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Photos and videos reveal brewing unrest in southern Italy as lockdowns make people desperate for cash and food
Photos and videos reveal brewing unrest in southern Italy as lockdowns make people desperate for cash and food
Natalie ColarossiApr 2, 2020, 00:33 IST
Italy's novel coronavirus outbreak is one of the worst in the world, prompting the government to initiate a strict nationwide lockdown.
But southern regions are beginning to feel the weight of the economic blow as many residents begin to run out of food and money.
An estimated 3.3 million Italians - one-third of whom are located in the south - work off-the-books for cash, making them unsure of when their next paycheck will come.
This concern has caused some southern Italians to plot raids against grocery stores, and authorities are worried the situation could become violent.
While many of the coronavirus cases are located in the wealthier northern cities of Italy, poorer regions in the south are beginning to face the threat of running out of food and cash.
Photos and videos have circulated showing people pleading with police for money, attempting to organize grocery raids, and calling on the government for aid.
As tensions grow in these southern regions, authorities are worried the situation could soon become violent.
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While the majority of COVID-19 cases have been in the northern region of Italy, many in the south are dealing with the lockdown's economic blow, and now face the prospect of poverty and unrest.
Long lines at grocery stores have caused anxiety in the region, and reports have shown that some people are pressuring small businesses owners to give away food for free.
A private Facebook group has urged people to organize large raids on grocery stores and markets, and is currently under investigation. This has prompted police officers to stand guard outside of supermarkets in Palermo, the capitol city of Sicily.
Police with batons and guns have moved in to protect supermarkets on the Italian island of Sicily after reports of looting by locals who could no longer afford food, @AFP reports from Palermohttps://t.co/PhSLZg00GGpic.twitter.com/nY2DWAjlcn
Plus very significant economic problems are beginning to bite for people suddenly without incomes or savings: in Palermo police guard supermarkets. https://t.co/AfSqAuCnnx
A video from Sky News shows people shouting at police, desperately claiming they have no money. Other footage shows a man saying he and his daughter will soon run out of bread, heading the call for a revolution.
One Priest told the Guardian: "Now people are more afraid — not so much of the virus, but of poverty. Many are out of work and hungry. There are now long queues at food banks."
The south has been hit particularly hard because of Italy's underground economy. An estimated 3.3 million people work off the record for cash, with at least one million of those jobs concentrated in poor southern regions.
Small business owners and workers fear their shops will not be able to reopen, after the lockdown is lifted. One waiter in Sicily who lost his job told the Guardian, "This situation is bringing us to our knees."
The mayor of Palermo fears that organized crime will soon swoop in and take advantage of an increasingly desperate situation. He told the government that "criminal groups could promote violence acts," according to The Guardian.
Realizing that social unrest could become worse as lockdowns persists, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte is preparing an emergency relief package that could be worth 600 euros per month for workers hit hardest in the south.