
-
Arsenal sign Swedish international Viktor Gyokeres
-
Spain's pioneers 'knocking down walls' with run to Euro 2025 final
-
Greece asks for EU help in battling wildfires
-
Rahul and Gill frustrate England in fourth Test after Stokes century
-
Norris reassured by pole after Belgian Grand Prix 'worries'
-
England ready to meet challenge of 'fantastic' Spain in Euro 2025 final
-
US migrant raids spark boom for private detention providers
-
'Make America Gay Again': Amsterdam pride gets political
-
Over 600 malnourished children die in six months in Nigeria: MSF
-
Hamilton holds hands up after 'unacceptable' qualifying
-
Norris on pole as McLaren lock-out front row at Belgian Grand Prix
-
Johannesburg to host first LIV Golf event in Africa
-
Pogacar on cusp of fourth Tour title as Groves solos to stage 20 win
-
Motor rally accident kills three spectators in France
-
Lando Norris claims pole for Belgian Grand Prix
-
'Famine', 'starvation': the challenges in defining Gaza's plight
-
Stokes ends two-year wait for Test hundred before Gill holds firm for India
-
Australian Groves wins penultimate Tour stage, Pogacar in yellow
-
Root has no interest in Tendulkar run-record hype
-
Too early to judge Gill and his young India team, says Dev
-
Liverpool beaten 4-2 by AC Milan in Hong Kong pre-season friendly
-
NASA says it will lose about 20 percent of its workforce
-
Farrell says win over Australia 'what dreams are made of'
-
Trump plays golf in Scotland as protesters rally
-
Stokes ends two-year wait for Test hundred before India collapse in fourth Test
-
Lions stage stunning comeback to beat Wallabies and win series
-
Taiwanese voters reject attempt to recall opposition lawmakers
-
Thai-Cambodia clashes spread along frontier as death toll rises
-
Stokes ends two-year wait for Test hundred as England press for India series win
-
Liverpool to remember Jota with permanent tribute
-
'We are neighbours': fleeing Thais and Cambodians call for peace
-
Verstappen begins new Red Bull era with Belgian sprint win
-
French left urges Macron to act over US plan to destroy contraceptives
-
Howe confident Isak will stay at Newcastle despite transfer talk
-
Top seed Fritz falls as Raducanu and Fernandez win at DC Open
-
Belgian region grapples with forever chemical scandal
-
New-look Australia focused on LA 2028 at swimming worlds
-
China urges global consensus on balancing AI development, security
-
David's century sparks Aussies to T20I clincher over WIndies
-
Death toll rises in Thai-Cambodian clashes despite ceasefire call
-
Taiwan votes in high-stakes recall election
-
China prodigy takes on swimming world aged 12
-
UN gathering eyes solution to deadlocked Palestinian question
-
Polls open in Taiwan's high-stakes recall election
-
4 Steps to Budget When Living on Your Own in Lafayette, LA
-
'Alien' lands at Comic-Con
-
Top footballers afraid to speak out against playing too many games: FIFPro chief
-
Cambodia calls for ceasefire with Thailand after deadly clashes
-
Top US Justice official questions Epstein accomplice for 2nd day
-
Cambodia calls for ceasefire with Thailand: envoy to UN
RBGPF | -1.52% | 73.88 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.24% | 22.485 | $ | |
NGG | -0.11% | 72.15 | $ | |
RIO | -1.16% | 63.1 | $ | |
RELX | -1.86% | 52.73 | $ | |
SCU | 0% | 12.72 | $ | |
SCS | 0.66% | 10.58 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.3% | 13.2 | $ | |
GSK | -0.68% | 37.97 | $ | |
VOD | -0.79% | 11.43 | $ | |
BP | 0.22% | 32.2 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.17% | 22.89 | $ | |
AZN | -1.4% | 72.66 | $ | |
BCE | -0.95% | 24.2 | $ | |
BTI | -0.71% | 52.25 | $ | |
JRI | -0.46% | 13.09 | $ | |
BCC | 1.94% | 88.14 | $ |

Italy forges on with world's largest suspension bridge
Italy hopes to begin constructing the world's largest suspension bridge connecting Sicily to the Italian mainland this summer amid widespread scepticism that it will ever be built.
The 13.5-billion-euro ($15.3-billion) project would carry trains and six lanes of traffic, allowing cars to cross the Strait of Messina in 15 minutes.
Giorgia Meloni's hard-right government hopes to boost the economy of the impoverished region, although critics say there are better ways to do this -- and many believe that after decades of false starts, the bridge will never actually happen.
The choppy waters between the eastern tip of Sicily and the western edge of the region of Calabria are legendary as the place where monsters Scylla and Charybdis terrified sailors in Homer's epic poem "The Odyssey".
These days the challenges are more prosaic, from winds of more than 100 kilometres an hour (62 mph) to the real risk of earthquakes in a region that lies across two tectonic plates.
The government says the bridge will be at the cutting edge of engineering, with the section suspended between its two pillars stretching 3.3 kilometres, the longest in the world.
But critics point to a long history of public works announced, financed and never completed in Italy, whether due to corruption or political instability, resulting in enormous losses for taxpayers.
"The public does not trust this political class and these projects that become endless construction sites," said Luigi Storniolo, a member of protest group No Ponte (No Bridge).
Infrastructure Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, one of the main champions of the project, insists it will be a game-changer for the local economy.
"The bridge will be a catalyst for development," he said on a recent visit to Reggio di Calabria, the city where the bridge will begin.
- 'A senseless project' -
The government hopes to boost trade in Sicily, which currently suffers from an "insularity cost" of around 6.5 billion euros a year, according to regional authorities.
Meloni's ministers are expected to give their final approval to the project -- which Rome will fund -- later this month, and Salvini insists construction will begin this summer.
But work had already been announced for the summer of 2024, before being postponed -- a common theme in the history of the bridge, the idea of which dates back to the unification of Italy at the end of the 19th century.
The first law for the project was passed in 1971. Since then, successive governments have either revived it or cancelled it.
In 2012, the idea appeared to be definitely abandoned amid the eurozone debt crisis, only for Meloni's government, which took office in 2022, to return to it once again.
Salvini has repeatedly stated that the bridge would create 120,000 jobs in Calabria and Sicily, which have the fourth and the 13th highest unemployment rates respectively in the EU for young people under 29.
However, the left-wing CGIL trade union estimates around 2,300 workers a year will be hired during the project, and critics say the jobs created will be offset by long-term losses from the closure of ferries.
- Mafia risk -
The project has sparked local protests, with critics warning of the impact on a protected marine zone and an important bird migratory route.
Storniolo told AFP it was a "senseless project" which used up valuable funds when "our regions already suffer from many problems... healthcare, schools, and infrastructure."
The Italian Court of Auditors has also criticised the extent of the debt-laden Italian state's investment in this one project in its assessment of the 2024 budget.
"They want to make an entire territory believe that its only hope is this bridge -- but then the bridge never arrives," protester Storniolo added.
There is also the question of mafia infiltration.
The attorney general of Messina recently warned of the risk that organised crime would benefit from the project, noting that "the power of the mafia is hidden... behind public contracts".
The government has proposed placing companies relating to the project under control of an anti-mafia structure reporting to the interior ministry.
But Italian President Sergio Mattarella blocked this, saying it should only be used for one-off events such as earthquakes or the Olympics.
Salvini argued that the bridge can help tackle the mafia, saying: "You do not fight the mafia... with conferences and protests, but by creating jobs and giving hope to young people."
A.O.Scott--AT