Articles

  • Apr 3, 2024 | nytimes.com | Jason Horowitz |Gaia Pianigiani

    Italia tiene una de las tasas de natalidad más bajas de Europa, pero la región del Alto Adigio-Tirol del Sur ha resistido a la tendencia y se ha vuelto una especie de universo paralelo de procreación. La familia Baldo en el parque frente a su apartamento. Renata Canali, la abuela de los niños, está a la izquierda, con Gioele. Baldo, el padre, está junto a ella y Rubén, junto a él. Tiziana Balzamá, la madre de los niños, sostiene a Giona.

  • Nov 7, 2023 | nytimes.com | Jason Horowitz |Gaia Pianigiani

    Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of Italy on Tuesday heralded an agreement she had struck with Albania, a non-European Union nation, to outsource the processing and containment of migrants as a breakthrough for one of the continent’s most defining challenges. “I believe it could become a model of cooperation between E.U. and non-E.U. countries in managing migration flows,” Ms. Meloni told the Rome-based daily newspaper Il Messaggero.

  • Nov 6, 2023 | nytimes.com | Elisabetta Povoledo |Gaia Pianigiani

    The pope, 86, who has had a number of medical scares in recent years, met Monday with European rabbis. The Vatican stressed his illness was nothing serious. “I am not feeling well, and so I prefer not to read the speech but give you a copy so you may have it,” the pope said, meeting at the Vatican with European rabbis.Credit...Vatican media, via Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesElisabetta Povoledo and Elisabetta Povoledo reported from Rome, and Gaia Pianigiani reported from Vatican City. Nov.

  • Nov 3, 2023 | nytimes.com | Gaia Pianigiani

    At least five people have died in Tuscany, Italy, amid widespread flooding, local officials said on Friday, after Storm Ciaran swept into the country with torrential rains overnight on a path of destruction across Western Europe. Ciaran left a trail of damage and a number of deaths after it made landfall in northwestern France with record-breaking winds late on Wednesday and moved north.

  • Oct 30, 2023 | nytimes.com | Gaia Pianigiani

    The Garisenda Tower in Bologna is not as famous as the Tower of Pisa, but it leans a little more. Lately, though, the dynamic of its movement has become worrisome, and city officials decided recently that the central square where it stands a few meters apart from the much taller Asinelli Tower will be closed off, most likely for years. The tower, which, along with the Asinelli Tower, makes up the “two towers,” a symbol of the city, has historically slanted four degrees.

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gaia_pianigiani
gaia_pianigiani @gaia_pianigiani
20 Jul 23

For Europe’s Older Population, Heat Is the New Covid. I travelled to Rome’s most disadvantaged suburbs to tell the stories of two women that the heat has shunted inside, as temperatures outside topped 41 degrees Celsius https://t.co/ipYz00D6pj

gaia_pianigiani
gaia_pianigiani @gaia_pianigiani
15 Jul 23

In today’s @nytimesworld, my story on the struggle of European cities to adapt to heat waves and global warming. I went to Florence, whose centuries old history adds challenges to the daunting tasks of keeping residents cool in an overheated continent https://t.co/NcdZXbTwLJ

gaia_pianigiani
gaia_pianigiani @gaia_pianigiani
1 Jul 23

RT @MatinaStevis: "Didn't I tell you we were going to die? Didn't I tell you we were already dead?" The complete story of hundreds of prev…