'Free to choose' bill for mafia wives and kids to opt out becomes law
ANSA - ROME, JUL 15 - A so-called 'free to choose' bill offering legal and fruitful alternative lives to the children and wives of mafiosi became law when it…
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Summary
ANSA - ROME, JUL 15 - A so-called 'free to choose' bill offering legal and fruitful alternative lives to the children and wives of mafiosi became law when it won final approval in the Senate Wednesday. The law, the fruit of a move by a minors' court chair in the Sicilian city of Catania, will enable Mafia offspring up to the age of 25 and the female partners of mafiosi to opt out of Mob life and be free to build legal futures for themselves instead of following their father's and men's footsteps into organised crime. "I want to thank," Meloni added, "President Colosimo, the Anti-Mafia Commission, and all those who promoted this initiative and who have carried it forward with perseverance and determination.
Furthermore, The President of the Parliamentary Anti-Mafia Commission, Chiara Colosimo, said: "Today, Parliament is translating into law a dream that for years seemed impossible. "Today, we don't just celebrate the approval of a law; today, we celebrate the victory of freedom." Don Ciotti, an anti-mafia priest and campaigner, voiced "enormous joy for a law protecting those who leave mafia environments". Father Ciotti also spared a thought for the late Pope Francis, who had encouraged some women in this situation.
Cross-referenced from 2 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
ANSA - ROME, JUL 15 - A so-called 'free to choose' bill offering legal and fruitful alternative lives to the children and wives of mafiosi became law when it won final approval in the Senate Wednesday.
reliability low1/2 sourcesThe law, the fruit of a move by a minors' court chair in the Sicilian city of Catania, will enable Mafia offspring up to the age of 25 and the female partners of mafiosi to opt out of Mob life and be free to build legal futures for themselves instead of following their father's and men's footsteps into organised crime.
reliability low1/2 sources"I want to thank," Meloni added, "President Colosimo, the Anti-Mafia Commission, and all those who promoted this initiative and who have carried it forward with perseverance and determination.
reliability low1/2 sourcesThe President of the Parliamentary Anti-Mafia Commission, Chiara Colosimo, said: "Today, Parliament is translating into law a dream that for years seemed impossible.
reliability low1/2 sources"Today, we don't just celebrate the approval of a law; today, we celebrate the victory of freedom." Don Ciotti, an anti-mafia priest and campaigner, voiced "enormous joy for a law protecting those who leave mafia environments".
reliability low1/2 sourcesFather Ciotti also spared a thought for the late Pope Francis, who had encouraged some women in this situation.
reliability low1/2 sources
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
No notable framing divergence.
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
No blind spot detected: every side covers the same facts.
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Agency1