Sights of Rome include monumental eyesores
ROME (AP) — Rome’s monumental problems of garbage and decay exist side by side with the Italian capital’s glories, including the Colosseum.
Associated Press photographers recently trained their cameras on some of the eyesores. With City Hall administrations often mired in scandal, Romans over the last few years have started trying to fix the mess themselves.
Pie’ di Marmo, a giant marble foot dating back to the 1st century, rests on a pedestal in a narrow alleyway named for it. But the backdrop to its splendour is a collection of scribbled graffiti, and someone, perhaps heedless to the relic’s proud history, left behind a soggy plastic bag in front of it.
The Colosseum is a universally recognised symbol of Roman civilisation, so there’s no mistaking that. But people have plastered a road sign leading to it with stickers.
So much garbage piles up around overflowing trash bins on city streets — even near the pristine paths inside Vatican City — that even the trash collectors, when they do show up, seem overwhelmed.
A man pushes his child in a stroller in the street, because the sidewalk has been swallowed up by uncollected trash left by Romans exasperated by often infrequent garbage collection.
Unpruned plants and towering weeds rule the day on playgrounds. Grass sprouts up around Rome’s iconic cobblestones.
Even after a few minutes of heavy rain, uncleaned drains and sewers overflow, making intersections impassable and sending sewage floating down neighbourhood streets.
Rome is nicknamed the Eternal City, but recent years have increasingly seen its glory soiled by seemingly ever-present problems of urban decay.
While many other urban capitals grapple with graffiti and citizen services that could use efficiency improvements, Rome also pays the price of decades of City Hall mismanagement and corruption. Trash even became an issue in Italy’s general election earlier this year.
But Romans have started saying “basta” (enough) to shrugging shoulders and overall indifference. Citizens’ groups with catchy names like Retake Rome scrub off graffiti in their neighbourhoods on Sunday mornings. Romans have also started signalling dangerous potholes to organisations like Tappami (“Fill me up” in Italian), which, armed with asphalt and shovels, fan out across the city to patch up neighbourhood streets.
Recently, several thousand fed up Romans gathered beneath the office of Mayor Virginia Raggi, the first mayor for the Italian populist 5-Star Movement, which had vowed to do away with old-school City Hall politics.
Reduced so low by such widespread decay, Romans are starting to come to grips with the meaning of civic duty.
