- Critically endangered whale species rebounds slightly
- US interest rate, election uncertainty hit stock market sentiment
- Russian dissident Navalny's memoir published worldwide
- Strong auto prices lift GM results as it eyes China revamp
- 'Dutchman' Hirscher to step out of retirement in Soelden
- UN eyes modest 2024 maritime trade growth, but future uncertain
- 70% of Cuba's population has power back after blackout
- Families separated by front line in Russia's Kursk region
- India, China and S.Africa leaders underpin Putin at key summit
- Navalny memoirs spark mix of curiosity, indifference in Moscow
- Modi calls for quick end to Ukraine conflict in talks with Putin
- Ukraine peace talks, NATO invite may hinge on US elections, Zelensky says
- Leipzig players 'not yet talking' about Klopp, says Openda before Liverpool tie
- IMF predicts slightly slower global growth in 2024 and 2025
- US interest rate, election uncertainy hit stock market sentiment
- Guardiola applauds Man City mentality ahead of Sparta Prague test
- San Siro saga continues as Inter and AC Milan propose new stadium project
- French luxury brand Chanel to sponsor Oxford v Cambridge Boat Race
- Flick calm despite Barca's dire Bayern record
- Kenya court hears challenge to deputy leader's impeachment
- Women footballers call on FIFA to drop Saudi Aramco as sponsor
- Mozambican opposition leader says security forces killed his lawyer
- Modi calls for quick end to Ukraine conflict in meeting with Putin
- Stock markets diverge tracking US outlook
- Snyman returns for Springboks' November internationals
- Bangladesh battle at 101-3 as South Africa threaten innings defeat
- Over 250 women in talks with Harrods over Al-Fayed claims
- England pick Ahmed as third spinner for deciding Pakistan Test
- Verreynne century puts South Africa on top, Bangladesh 19-2 at tea
- Navalny's tomb 'covered with fresh flowers every day': widow
- Schauffele targets more success in Japan after major breakthroughs
- Rare Tintin albums go under the hammer in Paris
- Blinken in Israel to push for Gaza truce
- Most markets fall as traders weigh US rates outlook
- Harris and Trump push for every vote with just 14 days to go
- Hyundai Motor India shares dip on debut after record IPO
- South Africa 243-8 at lunch, lead Bangladesh by 137
- Apple CEO visits China for second time this year as sales slump
- Glasgow confirmed as host of 10-sport 2026 Commonwealth Games
- 'Serious business': influencer degree launches in Ireland
- In South Africa, water shortages are the new reality
- Frontline Ukraine cafe offers glimpse of normality as war rages
- In Mozambique, cigars 100% made in Africa
- North Korea UN representative denies Pyongyang sent troops to Russia
- Leipzig host Liverpool under Klopp's looming shadow
- Harvey Weinstein diagnosed with bone marrow cancer: US media
- King Charles caps Australia trip with 'barbie' and Opera House bash
- Tuipulotu named All Blacks captain to face Japan
- Is Musk's million-dollar US voter lottery legal?
- Britain seeking EU trade reset: minister
RBGPF | 2.42% | 62 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.29% | 24.722 | $ | |
BCC | -1% | 136.535 | $ | |
NGG | -1.1% | 66.299 | $ | |
JRI | -0.23% | 13.12 | $ | |
SCS | -0.78% | 12.79 | $ | |
GSK | -0.49% | 37.975 | $ | |
AZN | -0.47% | 77.08 | $ | |
RIO | 0.41% | 65.22 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.1% | 24.894 | $ | |
RELX | -1.62% | 46.87 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.68% | 7.35 | $ | |
BCE | -0.53% | 33.215 | $ | |
VOD | -0.89% | 9.545 | $ | |
BTI | 1.1% | 34.63 | $ | |
BP | 0.3% | 31.565 | $ |
Italy riled up by stamp honouring Fascist football pioneer
The decision to honour the founder of the AS Roma football club on a postage stamp has caused a furore in Italy due to his Fascist past.
The stamp issued on Thursday bears the face of Italo Foschi, a Fascist militia leader who was accused of persecuting Jewish people.
The legacy of Fascism, to which many Italians have an ambiguous attitude, has faced renewed debate since the 2022 election of Giorgia Meloni, Italy's first far-right prime minister.
And the decision to honour Roma's founding president has caused bewilderment, coming at the same time as another stamp honouring a Socialist MP assassinated 100 years ago by Fascist hitmen -- one of whom was praised by Foschi.
La Stampa daily reported that the idea to commemorate Foschi came from an undersecretary in Italy's industry ministry who is a member of the far-right Brothers of Italy party headed by Meloni.
The choice set off a wave of incredulity within the opposition.
Foschi was the "author of brutal crimes against political opponents and of ruthless persecutions against Jews," wrote two MPs from the opposition Democratic Party, Francesco Verducci and Dario Parrini, calling the choice "offensive and shameful".
Another, Michele Fina, said it represented a "continuous regurgitation of clearly Fascist impulses" by Meloni's government, which is Italy's most right-wing since the end of World War Two.
Italian newspapers seized on the irony, given that the post office is due on Monday to issue another stamp to honour Giacomo Matteotti, a Socialist MP abducted in broad daylight and killed by Fascists in 1924.
Following Matteotti's death, Foschi wrote to one of Matteotti's killers, Amerigo Dumini -- a member of the violent Fascist paramilitary squads whose beatings, murders and raids on property in the early 1920s helped consolidate Mussolini's power -- telling him "You are a hero".
"Welcome to Italy's Pantheon", ironised La Stampa.
A member of the industry ministry's advisory committee that selects personalities worthy of appearing on stamps protested that the committee was not told about the choice of Foschi.
"We find his name on the list of those responsible for the anti-Jewish persecution in Veneto," Carlo Giovanardi wrote on Wednesday on the Il Riformista website.
Contacted by AFP, an industry ministry spokesman said: "The celebration is only about sports. There is no other connotation, much less political."
Born in 1884, Foschi was active in the Italian National Association before it merged with the National Fascist Party (PNF) in 1923.
He rose through the ranks in the Lazio section active in Rome and made a name for himself by taking part in violent actions against Mussolini's opponents.
As general secretary of the Roman PNF federation, Foschi organised the merger of three football clubs in the capital, giving birth to Roma in 1927 and becoming their first president.
- 'Not anti-Fascist' -
To mark the 140th anniversary of Foschi's birth, Roma -- whose website makes no mention of Foschi's political past -- organised the third edition of the "Italo Foschi Trophy", a match between two youth teams.
Foschi died of a heart attack in 1949 while attending a football match.
Meloni paid tribute to Matteotti last week, describing him as "a free and courageous man killed by fascist squad members for his ideas".
Some observers found the comments surprising coming from Meloni, who as a 19-year-old activist in 1996 told a television reporter that "Mussolini was a good politician... everything he did, he did for Italy".
Since coming to power in October 2022, however, Meloni has sought to downplay the post-Fascist origins of Brothers of Italy, which grew from the Italian Social Movement (MSI) formed after the war by supporters of Mussolini.
Meloni has played a delicate balancing act, trying to broaden her electorate and win new respectability on the international stage, without cutting herself off from the more radical fringes of her party.
Paolo Borioni, a professor of political science at Rome's La Sapienza university, told AFP that Meloni's challenge was to project "signs of a non-Fascist but not anti-Fascist democracy."
Y.Aukaiv--AMWN