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Tension as Italian students protest education law
THOUSANDS of students gathered in Rome to protest a new university law today as police blocked off large parts of the city centre to prevent a repeat of the violent clashes seen at a similar march a week ago.
Last week's demonstration saw cars torched, shop windows smashed and dozens injured in street battles between protestors and riot police after the initially peaceful march descended into some of the worst violence seen in Rome for years.
The rioting, which came after Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi narrowly survived a no-confidence vote in parliament, was blamed by Interior Minister Roberto Maroni on militant agitators and provoked calls for a crackdown by many in the ruling centre right.
Student leaders, who want to avoid similar scenes on Wednesday, have pledged not to try to breach police blockades but have kept the route of two separate marches secret and have promised a surprise.
The new education law, which the government says will strengthen Italy's crumbling university system but which critics say will merely cut funding, was due for final approval in the Senate on Wednesday though a vote may be delayed until Thursday.
"We are asking for this bill to be blocked and for the whole public education system to be refinanced," the Student Network, which groups different associations, said in a statement.
Education Minister Mariastella Gelmini, who has piloted the new law through parliament, said the measures were urgently needed to equip Italian students for employment.
"It is essential to restore dignity and usability to Italian university degrees," she said in an open letter to the Corriere della Sera newspaper.
The reform cuts the number of university courses and faculties and reduces funding for grants. It also sets time limits for research, overhauls the admissions system, increases the role of the private sector in university governance and limits the duration of rectorships.
The government, under pressure to cut Italy's bloated public debt, says that while spending cuts are necessary, the reform will create a more merit-based system which is closer to the needs of employers.
With an official youth unemployment rate of around 25 percent in the country overall and as high as 35 percent in the poorer southern regions, the battle over university reform has crystallised discontent over the future of Italy's young people.
Supporters of the bill say the country's overcrowded universities do little more than produce 30 year-old sociology graduates ill-fitted for work in a modern economy and the system needs radical overhaul.
Critics, many of whom also support the principle of reforming the universities, say the system has been systematically starved of funds and further cuts will seriously endanger Italy's research capacity.
Last week's demonstration saw cars torched, shop windows smashed and dozens injured in street battles between protestors and riot police after the initially peaceful march descended into some of the worst violence seen in Rome for years.
The rioting, which came after Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi narrowly survived a no-confidence vote in parliament, was blamed by Interior Minister Roberto Maroni on militant agitators and provoked calls for a crackdown by many in the ruling centre right.
Student leaders, who want to avoid similar scenes on Wednesday, have pledged not to try to breach police blockades but have kept the route of two separate marches secret and have promised a surprise.
The new education law, which the government says will strengthen Italy's crumbling university system but which critics say will merely cut funding, was due for final approval in the Senate on Wednesday though a vote may be delayed until Thursday.
"We are asking for this bill to be blocked and for the whole public education system to be refinanced," the Student Network, which groups different associations, said in a statement.
Education Minister Mariastella Gelmini, who has piloted the new law through parliament, said the measures were urgently needed to equip Italian students for employment.
"It is essential to restore dignity and usability to Italian university degrees," she said in an open letter to the Corriere della Sera newspaper.
The reform cuts the number of university courses and faculties and reduces funding for grants. It also sets time limits for research, overhauls the admissions system, increases the role of the private sector in university governance and limits the duration of rectorships.
The government, under pressure to cut Italy's bloated public debt, says that while spending cuts are necessary, the reform will create a more merit-based system which is closer to the needs of employers.
With an official youth unemployment rate of around 25 percent in the country overall and as high as 35 percent in the poorer southern regions, the battle over university reform has crystallised discontent over the future of Italy's young people.
Supporters of the bill say the country's overcrowded universities do little more than produce 30 year-old sociology graduates ill-fitted for work in a modern economy and the system needs radical overhaul.
Critics, many of whom also support the principle of reforming the universities, say the system has been systematically starved of funds and further cuts will seriously endanger Italy's research capacity.
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