(ANSA) - ROME, JAN 27 - Italy is not set to see public
obscenity laws return on the basis of a bill filed in October by
Premier Giorgia Meloni's rightwing Brothers of Italy (FdI)
party, majority sources clarified Friday.
The October 19 bill, whose first signatory is FdI Deputy Foreign
Minister Edmondo Cirielli, would have changed Italy's criminal
code and brought back jail time for breaching obscenity norms in
public.
The main thrust of the anti-vice bill was to clean up the
streets from shows of indecency by sea workers and their
clients, he said.
"The aim is to combat more adequately the moral degradation that
afflicts our communities, boost the safety and security of
citizens, and safeguard public morals and decency".
Green/Left House Whip Luana Zanella accused Cirielli of
"prurient moralism and sexism" in aiming to punish sex work in
cars while leaving sex work indoors unpunished.
But government sources stressed that "this bill is not part of
the government agenda" and was a personal initiative on the part
of Cirielli. (ANSA).
Public obscenity law not set to return
Jail time not to be restored for indecent acts
