
Italy's Agriculture Minister
resigned Sunday amid allegations of abuse of power over the appointment
of staff in the public healthcare system and in the wake of an
investigation into the management of European Union funds for
agriculture.
"I am resigning as minister. I
cannot remain part of a government which has not defended my honour,"
Nunzia De Girolamo said on Twitter.
De Girolamo was accused this
month of exerting improper influence over the choice of healthcare
managers in the city of Benevento in the Campania region, following
revelations in the media of phone-tapped conversations in 2012.
She
is the second minister to step down from Prime Minister Enrico Letta's
shaky coalition government. On Saturday, allegations of malpractice
emerged against her ministry after Italy's financial police confirmed
they carried out an on-site search this week as part of an investigation
into the distribution of EU funds, Italian media reported.
Investigators
are looking into discrepancies in the distribution of some 8.9 billion
euros ($12.18 billion) for agricultural investment which were given to
Italy from 2007 to 2013, according to the Repubblica daily.
De
Girolamo, who is not currently under investigation, said in a statement
Saturday that the police probe centered on a period before she took
office.
While the EU determined where part of the funds were
invested, the ministry was tasked with distributing the remaining
capital through the AGEA coordinating company, which the government
holds a 51 percent stake in, media reports said.
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