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Italy: Writer and journalist Roberto Saviano facing prison for defamation

Last update: 8 April 2019
Italy: Writer and journalist Roberto Saviano facing prison for defamation
The Italian authorities should immediately drop criminal defamation charges against writer, journalist and PEN award winner Roberto Saviano, and repeal all criminal defamation laws, PEN International and English PEN said today.

The Italian authorities should immediately drop criminal defamation charges against writer, journalist and PEN award winner Roberto Saviano, and repeal all criminal defamation laws, PEN International and English PEN said today.

On 20 March 2019, Roberto Saviano announced that he had been summoned to stand trial on charges of defaming Italy’s Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, over a speech that described him as ‘Ministro della Mala Vita’ – minister of the underworld – a phrase borrowed from early 20th-century anti-fascist Gaetano Salvemini. In his speech, Roberto Saviano accused Matteo Salvini of ignoring the mafia stranglehold on Italy’s south in favour of stirring up resentment against immigrants.

Roberto Saviano is being sued under Article 595 of the Italian Penal Code. A date for his trial hearing has yet to be set.

‘Too often governments use criminal defamation laws to silence those who dare to speak out against them, depriving the public of their right to be informed. Roberto Saviano has repeatedly risked his safety and his life to expose the truth about Italy’s criminal networks. Instead of doing everything in their power to protect Saviano, the Italian authorities have threatened to remove his police escort and are now suing him’ said Jennifer Clement, PEN International president. ‘Today he faces up to three years behind bars. This egregious assault on the rights and freedoms of Roberto Saviano is an assault on all of us. Italy should end the use of criminal law in regard to defamation and treat is as a matter for civil litigation.’

In June 2018, Matteo Salvini threatened to remove Roberto Saviano’s police escort. Saviano has been living under constant police protection since October 2006, after receiving threats from the mafia following the publication of his bestseller Gomorrah. Matteo Salvini’s warning came after Roberto Saviano criticised the Italian authorities’ anti-migrant stance.

‘I stand with you Roberto Saviano, as President of English PEN, as a lawyer, as a human being – totally committed to your freedom of expression and the rule of law’ said Philippe Sands, President of English PEN.

PEN calls on the Italian authorities – and on the governments of all countries that retain criminal defamation or insult laws – to amend those laws and allow issues of reputation to be addressed solely as a civil law matter in which the government has no role.

Additional information

Roberto Saviano is the author of Gomorrah, an international best seller that has sold over 10 million copies worldwide. He wrote several screenplays and theatre scripts and regularly contributes to newspapers and magazines such as La Repubblica, l’Espresso, The New York Times, The New York Review of Books, Newsweek, El Diario, Die Zeit, The Guardian and Le Monde. He is the Winner of the 2011 PEN/Pinter International Writer of Courage Award and of the 2019 Oxfam Novib/PEN International award for freedom of expression.

Defamation is defined in Article 595 of the Italian Penal Code as damage to the reputation of a person through communication with several persons and carries up to three years in prison. Defamation is also considered a criminal offence under Article 13 of the Press Law, which punishes defamation committed by the press by imprisonment from one to six years.

In October 2013, the Chamber of Deputies, the Lower Chamber of the Italian Parliament, approved a bill that would have removed the possibility of imprisonment for defamation offenses. Progress on the bill has since stalled. In 2016, the Justice Committee of Italy’s Senate approved a bill that would have seen journalists facing up to nine years in jail if convicted of defaming public officials. The bill was shelved following a national and international outcry. In May 2017, the UN Human Rights Committee called on the Italian authorities to ‘consider the complete decriminalization of defamation and libel’ and amend Article 13 of the Press Law and Article 595 of the Penal Code.

PEN opposes criminal defamation in all cases. For more information about PEN’s campaign to repeal criminal defamation and insult laws, please click here.

Show your support

Please share on Facebook, Twitter and other social media using the hashtag #StandWithSaviano

PEN members wishing to send solidarity messages should contact Cat Lucas, Writers at Risk Programme Manager at English PEN: [email protected].

For further details contact Aurélia Dondo at PEN International, Koops Mill, 162-164 Abbey Street, London, SE1 2AN, UK Tel: +44 (0) 20 7405 0338 Fax +44 (0) 20 7405 0339 e-mail: [email protected]