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Mussolini’s granddaughter abandons Meloni for Forza Italia, “more moderate and centrist”

The granddaughter of the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini who until now played in the far-right Brothers of Italy (FdI) party, Rachele, has left the formation of the Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni, to move to the conservative Forza Italia (FI), more in line with its “moderate and centrist sensitivity”.

The most voted councilor in the City Council of Rome with FdI considers that Meloni’s formation has too extremist positions particularly on civil rights and feels more comfortable in the party founded by Silvio Berlusconi and now led by the Vice President of the Executive and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Antonio Tajani, revealed this Thursday the newspaper ‘Repubblica’.

“I thank FdI for having believed in me and having supported me during two candidacies, affection and esteem remain, but for me the time has come to turn the page and join a party that I feel closer to my moderate and centrist sensitivity,” Mussolini said succinctly to the Ansa agency after his decision was known.

The granddaughter of the ‘Duce’, twice elected councilor in the municipal elections in Rome, in the last as the most voted, maintains differences with the ultras of Meloni, as happened last August with the controversy surrounding the intersexual character of the Algerian boxer Imane Khelif and that she described as “a denigrating campaign,” according to the newspaper.

Khleif won the gold medal at the Paris Games and, after the withdrawal of his Italian rival Angela Carini, Meloni, who said that confrontation was not done on equal terms.

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Rachele, daughter of Romano, the dictator’s fourth son, and half-sister of former MEP Alessandra, had also been against maintaining the tricolor flame in the past, one of the emblems of the Italian Social Movement, heir to her grandfather’s fascist party, as a symbol of the FdI.

Last June there was talk of his candidacy for the European elections, which finally did not materialize by his own decision. Then she assured, in the ‘Corriere dell’, that although she was proud of her last name after her father, a prominent jazz musician, “they would only have talked about my name and they would have said: ‘Meloni puts the granddaughter of the Duce as a candidate’”.

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International

Pope Leo XIV’s roots in Peru inspire hope for Amazon protection

The bishop sat silently near the front row, hands clasped, as Indigenous leaders and Church workers spoke about the threats facing the forests of northern Peru, deep within the Amazon. It was 2016, one year after Laudato Si, Pope Francis’ encyclical on the environment.

When it was his turn to speak, the bishop didn’t preach—even though the gathering was taking place in his own city, Chiclayo, where he was hosting a regional meeting. Instead, he reflected on what he had witnessed.

“I believe it’s a very important encyclical,” he said. “It also marks a new step in the Church’s explicit expression of concern for all of creation.”

That bishop, Robert Prevost, is now Pope Leo XIV.

“He was always warm and approachable,” recalled Laura Vargas, secretary of the Interreligious Council of Peru, who helped organize the event, in a phone interview with The Associated Press.

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“He had a strong interest in a socially engaged ministry, very close to the people. That’s why, when we proposed holding the event in his diocese, he welcomed it without hesitation,” she added.

Since then, Prevost has strengthened ties with environmental interfaith networks like the Interfaith Rainforest Initiative and Indigenous organizations such as AIDESEP, which place forest protection and rights at the heart of Church concerns.

These credentials have given hope to clergy and the faithful across the Amazon region—a vast area of 48 million people and 6.7 million square kilometers (2.6 million square miles) in South America. Many see Prevost, who was born in Chicago and spent nearly two decades in rural Peru, as a pope who will protect the region and stand up to climate change.

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International

Pope Leo XIV blesses mexican faithful during Vatican appearance

Following his appointment as the new leader of the Catholic Church, Pope Leo XIV offered his blessing to Mexican faithful and priests who had been waiting for him in the courtyard of the Palace of the Holy Office, just steps away from the entrance to the Vatican.

As he continued to shake hands with those present, someone exclaimed, “Greetings from Mexico!” To which Pope Leo XIV responded warmly, smiling and asking, “From Mexico?” A woman, kneeling to receive his blessing, confirmed: “All from Guadalajara.” The Pope reacted with pleasant surprise, exclaiming, “Ah, Guadalajara!”

Upon his arrival, the first American Pope—who also holds Peruvian nationality—blessed those awaiting him and even signed a Bible for a young girl.

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International

Habeas Corpus at risk as Trump team eyes drastic border policy shift

The White House is reportedly considering suspending habeas corpus, the legal principle that protects individuals against arbitrary detention, as part of its efforts to escalate anti-immigration measures in the United States.

In remarks to reporters, Stephen Miller, a senior advisor to President Donald Trump, argued that the U.S. Constitution allows the suspension of habeas corpus “in times of invasion.”

“It’s an option we are actively considering, and it all depends on whether the courts do the right thing or not,” Miller stated.

The Trump administration has frequently invoked the notion of a “migrant invasion” to justify actions such as the militarization of the U.S.-Mexico border and the deportation of foreign nationals—primarily Venezuelans—to El Salvador’s CECOT megaprison.

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