Never as now peace cries out in its urgency - Mattarella
We are hope says president in New Year address
Never as now does peace cry out in
all its urgency, President Sergio Mattarella said in his New
Year address to the nation live on all TV channels Tuesday
evening.
Peace is not submission to the aggressor, he stressed in
reference to the Ukraine-Russia war.
He also urged peace in Gaza where he recalled a Palestinian baby
girl had died of cold on Christmas day, while also calling for
the release of Israelis hostages held by Hamas.
Mattarella also issued a heartfelt plea for the return to Italy
of Cecilia Sala, a journalist being held in Iran and possibly
used as a pawn for a prisoner exchange with a Swiss-Iranian
businessman held in Milan on US charges of trafficking in drone
parts used to kill three US serviceman in Jordan last January.
"Never before has peace cried out its urgency," said the
president from the presidential Quirinale Palace in the keenly
awaited and closely watched address..
"The peace that our Constitution indicates as an indispensable
objective, that Italy has always pursued, even with the
important moment this year of the G7 presidency. The peace of
which the European Union is a historic expression" underlined
the Head of State.
"I interpret, in these hours, the anguish of everyone for the
detention of Cecilia Sala. We are close to her waiting to see
her again as soon as possible in Italy" Mattarella hoped
"The growth of spending on armaments, triggered in the world by
Russia's aggression against Ukraine - which also forces us to
provide for our own defense - has reached the record figure of
2,443 billion dollars this year.
"Eight times more than what was allocated at the recent Cop 29,
in Baku, to combat climate change, a vital need for humanity. A
disheartening disproportion" he also highlighted
"Between North and South there is an unequal availability of
services. The danger of abandonment of internal and mountainous
areas continues. Bridging these distances. Ensuring an effective
fullness of rights is our task"
Mattarella then said
"Science, research, new technologies open up possibilities
unimaginable until recently for the treatment of diseases
considered incurable. At the same time, there are long waiting
lists for tests that, if timely, can save lives. Many people
give up treatment and medicine because they lack the necessary
means" highlighted the Head of State.
Among other things, Mattarella also denounced growing prison
suicides, a rising wave of femicides, the increasing brain drain
of young talent, a growing wealth gap, a growing north-south
gap, and rising health service waiting lists.
He ended his address by saying the liberation, whose 80th
anniversary comes next year, was the foundation of the republic,
and said "we are hope".
Concluding the quarter-hour speech, Mattarella said:
"We are called to consolidate and develop the reasons set by the
Constitution at the basis of the national community.
"It is an undertaking that is passed down from one generation to
the next.
"Because hope cannot be translated only into idle waiting. We
are hope. Our commitment. Our freedom. Our choices".
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