ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½

Skip to main content

Women's rights activists cover Rome's Spanish Steps in red paint

In this frame taken from video Police stop activists dumping red paint on Rome's Spanish Steps as they protest against violence against women, in Rome, Wednesday, June 26, 2024. (Lapresse via AP) In this frame taken from video Police stop activists dumping red paint on Rome's Spanish Steps as they protest against violence against women, in Rome, Wednesday, June 26, 2024. (Lapresse via AP)
Share
ROME -

Women's rights activists protested against feminicide on Wednesday by painting Rome's famed Spanish Steps red, symbolically representing the blood of female victims of violence.

Members of the movement called "Bruciamo tutto" - or "Let's burn everything" - poured cans of the liquid down the Spanish Steps and also made prints of their hands with it.

In this frame taken from video Police stop activists dumping red paint on Rome's Spanish Steps as they protest against violence against women, in Rome, Wednesday, June 26, 2024. (Lapresse via AP)

"This is symbolically the blood of all the people who are killed," said one of the activists involved in the protest before being taken away by police.

"We will no longer accept this, it must stop now," he said.

The activists said the liquid was a type of paint that would cause no lasting damage to the Spanish Steps, a major tourist landmark in the Italian capital.

Rome municipality workers clean the Spanish Steps after activists dumped red paint over them protesting against violence on women, in Rome, Wednesday, June 26, 2024. (Andrew Medichini / AP Photo)

Some 120 women were killed in Italy in 2023, according to data published by the national statistics bureau ISTAT.

More than half of the homicides are committed by partners or former partners of the victims and about 20 per cent by other relatives, the data showed.

(Reporting by Antonio Denti, writing by Oriana Boselli, Editing by Giulia Segreti and Gareth Jones)

CTVNews.ca ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½

Toronto police are looking for a stolen vehicle in connection with at least eight separate shootings in the city over the weekend.

A B.C. man who reneged on a deal to split the cost of removing a tree with his next-door neighbour is now on the hook for the whole amount, B.C.’s civil resolution has ruled.

Local Spotlight

When Zhya Aramiy was living in Turkey and Iraq, he had to keep his Pride flags hidden away.

A rave at the Ontario Science Centre was the place where Greg LeBlanc says his relationship first began with his husband Mark in 1997.

The city is entering the final stages of resuming water service through its repaired feeder main, as water consumption continues to fall below the city’s threshold level.

A grandfather and grandson duo proudly graduated alongside each other at the same northern Manitoba school.

A large basking shark was captured close to the shoreline on Nova Scotia's Eastern Shore.

The world's largest hockey stick could soon become the world's most in-pieces hockey stick as a Vancouver Island community prepares to tear down and carve up the Canadian landmark.

For half a decade, a Saskatoon family has been trying to bring their orphaned niece to Canada, they say now it’s a matter of life or death.