholars began researching the imperial period.
.

.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Catholic daily buries the news in sexual abuse headline


Mar 13, 2010 14:24 EST

Tom Heneghan


Catholic daily buries the news in sexual abuse headline

Headlines are supposed to highlight the news, but sometimes the news is uncomfortable. Like the sexual abuse cases for the Roman Catholic Church. Avvenire, the daily newspaper of the Italian Catholic bishops’ conference, played down the big news in its front-page headline on Saturday about an interview with the head of the Vatican office dealing with charges of sexual abuse against priests.

In the middle of the front page (at left), it ran the headline “Il ‘pm’ vaticano: in tutto il mondo trecento i preti accusati di pedofilia.” — Vatican public prosecutor: 300 priests accused of pedophilia in the whole world.” That actually doesn’t sound like that many, given all the cases we’ve heard about all these years.

It’s only in the interview on page 5 that the real picture emerges. There the reader finds a much larger figure of 3,000 accusations of sexual misdeeds of all kinds made against priests since 2001, concerning cases dating back up to 50 years ago. That sounds more like it, although it still must be lower than the real number of cases because so many don’t get reported.
.
.
.
..

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Vatican hit by gay sex scandal

Vatican chorister sacked for allegedly procuring male prostitutes for papal gentleman-in-waiting

John Hooper in Rome
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 4 March 2010 19.59 GMT
Article history

Pope Benedict XVI greets cardinals in the Clementine Hall at the Vatican. Photograph: Max Rossi/AFP/Getty Images

The Vatican was today rocked by a sex scandal reaching into Pope Benedict's household after a chorister was sacked for allegedly procuring male prostitutes for a papal gentleman-in-waiting.

Angelo Balducci, a Gentleman of His Holiness, was caught by police on a wiretap allegedly negotiating with Thomas Chinedu Ehiem, a 29-year-old Vatican chorister, over the specific physical details of men he wanted brought to him. Transcripts in the possession of the Guardian suggest that numerous men may have been procured for Balducci, at least one of whom was studying for the priesthood.

The explosive claims about Balducci's private life have caused grave embarrassment to the Vatican, which has yet to publicly comment on the affair.

While Catholicism does not condemn homosexuality outright, its teaching is that homosexual acts "are intrinsically disordered". The Catechism of the Catholic church states unequivocally: "Under no circumstances can they be approved."

Balducci was arrested on 10 February, suspected of involvement in widespread corruption. A senior Italian government official, he is alleged to have to steered public works contracts towards favoured bidders. He has not been charged.

It was during this investigation into corruption that wiretaps revealed his alleged sexual activity. In one conversation, Ehiem tells Balducci: "I saw your call when I was in the Vatican, because I was doing rehearsals … in the choir … in St Peter's." He then suggests Balducci meet a man who he describes is "two metres tall … 97 kilos … aged 33, completely active."

Balducci is also a senior adviser to the Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples, the department that oversees the Roman Catholic church's worldwide missionary activities.

Since 1995, he has been a member of one of the world's most exclusive fraternities – the Gentlemen of His Holiness, or Papal Gentlemen, the ceremonial ushers of the papal household. In the words of a 1968 ordinance, they are expected to "distinguish themselves for the good of souls and the glory of the name of the Lord".

According to a report by the Carabinieri for prosecutors in Florence investigating the corruption scandal, there was a hidden side to Balducci's life. "In order to organise casual encounters of a sexual nature, he availed himself of the intercession of two individuals who, it is maintained, may form part of an organised network, especially active in [Rome], of exploiters or at least facilitators of male prostitution."

It named one as Ehiem, a professional chorister born in Nigeria. According to Italian press reports, Ehiem, a member of the choir that sings in St Peters when the pope is not officiating, lost his job on Wednesday after details of the Florence investigation became known to the Vatican.

In an interview to be published tomorrow by the news magazine Panorama, Ehiem said he had been introduced to Balducci more than 10 years ago. He claims: "He asked me if I could procure other men for him. He told me he was married and that I had to do it in great secrecy."

There were conflicting accounts of how the Vatican might respond. According to one source, there was no provision for the dismissal of a Gentleman of His Holiness. Another said: "We shall wait for the judiciary's definitive verdict."

The transcripts imply that over a period of around five months in 2008, Ehiem procured for Balducci at least 10 contacts with, among others, "two black Cuban lads", a former male model from Naples, and a rugby player from Rome.

Balducci's lawyer, Franco Coppi, said tonight: "I have no comment. First, because we have more serious questions to tackle. Second, if these claims are correct, they regard his private life. It is disgraceful that these transcripts, which have nothing to do with the case, should have been spread about."

In January this year, the Carabinieri recorded an exchange in which Balducci and Ehiem discuss a seminarian, or student for the priesthood. Balducci is said to have asked: "Listen, have you spoken with the seminarian by any chance?" Ehiem says he is "probably at mass or something". On 11 January, Ehiem calls again to recommend "a colleague, a friend" of the seminarian because the latter is unavailable. He says the colleague is "better, taller, a bit taller than you". Later, Ehiem asks: "Can I send [him] around straight away?"

He asks where Balducci is. The adviser says: "Up at the seminary … where the cardinal lives." Ehiem replies: "He could get there within half an hour … the time it takes to catch a taxi and get there."
.
.
.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Avalanches in Italian Alps kill seven

Page last updated at 03:45 GMT, Monday, 28 December 2009


Alessando Dantone was one of the four rescuers who died


A series of avalanches in the Italian Alps has killed seven people, emergency services said.

Four of those who died were rescuers searching for two tourists killed by an earlier avalanche in the Trentino region of northern Italy.

Another avalanche killed a 12-year-old German boy skiing in the same area.

The head of Italy's civil protection service, Guido Bertolaso, said rescuers were dying because people were ignoring warnings about conditions.

The two tourists, from Udine, northern Italy, went missing on Saturday afternoon. Relatives said they were both experienced and careful skiers.

The seven-strong rescue team sent to find them was hit by a second avalanche and four members were killed.

Police said the German teenager was hit by an avalanche while skiing off-piste with his brother and a friend.

The brother was unhurt while the third skier was taken to hospital in the nearby city of Bolzano. His condition was not known.

Local officials recently increased the avalanche alert warning to level four on a scale of five following heavy snowfall and a rise in temperatures.
.
.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Silvio Berlusconi hospitalised in attack

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4s_hRMib30http://

itnnewsDecember 13, 2009

The Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is hospitalised after an attack in Milan. Follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/itn_news
/
P.S.....Italy's greatest hits; 'Il Bomsbastico' gets one on the kisser.

.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Documentary about Jesuit missionary to China screened at Venice Film Festival


Fr. Matteo Ricci


Venice, Italy, Sep 12, 2009 / 06:13 pm (CNA).- A new documentary on the life of Fr. Matteo Ricci, a pioneering Jesuit missionary to China, was screened at the Venice Film Festival on Thursday.

The film is part of a revival of interest in Ricci, whom Pope Benedict XVI has called a model for a “fruitful meeting” between civilizations.

The movie, directed by Italian filmmaker Gjon Kolndrekaj, was shot in China and Italy.

Political and religious dignitaries from both countries attended the screening, ANSA reports. They included the Patriarch of Venice Cardinal Angelo Scola, China’s Ambassador to Italy Sun Yuxi and the Chinese Embassy’s cultural counselor Zhang Jianda.

Matteo Ricci was born in 1552 in the Marche town of Macerata. He became a Jesuit priest and a scholar of mathematics and astronomy before leaving for the Far East at the age of 26.

Audience members from Ricci’s hometown of Macerata included Bishop Claudio Giuliodori, Mayor Giorgio Meschini. The Governor of Marche Gian Maria Spacca was also in attendance.

Ricci spent four years in Goa on the west coast of India before traveling to China. There, he settled in Zhao Qing in the southernmost Guangdong Province and began studying Chinese. During his time there he produced his global Great Map of Ten Thousand Countries, which revolutionized the Chinese understanding of the rest of the world.

In 1589 he moved to Zhao Zhou and began sharing European mathematics discoveries with Chinese scholars. He became known as “Li Madou” and was renowned for his extraordinary memory and knowledge of astronomy. He eventually became a member of the court of Ming Emperor Wanli.

In 1601 he was allowed into the Forbidden City of Beijing, where he worked until his death in 1610.

Ricci’s work is familiar to Chinese schoolchildren of all ages but he was not well known in Italy until recently, ANSA says. Two successive exhibitions and a TV film have revived interest in his life.

Governor Spacca said that Father Ricci is one of his region’s “most important sons.”

“The fact this film is being shown on September 10 is also a special coincidence, as this was the very day in 1583 when Ricci left Macao and set out for inland China, the province of Canton,” he continued, according to ANSA.

Pope Benedict XVI recently sent a message to the Bishop of Marcerata which described the Jesuit missionary as a model for a “fruitful meeting” between European and Chinese civilizations.

“Matteo Ricci sets an example for our communities of people from different cultures and religions to bloom in the spirit of hospitality and mutual respect,” the Pontiff said.
.
.
.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

The Swiss-Italian Connection

Catherine and News & Commentary,
July 13, 2009 at 5:07 pm


Photo: Swiss Guards serve as the Pope’s bodyguards.

On June 3, the Italians seize $134.5 billion in US Treasuries (maybe fake, maybe not) from two Japanese on the Swiss-Italian border. Under the law, the Italians may have the right to claim a healthy % of them.

On June 29th the Pope publishes a new encyclical, immediately prior to the G-8 meeting in Italy and President Obama’s visit to the Vatican, and calls for a new world order government by an international entity with teeth to enforce against US financial institutions.

Then, on July 8th, the Swiss government suddenly tells the IRS to p*** off with respect to the UBS case.

Just a coincidence?

.

Source: http://solari.com/blog/?p=3492

P.S. Here's one of the comments/responses to the above post:

katherine
Jul 14th, 2009 at 6:59 pm
With all due respect to the Pontiff, his terribly lengthy, convoluted treatise misses the fundamental point on our Lord’s statement on things political, “Render onto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, render unto God, the things that are God’s”. To translate, our Lord was succintly stating the obvious that government is a thing of man and will always fall short of the mark. God, on the other hand never falls short. He is all, knows all. Seek God and you will find his kingdom, you will never find it in the imperfect world of man. The problem with all these New World Order types is they reside in a self deception, a narcissism that in its resulting inevitable perception of superiority over other mortels, dictates that they act in behalf of God and eventually see themselves as God(s). To proclaim oneself a God is the greatest blasphemy, the worship of the golden idol of self. I find it absolutely frightening that the head of the largest Christian church, the one that claims it is the only true universal church, is joining with the forces of the New World Order, who, quite paradoxically, in implementing their draconian plan for the world, is destroying, the greatest nation ever founded, I believe, inspired by God himself in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States of America. Guarantors of life and liberty for the individual, each one endowed by his creator, truly beloved in his or her uniqueness, given the gift of life to enjoy here on earth and in the life that is everlasting. These are the concepts Christ would be mosted interested in for his creation. Social justice is an illusion, created by the likes of Karl Marx, an illusion that destroys freedom, liberty, and all too often life itself. The New World Order is everything our Lord would despise, a cabal of elites, corporations and bankers out to enslave and deprive others for their own self enrichment. Remember, Christ did throw the money changers out of the Temple. That is what His church should be concerned with now - throw the money changers out of the Temple and spread liberty, self determination, freedom and opportunity to the world’s people. God Bless all of you and especially Catherine for her wonderful work to educate and enlighten people everywhere.

.

Thursday, July 09, 2009

"L'Aquila."




L'Aquila


L'Aquila, Abruzzo/Italy Aquila degli Abruzzi A province and a city founded c.1240 on the order of Frederick II†, Holy Roman Emperor, who gave it an imperial eagle, aquila, for its emblem from which the town took its name. The former name meant ‘Eagle of the Abruzzi (Mountains)’ and was in use 1863–1939.

...

eagle Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology eagle XIV. — AN. egle , (O)F. aigle , replacing † aille , refash. after Pr. aigla , etc. :- L. aquila , perh. rel. to aquilus dark-brown. So eaglet young eagle. XVI. See -ET ; after F. aiglette , † eglette . Read more
...

JOHN EVERETT-HEATH. "L'Aquila." Concise Dictionary of World Place-Names. Oxford University Press. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. (July 9, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O209-LAquila.html

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Baptists and Catholics in Italy reach agreement on marriage


Baptists and Catholics in Italy reach agreement on marriage


Baptists and Roman Catholics in Italy have signed an agreement on "mixed" or interchurch marriages between members of the two Christian faith traditions, reports Michael Ireland, chief correspondent, ASSIST News Service.

According to a news release from the Baptist World Alliance (BWA), the agreement, called "A Common document for a pastoral approach to marriages between Catholics and Baptists in Italy," addresses Baptists and Catholics who marry each other, in order to help these couples in their preparation for marriage and family life.

The document also seeks to deepen couples' awareness of their rights and obligations toward each other, and clarify their relationship with their respective churches.

The BWA news release states that Anna Maffei, president of the Christian Evangelical Baptist Union of Italy (UCEBI), said that with this document "we offer to our communities and our pastors a practical guide so that the confessional difference that remains between the future spouses may not be experienced as an obstacle but as enrichment."

Maffei, who signed the agreement on the behalf of Italian Baptists, said that "respective churches should not be competitors anymore but places of listening and encouragement to communion," highlighting "all that is unifying in spirit and love of God."

Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, president of the Italian Episcopal Conference (CEI), who signed for Italian Catholics, declared that "the document is a common step in the journey of ecumenism between the Catholic church and the Baptist churches in Italy in a particularly sensitive field" and is "likely to pave the way for further developments."

The BWA news release says the agreement holds special significance for Baptists.

"As the number of Baptists in Italy is very small, only in a few marriages are both spouses Baptists. In fact Baptists often marry Catholics and this becomes an interchurch marriage," states an accompanying document released by the UCEBI.

"In order to clarify the situation, it has become necessary to reach an agreement between the Baptist Union and the Catholic Church," the document says.

The BWA news release explains there are approximately 6,400 Baptists who hold membership within the 116 churches of the UCEBI. In contrast, more than 87 percent of the population of more than 60 million in Italy identify themselves as Roman Catholic.

The news release goes on to say: "The agreement includes aspects of marriage that are held in common between Baptists and Catholics, such as the creation of men and women in their diversity and reciprocity, marriage as a parable of the alliance between God and God's people, the love shared by the couple, and the duration of marriage.

"Pastoral care for mixed marriages is also of significance in the signed agreement, including the responsibility of the respective churches, and the need for a shared and ongoing pastoral care program by both pastor and priest."

The BWA says the document offers guidelines to be followed by mixed couples on aspects of Italian civil law, the marriage preparation process, the marriage service or ceremony, and the upbringing of children.

The agreement, which was signed on Tuesday, June 30, in Rome, is the culmination of a process that began in October 2007 with the signing of a "Joint text for the pastoral care in interchurch marriages between Roman Catholics and Baptists in Italy," by respective commissions of the UCEBI and the CEI. Both commissions met jointly to study interchurch marriages and to draft the agreement.

The agreement was voted into acceptance by the general assemblies of both the UCEBI and the CEI, which paved the way for its signing.
.
.
.
.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Obama To Visit Pope Benedict XVI


First lady Michelle Obama will also make the trip to the Vatican
Published on June 25, 2009

by OfficialWire NewsDesk

(OfficialWire)

WASHINGTON, D.C.



U.S. President Barack Obama will visit with Roman Catholic Pope Benedict XVI when he heads back overseas next month, the White House said Wednesday.

Press Secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters the president will discuss "a range of issues, including their shared belief in the dignity of all people" when he meets the pope July 10.

The first meeting between the two men will follow Obama's attendance at the Group of Eight summit in L'Aquila, Italy. Obama drew condemnation from the Vatican in March when he lifted restrictions on funding for stem-cell research and he also has rankled some Catholics for his support of abortion rights.

First lady Michelle Obama will make the trip to the Vatican, as well, Gibbs said.




Monday, June 15, 2009

How the Vatican sold its soul


How the Vatican sold its soul

A new book by the journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi lays bare a history of political bribes being paid through the Vatican's central bank

guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 3 June 2009 20.00 BST
Article history


The Vatican appears to have an enduring vocation for Italian political and financial scandal. Secrecy and intrigue were the order of the day when American archbishop Paul Marcinkus held sway in the Bastion of Nicholas V, the medieval tower housing the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR), the Vatican's central bank.

The requirements of a clandestine global struggle against atheist communism may explain the choice of business partners such as Michele Sindona and Roberto Calvi, whose mafia links and ruinous bankruptcies brought lasting discredit on the Catholic church three decades ago.

The Vatican hoped that a goodwill payment of $240m to the creditors of Calvi's Banco Ambrosiano's would salve its conscience and erase the memory of Marcinkus's inept and dishonest banking practices. We were led to believe that a new broom, wielded by the lay banker Angelo Caloia, had since swept the premises of the IOR.

The process of reform has been slower and more painful than previously thought, however, to judge by a new book, Vaticano Spa ("Vatican Ltd"), by the journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi. According to Nuzzi, despite the best efforts of Caloia, a cavalier attitude to financial ethics appears to have continued well into the 1990s, with huge political bribes being laundered through the IOR and funds donated for charitable purposes or to pay for masses for the souls of the dead being casually misappropriated by the bank's administrators.

Nuzzi's allegations are based on internal IOR documents, more than 4,000 in all, that were smuggled out of the Vatican by a disgruntled employee. This unique violation of IOR confidentiality was made possible by an unlikely whistleblower, Monsignor Renato Dardozzi. An electronic engineer who held a top job at the state telecommunications company, Dardozzi discovered his vocation late in life and was ordained a priest at the age of 52.

He worked in the IOR under Marcinkus, participated in the joint Vatican/Italian commission that examined the IOR's role in the Ambrosiano saga, and witnessed Caloia's uphill struggle against the personnel and practices of the Marcinkus era.

Monsignor Donato De Bonis, who served as secretary general under Marcinkus, continued to work under the new regime.

In 1987, according to Nuzzi, De Bonis set up the Cardinal Francis Spellman Foundation, with its own account at the IOR. Signatories on the account included De Bonis himself. During its first six years of operation the account received some 50bn lire (£22m) and paid out 43bn.

The choice of the staunchly anti-communist Spellman as "patron" of the fund is interesting. The well-connected cardinal of New York earned the sobriquet "money-bags" for his fund-raising skills and earmarked significant sums for Italy's Christian Democrat party during the cold war years.

The Spellman fund seems to have been administered by De Bonis with promiscuous generosity. A variety of convents and clerics were to benefit, with payments ranging from the modest 1m lire paid to five mother superiors, to the $50,000 sent to the auxiliary bishop of Skopje-Prizen, for the Albanian-speaking faithful, and the $1m delivered to Cardinal Lucas Moreira Neves, the archbishop of Sao Salvador de Bahia in Brazil.

There were also payments of a more personal nature: 100m lire for one of the lawyers of Giulio Andreotti, the veteran Christian Democrat politician, $134,000 for a conference on Cicero in New York sponsored by the former prime minister, and even a 60m lire payment to Severino Citaristi, a former treasurer of the Christian Democrat party convicted on corruption charges.
Part of the massive Enimont bribe, paid to politicians to secure their approval for a reorganisation of the chemicals sector, was also bounced through the Spellman fund, according to Nuzzi. But Caloia and Dardozzi chose discretion over transparency when questioned about it by prosecutors from Milan. "Despite the full collaboration promised and publicised in the press, they limit themselves to referring only what can no longer be concealed," Nuzzi writes.

It is interesting to note that Dardozzi's motive for turning whistleblower was not unalloyed disapproval of the IOR's unethical conduct. His decision to smuggle his secret archive out of the Vatican was motivated, at least in part, by anger at the institute's refusal to pay him a commission on the sale of a valuable real estate property near Florence. The unusual monsignor wanted to leave the money to his adoptive daughter, whose health condition required expensive hospital treatment.

Whatever the reason, Dardozzi's archive offers an unprecedented glimpse of the inner workings of one of the world's most secretive and unaccountable financial institutions. The idea that a noble end – winning the cold war or funding one's favourite charity – justifies almost any means, still seems to endure at the pope's bank in the Nicholas V Tower.

Philip Willan is the author of The Last Supper: The mafia, the Masons and the Killing of Roberto Calvi. His website is http://www.philipwillan.com/
. .

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2009/jun/03/vatican-central-bank


.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Xenophobia Threatens Italy, President Warns


By ELISABETTA POVOLEDO


Published: May 14, 2009



ROME — President Giorgio Napolitano warned Thursday that intolerance and xenophobia posed a danger for Italy as the lower house of Parliament approved wide-ranging security legislation that includes measures toughening Italian immigration policies.

Speaking at a conference in Rome, Mr. Napolitano warned that there was a danger that social tensions would be inflamed by “public rhetoric that, even in Italy, does not hesitate to incorporate intolerant and xenophobic tones.”

Under the terms of the bill, which was passed Thursday by the Chamber of Deputies after three confidence votes Wednesday to approve amendments, illegal immigrants entering or residing in Italy will be fined up to 10,000 euros, or about $13,500, before being expelled.

In addition, the period of time that foreigners can be held in detention centers has been tripled to 180 days. An African woman killed herself at one such center near Rome last week.

The bill, backed by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s coalition allies in the Northern League, which has championed a legislative hard line against immigration, also sanctions the creation of neighborhood watch groups to increase security on Italian streets.

“We have the consensus of the majority of Italians,” Interior Minister Roberto Maroni — who belongs to the Northern League — said Thursday shortly after the vote. “The government’s commitment on this front is appreciated by Italians.”

But critics say that because the new law criminalizes clandestine immigration, implementing it would clog up an already backlogged justice system. About a million foreigners are estimated to be living illegally in Italy.

The measure could also have a significant impact on Italian families, many of whom depend on foreign women — many of them in Italy illegally because of existing restrictions on immigration — to care for their elderly and children.

“The disorder this law will produce will be terrible,” said Christopher Hein, the director of the Italian Council for Refugees. “It’s one thing to publicly announce a law, quite another to implement something that will only create more confusion, more bureaucracy and make life more difficult for people who are legally here to work.”

The bill now goes to the Senate for a final passage before becoming law. Crossing that finish line will mark the end of a yearlong battle on the part of the Northern League, which imposed its hard-line position on Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s coalition even as some allies openly wavered in the face of criticism on the part of the Italian Catholic church.

The Northern League has been pushing its anti-immigrant line with the approach of European Parliament elections June 6 and 7. Last week, one League official in Milan suggested that subway trains in the Lombardy capital reserve seats for native Milanese.

Mr. Maroni has also taken credit for the enactment last week of a treaty between Italy and Libya that includes the forced return of migrant boats intercepted in international waters to their port of departure. The government has lauded the practice as key to fighting human trafficking.

On Thursday, Italy gave three patrol boats to Libya that will be used for joint patrolling operations.