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Italian Senate backs train link with France

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ROME: The Italian Senate on Wednesday rejected a motion by one of the ruling coalition parties, the 5-Star Movement, to block an alpine rail link with France, paving the way for the long-contested project to continue.


The planned line, meant to connect the Italian city of Turin with Lyon in France, includes a 58-km tunnel through the Alps. It is fiercely opposed by 5-Star but supported by its coalition partner, the right-wing League, and by most other parties in parliament.


The upper house of parliament rejected the 5-Star’s motion by 181 votes to 110.


The 5-Star Movement is the largest party in parliament but it was outvoted by the combined forces of the League and opposition parties from the left and right.


A subsequent motion by the opposition Democratic Party, in favour of the TAV, was passed by 180 votes to 109.


Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said last month that new financial offers from the European Union and France had made the infrastructure, known as the TAV, less costly for Italy, and it would now cost more to block it than to complete it.


Italy then wrote to the European Union pledging to go ahead with it, according to the European Parliament president David Sassoli.


The TAV, which has been repeatedly held up by protests and bottlenecks since it was first planned some 30 years ago, is among a raft of issues that have divided the League and 5-Star in recent months, as the two parties have squabbled incessantly.


5-Star says tunnelling through the Alps hurts the environment and the project is a waste of money that would be better spent on upgrading Italy’s existing transport network.


The League says it will create jobs and promote growth, and shifting freight from road to rail is environmentally friendly.


League leader Matteo Salvini said on Tuesday that tensions with 5-Star meant the government could soon collapse, and the parliamentary


debate ahead of the Senate vote exposed the growing gulf between the two parties.. — Reuters


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