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Killer in Italy femicide sentenced to life in jail

 Filippo Turetta, the 22-year-old Italian student who admitted to stabbing to death his ex-girlfriend Giulia Cecchettin last year, has been sentenced to life in jail.

The murder case gripped Italy and sparked a heated debate on the issue of violence against women.

Speaking to reporters after the sentence was read out in a Venice court, Giulia’s father Gino Cecchettin said: “Nobody is giving me Giulia back so I am neither more relieved nor more sad than I was yesterday or than I will be tomorrow.”

He added that the battle against gender violence was one “we’ll have to fight together as a society… we look ahead and hope another dad won’t find himself at my place”.

Over the last year a huge amount of detail about the killing has emerged, forming a picture of an increasingly an­guished young woman harassed by her possessive ex-boyfriend who refused to accept the end of their relationship.

The case, which captivated Italians, has thrust the concepts of femicide, patriarchy and male violence into the headlines.

On November 11, 2023 Mr Turetta picked up his fellow uni­versity student and ex-girlfriend Ms Cecchettin, a 22-year-old biomedical engineering student from the Venice province, to take her shopping for an outfit for her upcoming graduation.

Later that evening, he stabbed her more than 70 times, and left the student’s body at the bottom of a ditch, wrapped in plastic bags.

Then, he disappeared. For a week, Italians followed the search for the couple with bait­ed breath. The discovery of Ms Cecchettin’s body on November 18 was met with an unprec­edented outpouring of grief. The next day, Mr Turetta was arrested in Germany. He readily admitted to killing Ms Cecchet­tin and was extradited to Italy.

To raise awareness of the signs of controlling relation­ships, Ms Cecchettin’s family recently shared a list she wrote a few months before her death, titled “15 reasons I had to break up with him”.

In it, Ms Cecchettin said Mr Turetta insisted she had a “duty” to help him study, com­plained if she sent him fewer emoji hearts than usual, didn’t want her to go out with friends and needed her to text him all the time.

“They were the typical signs of possessiveness,” Giulia’s father Gino told the BBC. “He would deny her her own space, or demand to always be included. He always needed to know everything she said to her friends or even her therapist.”

“We realised later that she thought she was the cause of his pain, that she felt responsi­ble for it,” he said. -BBC

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