CIPG_20200414_NYT_Coronavirus-Naples_A7-3253.jpg
NAPLES, ITALY - 14 APRIL 2020: Volunteer Kalina Wojcieszek (28) delivers groceries to needy families in Naples, Italy, on April 14th 2020. Volunteers gathered at the "Sgarrupato", an abandoned church seized by the "Movimento 7 Novembre" community organization, distribute between 100 and 150 grocery bags each day, by providing food to approximately 600 families who have lost an income due to the coronavirus in Naples.
Southern Italians are facing a war on two fronts. Italy’s coronavirus epidemic, among the deadliest in the world with nearly 20,000 deaths, exploded in the country’s wealthy north, where it stretched one of Europe’s most sophisticated healthcare systems to the limits and shut down the country’s economic engine. But it is the country’s poorer, less developed south that has loomed over the entire crisis and which figured prominently in the government’s decision to lock down all of Italy last month.
The south is facing economic carnage not seen since the post-war era. The region’s poor, used to scraping by with temporary contracts or off-the-books jobs, are now increasingly dependent on handouts. Scattered, but troubling, reports of unrest at supermarkets puncture the Italian narrative of patriotic sacrifice. And officials are concerned that criminal organizations that have long infiltrated the black market, the health systems and many other facets of southern life are seeking to exploit the crisis by substituting reluctant banks as providers of loans and, in some cases, food.
The existence of the widespread use off-the-books workers in the South’s vibrant “street economy,” meant that the lockdowns hit hard families that had no access to the government’s targeted relief packages.
- Copyright
- ©2020 Gianni Cipriano
- Image Size
- 5885x3923 / 4.5MB
- www.giannicipriano.com
- Keywords
- Contained in galleries
- 20200411_NYT_Covid-Naples