Connect with us

INTERNACIONAL

Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni leaves partner following a nearly decadelong relationship

Published

on


Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni announced Friday that she is separating from her partner and the father of her young daughter after nearly a decade together.

In a statement posted on social media, Meloni said her relationship with Andrea Giambruno had ended. She said their paths had diverged «for some time.» The announcement came after Giambruno, an on-air television personality, was caught on audio seemingly making lewd remarks to colleagues.

An Italian satirical news program, Striscia la Notizia, aired two nights’ worth of programming on Giambruno this week, using backstage clips and audio. Striscia is a primetime program of the Mediaset broadcaster of the late Silvio Berlusconi, whose Forza Italia party is a junior partner in Meloni’s government.

‘DANCING WITH THE STARS’: MIRA SORVINO IS EMBRACING HER SEXUALITY FOR THIS REASON

 Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni and Andrea Giambruno

Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni, center, and her partner Andrea Giambruno arrive in Milan, northern Italy, on Dec. 7, 2023.  (Alessandro Bremec/LaPresse via AP)

This week marks the first anniversary of Meloni’s government, Italy’s first headed by a woman and first hard-right-led administration since the end of World War II.

Meloni, who was raised by a single mother after her father abandoned the family, and Giambruno share 7-year-old Ginevra.

Advertisement

Meloni had previously described Giambruno as a «fantastic» and very present father who complemented her in caring for their daughter. In her 2021 memoir «I am Giorgia,» she said Giambruno wouldn’t balk if she was working and he had to step in, though she complained that he was messier than she.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

In her statement, Meloni thanked Giambruno for their relationship and daughter and she would defend their friendship. «And I will defend, at all costs, a 7-year-old girl who loves her mother and loves her father, as I was unable to love mine.»

She also hit back at the media coverage that preceded her announcement, blasting «all those who hoped to weaken me by hitting me at home.»



Source link

Advertisement

INTERNACIONAL

Hamas’ Gaza death toll questioned as new report says its led to ‘widespread inaccuracies and distortion’

Published

on


Join Fox News for access to this content

Plus special access to select articles and other premium content with your account – free of charge.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

Having trouble? Click here.

A new report cites a laundry list of alleged errors in the casualty tallies that the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health has issued during the conflict in Gaza, and found that worldwide media widely report the inflated numbers with little or no scrutiny.

The Henry Jackson Society (HJS), a U.K. based think tank, found «widespread inaccuracies and distortion in the data collection process» for the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health (MoH) which has resulted in a «misleading picture of the conflict.» The study also analyzed how journalists worldwide have spread misleading MoH data without noting its shortcomings or offering alternative information from Israeli sources.

The report’s author, Andrew Fox, a fellow at HJS said his team’s research is based on lists of casualty figures that the MoH has released through Telegram as well as lists released by the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Fox said he and his team have been able to examine segments of the reporting, despite changeable MoH data being «really hard to interrogate.» 

Advertisement

On Tuesday, Gaza health authorities updated its number of dead to what it said was more than 45,000.

ISRAEL TO CLOSE EMBASSY IN IRELAND OVER ‘ANTI-ISRAEL POLICIES’

A man walks past shelter tents erected near collapsed buildings in the Bureij camp for Palestinian refugees in the central Gaza Strip on Oct. 1, 2024. (Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty Images)

The report said the ministry’s reporting long indicated that women and children made up more than half of the war dead, leading to accusations that Israel intentionally kills civilians in Gaza.

«If Israel was killing indiscriminately, you would expect deaths to roughly match the demographic proportions pre-war,» Fox said. At the time, adult men made up around 26% of the Gazan population. «The number of adult males that have died is vastly in excess of 26%,» he said.

Within accessible reporting, Fox and his team also found instances of casualty entries being recorded improperly, «artificially increas[ing] the numbers of women and children who are reported as killed.» This has included people with male names being listed as females, and grown adults being recorded as young children.

A Palestinian fighter from the armed wing of Hamas takes part in a military parade

A terrorist from Hamas takes part in a military parade. (Reuters/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/File Photo)

Analyzing data by category has further highlighted biases within reporting. There are three kinds of entries within MoH’s casualty figures: entries collected by hospitals prior to the breakdown of networks in November 2023, entries submitted by family members of the deceased, and entries collected through «media sources,» whose veracity researchers like Dr. David Adesnik, vice president of research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, has previously questioned. 

Advertisement

Analysis of gender breakdowns among these groupings shows that hospital records «are distorted,» with a higher percentage of women and children among hospital-reported casualties than in those reported by family members.

UN ACCUSED OF DOWNPLAYING HAMAS TERRORISTS’ USE OF GAZA HOSPITALS AS NEW REPORT IGNORES IMPORTANT DETAILS

Hospital patients evacuated

Kamal Adwan hospital’s health team evacuate Palestinian patients after Israeli airstrikes damaged the hospital in Gaza Strip on May 21, 2024. (Karam Hassan/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Though around 5,000 natural deaths typically occur in Gaza each year, the study found that MoH casualty figures do not account for natural deaths. It claims that it also fails to exclude deaths unassociated with Israeli military action from its count. This includes individuals believed to have been killed by Hamas, like 13-year-old Ahmed Shaddad Halmy Brikeh, who appears on a casualty list from August despite reports indicating he had «been shot dead by Hamas» while trying to get food from an aid shipment in December 2023. The list also excludes individuals killed by Hamas’ rockets, about 1,750 of which «fell short within the Gaza strip» between October 2023 and July 2024.

Fox and his team also found individuals who died before the conflict began had been added to MoH casualty counts. In addition, at least three cancer patients whose names were included in lists to leave the Gaza Strip for treatment in April had been listed as dead during the month of March.

RETURN OF TRUMP GIVES FAMILIES OF GAZA HOSTAGES NEW HOPE

Al Shifa Hospital

Ambulances carrying victims of Israeli strikes crowd the entrance to the emergency ward of the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City on Oct. 15, 2023. (Dawood Nemer/AFP via Getty Images)

The ministry does not separate combatants and civilians in its casualty figures. Though the study states that Israeli forces have killed around 17,000 Hamas terrorists, Fox said that his research indicated the death toll may include as many as 22,000 members of Hamas. He said his research supports the fact that around 15,000 of the dead in Gaza are women and children, and 7,500 are non-combatant adult males.

«Collecting these sorts of lists in a war zone is a hugely challenging thing,» Fox admitted, but he stated that the MoH’s mistakes, whether innocent or deliberate, show that the institution is «really unreliable.» 

Advertisement

Despite this unreliability, the Henry Jackson Society’s survey of reporting of the conflict found that 98% of media organizations it looked at utilized fatality data from MoH versus 5% who cited Israeli figures. Fox found that «fewer than one in every 50 articles [about the conflict] mentioned that the figures provided by the MoH were unverifiable or controversial,» though «Israeli statistics had their credibility questioned in half of the few articles that incorporated them.» 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Plume of smoke

Smoke rises near the al-Wafa hospital from Israeli airstrike in Gaza City on Oct. 24, 2023. (Ali Jadallah/Anadolu via Getty Images)

As an illustration of the phenomenon witnessed in the survey, Fox pointed out what he called an «incredibly biased» article from a British broadcaster that recently emerged citing MoH data claiming that there have been more than 45,000 deaths in Gaza. Though its report mentions MoH data, it does not break down the numbers of combatants and civilians, and does not mention the questionable veracity of MoH reporting. Instead, it parrots MoH claims, reporting that women and children make up for over half of the fatalities.

«It’s just a great example of everything we’ve written in the report,» Fox said.


Continue Reading

LO MAS LEIDO

Tendencias

Copyright © 2024 - NDM Noticias del Momento - #Noticias #Chimentos #Politica #Fútbol #Economia #Sociedad