EntertainmentRed paint on Spanish Steps: Activists protest women's murders in Italy

Red paint on Spanish Steps: Activists protest women's murders in Italy

Protest against the plague of femicides in Italy
Protest against the plague of femicides in Italy
Images source: © Canva

27 June 2024 09:14

An unusual protest took place on Wednesday, June 26, in Rome. Activists gathered in the Italian capital and smeared one of the monuments with red paint. They chose the famous Spanish Steps. This was all to express opposition to the epidemic of women being murdered and to show dissatisfaction with the government's inability to deal with it.

Violence against women remains a huge problem in many countries, both in Europe and around the world. We regularly receive information about rapes, beatings, and abuse of girls. They often become victims because they leave their partners or refuse to tolerate disrespect. Simply put, the reasons why women lose their lives are usually trivial.

There is an epidemic of murders of women ongoing in Italy. Since December 2022, over 40 women in this country have lost their lives. That is why on Wednesday, June 26, at the Spanish Steps in Rome, activists gathered and poured red paint over the famous steps. They did this to draw attention to the problem that the Italian authorities cannot handle. "Paint can be washed off, but lives cannot be restored," said the women's rights activists in Rome holding such banners.

Protests against violence against women in Italy

In November 2022, one of the largest demonstrations against violence against women took place in Rome. The protest pertained to the brutal death of Giulia Cecchettin, who her boyfriend murdered because he could not bear the fact that she did not want to be with him. She was only 22 years old. Since then, over 40 women have lost their lives in Italy. Hence, activists decided once again to gather in Rome.

- This painting symbolizes the blood of 40 women who have been killed since Giulia Cecchettin's murder. Still, many more people suffer daily due to violence and are exploited because of their gender. This is their blood. The slaughter that society does not want to see, which remains consistently hidden and accepted as if being killed by a husband, partner, or child were something normal - one of the protest participants said in an interview with "Corriere."

Another protest participant recalled the words of the sister of the 22-year-old Giulia, murdered in November. In November 2022, she appealed for people to change the law and care more about women instead of observing a minute of silence to commemorate the victim's name and believe women when they say they fear their partners and are worried that something might happen to them. She then, along with other activists, placed photos of the 40 murdered women on the painted steps.

- We are here for this reason. [...] We are here to scream our pain and make the problem visible. Our government does not respond to these tragedies. This paint will be washed off, but lives cannot be restored - said a protest participant in an interview with the media.

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