BFF-27-28 Italian youths rally to free screenings of police violence film

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Italian youths rally to free screenings of police violence film

ROME, Sept 19, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Thousands of Italians are flocking to
illegal free public screenings of a new film about a young man’s 2009 death
in custody, a potent symbol of police violence and a merciless penal system.

In city piazzas and lecture theatres around the country, community groups
and student organisations are showing pirated versions of the Netflix film
“Sulla mia pelle”, or “On My Skin”.

The film tells the tragic story of Stefano Cucchi, 31, who was arrested in
Rome in October 2009 in possession of 20 grammes (two-thirds of an ounce) of
hashish and two grammes of cocaine.

Director Alessio Cremonini’s film has bounced from the red carpet of the
Venice Film Festival, where it premiered last month, into the collective
conscience of Italian youths living under a populist, right-wing government.

Some of the 2,000 people who attended a screening at Rome’s prestigious La
Sapienza university on Friday were reduced to tears.

“What happened to Stefano Cucchi could have happened to any one of us,”
said Teo, a 27-year-old cameraman.

Student Luca Matteuzzi said the film was “both hard and beautiful. Violent
without showing any blood.

“It doesn’t show the police as animals but it points the finger at a
timorous bureaucracy that is incapable of facing its responsibilities.”

In the film Cucchi, who suffered from epilepsy, spends a week going
through the system, at police stations and then Rome’s central Regina Coeli
prison.

Despite being covered in bruises and barely able to walk, a judge remands
him into custody and he eventually ends up in the prison infirmary, where he
dies a week after being arrested.

– Battle for justice –

MORE/MR/ 1038 hrs

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The already slight Cucchi weighed just 37 kilos when he died, and his
family took shocking photos of his emaciated and battered body in the morgue.

His sister Ilaria has fought for justice for years, trying to establish
who was responsible for her brother’s death nearly a decade ago.

However despite years of legal battles no one has yet been successfully
prosecuted.

Five police officers are currently on trial over the affair, three of them
charged with manslaughter.

“It’s moving to see how things are being organised spontaneously to see my
brother’s story,” Ilaria Cucchi told AFP.

“He wasn’t anybody, and now they’ll know him in Spain, in France, around
the world,” said Cucchi, who after the premiere dedicated the film to far-
right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini.

“This film should make everyone reflect, especially him (Salvini). Stefano
represents a human being whose rights were denied and violated,” said Ilaria,
who accused the police of torturing her brother.

Listings of upcoming public screenings can be found easily online.

“This is how we can make people aware of the abuse of power by those in
uniform and, more generally, on conditions in Italian prisons,” screening
organiser Giovanni told Italian daily La Repubblica.

The film came out in Italian cinemas on September 12 and Andrea Occhipinti
of distributor Lucky Red has slammed the “piracy” going on around the
country.

The film’s star, Alessandro Borghi, who lost 18 kilos to play the role of
Cucchi, said: “What’s happening goes beyond cinema. We are all fighting for
the same cause, it’s a communion of ideas.”

BSS/AFP/MR/1038 hrs