Complete Lest || of events

Since March 2020, the Fondazione Mediterraneo has addressed - through seminars, webinars and international conferences - the development of the COVID 19 pandemic and its consequences for the future of humanity.
The assessments have been rigorous and validated by men and women of science from all over the world: free and unencumbered by any relationship with politics and with global companies producing vaccines or medicines related to COVID 19.
The resulting assessments, supported by logical analysis and irrefutable evidence, will be collected in a book that will be published when the pandemic is under full control.
The emergency and the discouragement palpable in these days - which should have concluded, at least in Italy, a year marked by more than 110,000,000 vaccinations - led the Foundation to organise an international seminar on this penultimate day of the year to understand exactly how things stand.
The result is the belief that the omicron variant could be a decisive step towards herd immunity and pandemic control. Many scientists, especially British ones, then argue that those vaccinated with more than two doses may risk immunodepression and consequences over time. This is borne out by a number of articles, including one in the Italian newspaper 'La Verità' published on 29 December 2021.
President Michele Capasso anticipated that high-level meetings between opposing parties would take place during 2022 to understand the various positions and arrive at the reconstruction of the scientific truth about the Covid 19 pandemic.

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The Fondazione Mediterraneo participated in the international seminar organised by the IMSE which was attended, among others, by:

  1. Mohammed Smani/Abdelhak Chaibi, R&D Maroc, Morocco.
  2. Andrea Antonio Bises, Samy Dada, SDS Consulting, Morocco.
  3. Abderhammen Fendri, General Manager, PWC, Tunisia.

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Great emotion at the San Carlo Theatre, full in every order of seats.
Mameli's anthem, the audience on its feet. And five minutes of applause. This is how the President of the Republic Sergio Mattarella is welcomed at the San Carlo for the premiere of Verdi's Otello, directed by Mario Martone.  The Head of State was received at the entrance of the theatre by the mayor of Naples, Gaetano Manfredi, the president of the Campania Region, Vincenzo De Luca, the prefect Claudio Palomba and the superintendent of the Neapolitan Massimo, Stephane Lissner.
There is a Western army in the Middle East, we see soldiers scrambling to make a career. A decidedly different scene from the original performance at La Scala on 5 February 1887. a predictable triumph, even then. "For music and drama intertwine and clasp each other in indissoluble knots", the opera's timeless summary. "Esultate", "Innaffia l'ugola" and the love duet in the first act, "Credo in un dio crudel" and "Sì pel ciel marmoreo io giuro", but also "Dio mi potevi scagliar", the "Canzone del salice" and "Niun mi tema" established its fame. With exceptional singers.
Jonas Kaufmann is the 'Moor' without the black face ('I couldn't and wouldn't want to anymore', says Martone). The star plays Otello with Yusif Eyvazov.
The guest of honour is President Sergio Mattarella. Mayor Manfredi shook his hand and accompanied him inside, already looking beyond: "For now we are content with one night, but Naples must always be the capital". Governor De Luca agreed. In the royal box, the President of the Chamber of Deputies Roberto Fico, Education Minister Patrizio Bianchi and Undersecretary Enzo Amendola.
The star in the audience is Toni Servillo, the actor greets the French ambassador to Italy, Christian Masset: he is expected in Paris on 7 December to present the film nominated for an Oscar by Paolo Sorrentino. Magistrates Federico Cafiero de Raho and Giovanni Melillo, and Rai's managing director Carlo Fuertes also arrive. On the balcony sit one hundred university and conservatory students, thanks to the supporters of Concerto d'imprese. And students from the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples engaged as interns on the new "On" platform for a training project on digital professions.
Roses were thrown at the end of the curtain and the Head of State was applauded as he left.

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