By Angelo Amante
ROME (Reuters) – Protesters on Thursday heckled Italy’s family minister over her critical position on abortion rights, forcing her to abandon a speech at a conference on reversing the country’s declining birth rate.
When Eugenia Roccella — a member of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party — took the floor, activists booed and raised letters forming the sentence “I decide over my body.”
Roccella initially tried to confront the protesters, but then decided to give up her planned speech.
In a post on social media X, Meloni offered “full and unconditional solidarity” to Roccella and called the protest “disgraceful,” as a group of people had prevented a minister from speaking because they opposed her ideas.
“It is time to say enough is enough,” Meloni said.
Gigi De Palo, among the organisers of the conference, said in a statement that Roccella had been shaken by the protest and had decided to leave.
The conference, which is taking place in Rome, features speakers from across the political spectrum and on Friday Pope Francis is also scheduled to participate.
Last month, Italy’s ruling coalition sparked outrage for passing legislation to allow groups who “support motherhood” into abortion clinics, which rights groups and the opposition saw as an attempt to curb the practice which has been legal in Italy since 1978.
The government denied this, saying the aim was only to give more options to women considering terminating their pregnancy.
It was not the first time an event with Roccella has seen protests over her conservative positions. Last year she was jeered at a book festival in the northern city of Turin.
The declining birth rate is seen as a national emergency in Italy. In March, national statistics institute ISTAT said births in the country had dropped to a record low in 2023, the 15th consecutive annual decline.
(This story has been refiled to edit the headline)
(Reporting by Angelo Amante; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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