Current:Home > StocksFather of slain Italian woman challenges men to be agents of change against femicide -ProgressCapital
Father of slain Italian woman challenges men to be agents of change against femicide
View
Date:2025-04-13 12:53:57
MILAN (AP) — The father of a young woman whose murder galvanized Italian outrage against violence targeting women implored men during her funeral Tuesday in the northern city of Padua to be “agents of change” to a culture that often “undervalues the lives of women.”
Outside, thousands of mourners rang bells and shook keys, part of a campaign to “make noise” against gender violence that has grown in intensity in the weeks since 22-year-old Giulia Cecchetin was found dead, her throat slit, in a ditch in a remote area of the Alpine foothills on Nov. 18. She had disappeared along with her ex-boyfriend a week earlier after meeting him for a burger.
Filippo Turetta, 21, was later arrested in Germany, and is being held in an Italian jail during an investigation to bring charges. Turetta has not commented publicly, but his lawyer told reporters that he admitted to the crime under prosecutors’ questioning.
Cecchetin is among 102 women murdered through mid-November this year in Italy, more than half by current or former intimate partners, according to the Interior Ministry.
Some 10,000 mourners, including Italy’s justice minister, gathered for Cecchetin’s funeral Mass at Padua’s Santa Giustina cathedral, many thousands spilling out into the piazza. Many wore ribbons representing the campaign to stop femicide, the killing of women.
“Femicide often results from a culture that devalues the lives of women, victims of those that should have loved them. Instead, they were harassed, forced into long periods of abuse until they completely lose their liberty, before they also lose their lives,’’ the young woman’s father, Gino Cecchetin, told mourners. “How could all of this happen? How could this have happened to Giulia?”
He called on families, schools, civil society and the media to “break a cycle.”
“I turn first to men, because we should first demonstrate to be agents of change against gender violence,’’ the father said, urging men to listen to women and not turn away from any signs of violence, “even the slightest.”
He remembered his daughter as “an extraordinary young woman. Happy. Lively. Never tired of learning,’’ who stepped in to take over household duties, alongside university studies, after her mother died of cancer last year.
She will soon be posthumously awarded a degree in bioengineering, which she had recently completed at the prestigious University of Padua.
The university suspended all classes until 2 p.m. for the funeral and the Veneto regional governor declared a day of mourning in the region, with flags flying at half-staff.
The father was joined by Giulia’s older sister Elena and younger brother Davide in the cathedral’s front row; notably, all the readings and hymns were led by young women. During the ceremony, Giulia’s father embraced Justice Minister Carlo Nordio, regional Gov. Luca Zaia and a contingent of local mayors.
As he left the cathedral, Zaia told regional broadcaster TG Veneto that schools should be reading the father’s eulogy, which commentators noted didn’t just mourn Cecchetin but offered a pathway to change.
There are no comprehensive statistics on the prevalence of gender-based violence against women in the EU, given the difference in legal definitions and data collection systems.
The European Institute of Gender Equality, however, estimated that in 2017, 29% of intentional female homicides in the EU were of women who were victims of their intimate partners. In Italy, the percentage was 43.9%, according to the institute.
____
Nicole Winfield contributed from Rome.
veryGood! (5843)
Related
- Bet365 ordered to refund $519K to customers who it paid less than they were entitled on sports bets
- 3 juveniles face riot charges after disruption at Arkansas behavioral hospital
- Kelly Ripa Jokes About Wanting a Gray Divorce From Mark Consuelos
- Diabetics use glucose monitors. Should non-diabetics use them too?
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- T.I. Announces Retirement From Performing
- The Daily Money: America's retirement system gets a C+
- Food Network Host Tituss Burgess Shares the $7 Sauce He Practically Showers With
- Illinois governor calls for resignation of sheriff whose deputy fatally shot Black woman in her home
- In Missouri, Halloween night signs were required in the yards of sex offenders. Until now
Ranking
- Beware of giant spiders: Thousands of tarantulas to emerge in 3 states for mating season
- NFL Week 6 overreactions: Jets playoff bound with Davante Adams, Lions' title hopes over
- Simu Liu accused a company of cultural appropriation. It sparked an important conversation.
- California Gov. Gavin Newsom signs a law aimed at preventing gas prices from spiking
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Poland’s leader defends his decision to suspend the right to asylum
- Grand jury charges daughter with killing Kentucky woman whose body was dismembered
- Social Security will pay its largest checks ever in 2025. Here's how much they'll be
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Europa Clipper has launched: Spacecraft traveling to Jupiter's icy moon to look for signs of life
The Daily Money: America's retirement system gets a C+
Tia Mowry and Tamera Mowry’s Candid Confessions May Make You Do a Double Take
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
I got 14 medical tests done at this fancy resort. I didn't need most of them.
'A piece of all of us': Children lost in the storm, mourned in Hurricane Helene aftermath
Nicholas Sparks' Chicken Salad With 16 Splenda Packets Is a Recipe to Remember