Not surprisingly, the focus was on the war in Ukraine, as well as on the broadly agreed upon China. The reference, then, to Ceta, the trade agreement between Canada and the EU, seemed almost like a thank you to the Italian government for its recent support of this free trade pact, after years of magnates like the FdI and the United States. Lega was opposed. In short, the calm atmosphere at the bilateral table between Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau and Italian leader Giorgia Meloni allowed us to foresee anything but an attack on a fundamentally marginal topic for the context of the meeting, namely the G7 meeting in Hiroshima. Yet, in between a snippet between Russia and Beijing’s intervention, comes Trudeau’s move: Canada is “concerned” with “some” positions in which Italy takes on LGBT rights.
The quotation marks are those reported by the Canadian media. The Ottawa report of the meeting speaks only of an “exchange of views” on human rights, including those of the LGBT community. But journalists following Trudeau swear that their prime minister brought the issue to the table precisely to voice his concern. Meloni’s response is also quoted in the note from the Canadian government: According to this report, the prime minister would have replied that “his government complied with court orders and did not deviate from previous administrations”.
No additional information has been received from Palazzo Chigi at this time: At the time of this writing, the bilateral agreement with Trudeau appears to have been “hidden” by the government’s website. The news section highlights the bilateral agreement between Meloni and British prime minister Rishi Sunak, while the meeting with Trudeau is reduced to a single image at the bottom of the photo gallery at the G7 meeting in Hiroshima, where the two prime ministers shook hands. He smiles In a photo of the Italy-Canada duo published by the Ottawa press service, Meloni has an angry expression on her face. According to Corriere della Sera, this image would betray the Italian leader’s disappointment.
True or not, it is unusual between the two G7 countries to have the LGBT issue on the agenda, especially when it is linked to domestic political issues. Italian Family Day lobbies realized that “Italy has nothing to learn from Canada, in terms of rights, where the rented womb is legal, compensation is under the guise of ‘return’, and LGBT ideology threatens women’s rights. parents’ freedom of education Meloni by Trudeau” A very serious and unwarranted intervention in Italy and in Italy exposes the rainbow lobby’s international overpowering power against those who defend the right of children to be parents and the family founded on marriage to a man and a woman,” said Jacopo Coghe, spokesperson for the Pro Vita & Famiglia troupe. “We encourage the Meloni government to continue on the path followed, unaffected in the slightest by what remains only an opinion of the Canadian voters represented by Trudeau,” Coghe added.
Democratic Party MP Alessandro Zan has a different opinion: “Meloni better remember that (Hungarian prime minister) Orban is not in the G7, there is no (Polish president) Duda, there are leaders. Western world where rights are a common heritage. Just out of place. it,” he wrote on Twitter.
Source: Today IT

Karen Clayton is a seasoned journalist and author at The Nation Update, with a focus on world news and current events. She has a background in international relations, which gives her a deep understanding of the political, economic and social factors that shape the global landscape. She writes about a wide range of topics, including conflicts, political upheavals, and economic trends, as well as humanitarian crisis and human rights issues.