Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2001-09-05-Speech-3-241"
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"en.20010905.6.3-241"2
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"Madam President, after the spirit of Rambouillet at the first G5 summit, we have reached the sad events in Genoa and many of us are beginning to think that these summits have become too large, unwieldy and bureaucratic and have lost the old, productive atmosphere of confidential meetings. The Commission spoke about this a while ago and this is certainly a subject to examine in greater depth.
On occasions such as these, however, many of us have also realised that there are forces in Parliament that are able to exploit even tragedies for their own ends, for the death in Genoa was a tragedy. This was simply to achieve their political objectives: that is, to discredit the centre-right government in Italy. To achieve this outcome, they use the European Parliament, organising in Parliament, as they did yesterday, for example, meetings with exponents of antiglobalisation movements that spread ridiculous, false accusations and offend a European Union Member State by calling it an incomplete democracy that should be placed under supervision. I regret to say that an active part is played in these demonstrations by Italian Members of this House – I need only name Mr Vinci – who perhaps do not realise that they are discrediting not so much the centre-right government but the whole of their country.
My question is quite obvious and simple: if a left-wing government had been in power in Italy, would there have been the same mobilisation of forces in this Parliament, with pilgrimages by our fellow Members who had never dreamt of going to previous summits but who – as if by coincidence – were present in Genoa?
I hope that the protests in Genoa and elsewhere never succeed in preventing world leaders from continuing to talk to each other, as could well happen."@en1
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