Back to the case of Caivano, a town in the province of Naples where two girls were gang raped, and, more broadly, the issue of violence against women in the spotlight these days, with the opposition to the attack stemming from a statement made by Andrea Giambruno, Rete4 journalist and companion of the premier Giorgia Meloni, during an edition of "Diario del giorno." Giambruno, the daily strip's conductor, adopts Pietro Senaldi's sentiment in this regard, stating that "the right not to suffer violence is sacred, but this does not mean that it does not occur," adding that "if you go dancing, you have every right to get drunk - there must be no kind of misunderstanding and any kind of stumbling - but if you avoid getting drunk and losing consciousness, maybe you also avoid running into certain problems because then the 'wolf' finds you". Words that irritate the left and call the prime minister personally into question. Giambruno responds to the critics again at "Diario del giorno" by attacking those who "in an instrumental way" are "distorting reality, and they are doing so either out of bad faith or because they have serious problems understanding". Meanwhile, the parish priest Don Patriciello has confirmed Giorgia Meloni's presence in Caivano for Thursday, August 31.
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