The Italian opposition calls for the abolition of the law to combat the unlawful random delirium parties

The Italian opposition calls for the abolition of the law to combat the unlawful random delirium parties

The extreme right-leaning new government in Italy was urged by the country’s opposition to scrap plans to pass a law that would have targeted illegal random delirium parties.
Enrico Lita, the head of the Social Democratic Party, declared in the daily “Corriere della Sera” on Thursday that “the law is so poor that it cannot possibly be changed, but rather it should be withdrawn.”
Such plans can affect not only loud random delirium parties, but also on schools, universities and environmental protests.

The right-wing oceanic prime minister Georgia Miloni’s new administration filed the law to Parliament on Monday.
If groups of more than 50 persons entered the property with the intent to have meetings that harm the system, security, or health, the law imposes prison sentences and higher fines.
Carlo Nordo, the minister of justice, made an effort to allay fears that the freedom of assembly and expression might be compromised.

The fact that loud techno is routinely played at erratic delirium events attended by thousands of party pioneers makes news in Italy.
Over 3,500 people took part in a multi-day ritual over the weekend in a deserted factory facility in Modena, northern Italy.

The opposition in Italy demands the repeal of the statute to stop the immoral random delirium parties.

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