Mission1: | Embassy of Italy, San Marino |
Mission2: | Embassy of San Marino, Rome |
Italy and San Marino have had diplomatic relations since Italian unification. Bilateral relations between Italy and San Marino have gone through various phases and have their official beginning after the Unification of Italy proclaimed in the Subalpine Parliament by Vittorio Emanuele II on 17 March 1861.
Shortly after the proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy in Turin, on 22 March 1862, the Italian-San Marino Treaty was signed between the President of the Italian council Urbano Rattazzi and the Sammarinese Captains Regent Melchiorre Filippi and Domenico Fattori.
In 1865 the first economic treaty was signed between Italy and San Marino, in fact from that year it was decided that the Italian government will mint the San Marino lira and the stamps for the small state will be printed thanks to another treaty with Italy in 1877 .
In 1915 many San Marino volunteers participated in the First World War to ensure that Italy obtained Arbe, the then Austro-Hungarian island off the coast of Dalmatia where the founder and namesake of San Marino, Saint Marinus, was born. That same year, the Italian Red Cross founded the San Marino section, which participated in the First World War and then give rise to the San Marino Red Cross in 1949.
In 1921, Italy sent the Carabinieri to San Marino for the establishment of the Gendarmerie. After the advent of Mussolini they became a tool to prevent San Marino from becoming a refuge for Italian anti-fascists. The Carabinieri left San Marino only in 1936.
Also in San Marino, thanks to the increasingly present Italian influence during the reign of the Fascist regime, the Fascist Party of San Marino was founded in 1922, headed by Giuliano Gozi, which controlled public life in San Marino until the fall of the National Fascist Party in Italy.
Thanks to an agreement with fascist Italy, after the treaty between San Marino and Italy signed in 1927, the Rimini-San Marino railway was built between 1927 and 1932, which was used by Mussolini to link the destinies of Italy and San Marino.
With the fall of Mussolini on 25 July 1943, after only 3 days the San Marino Fascist Party of Giuliano Gozi was dissolved and the San Marino fascists were tried.
In January 1944 the fascists in San Marino, thanks to the support of Mussolini, founded the Republican Fascio of San Marino and took power until August of the same year.
San Marino remained neutral during the war and hosted over 100,000 Italian refugees mainly from the Marche and Romagna.
Mussolini himself assured the captains regent that San Marino would not be invaded.
But it suffered the war in Italy with the allied bombing of San Marino where 63 San Marino died and with the advance of the allies in Northern Italy, where the Wehrmacht clashed with the British Gurkhas in the battle of Monte Pulito.
See also: Fatti di Rovereta.
After the return of democracy to Italy and San Marino in 1945, the San Marino Communist Party won the elections together with the San Marino Socialist Party and countries like the United States and Italy, alarmed by the only Western country under Communist and Socialist leadership, sought to finance the opposition forces that led to the Rovereta events that took place on the border between Italy and San Marino.
In 1951, the Italian interior minister Mario Scelba had imposed a police blockade in San Marino to force it to close the newly opened casino. The blockade lasted two years. The tension ended with the stipulation of the agreements of 1953, with which San Marino renounced both the gambling house and the system of a radio or television broadcaster.
In September 1958 the anti-communist opposition of San Marino, after having resigned en masse to avoid the election of the regent captains and the financial support of Italy and the United States, withdrew in Rovereta in a disused industrial plant bordering on three sides by 'Italy forming a provisional government formed by an executive committee, Immediately afterwards Italy surrounded the plant with the carabinieri and at the same time recognized the executive committee as a legitimate San Marino government, even if in the meantime arms arrived from Italy to all the forces in opposition.
On 11 October the captains regent recognized the provisional government of Rovereta as the only legitimate government of San Marino was the one recognized by Italy and immediately afterwards the executive committee moved to San Marino City.
Furthermore, the same day the Voluntary Militia Corps was dissolved, fearing the armed intervention of the Provisional Government supported by Italian soldiers towards the Public Palace.
Since then, San Marino was led until the end of the Cold War by anti-communist forces with a foreign policy close to Italy and the United States which led to the construction of the Rimini-San Marino highway; the works began on 10 August 1959, and it was inaugurated in the presence of the President of the Italian Republic Giuseppe Saragat on 25 November 1965, who met the Captains Regent Alvaro Casali and Pietro Reffi at the Palazzo Pubblico.
Furthermore, from 1962 to 1984, 30 carabinieri were sent, then reduced to 21 to set up an investigative and judicial police unit.
On 20 October 1984, the President of the Republic Sandro Pertini met the newly elected Captains Regent Marino Bollini and Giuseppe Amici.
On 11 and 12 June 1990 the President of the Republic Francesco Cossiga met the Captains Regent Adalmiro Bartolini and Ottaviano Rossi.
In August 1991, thanks to an agreement signed between RAI and the San Marino government with the mediation of the Italian government, San Marino public television was born. 50% of the San Marino government and the remaining 50% of the Italian radio and television broadcaster.
Thanks to the monetary treaty in force since 1985, a treaty was signed between Italy and San Marino for the introduction of the euro and the inclusion of San Marino in the Eurozone.
The unresolved problems between Italy and San Marino concern the status of the 6,000 Italian migrant workers in relation to the lack of an agreement between the two states and the introduction of a San Marino tax levy on frontier workers of 200 euro on 12 January 2011, the question had reached the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Chamber of Deputies on 23 February and on 16 February it provoked a parliamentary question by the Minister of Finances Giulio Tremonti.
Furthermore, San Marino is considered a tax haven by Italy and this situation has led several times to disagreements between the two states, for example in Pianacci di Fiorentino on 25 March 2010, two plainclothes agents of the Guardia di Finanza were stopped by the Gendarmerie, who were stopped and then accompanied by the Gendarmerie to Customs, where they were finally handed over to the Italian authorities,[1] on 14 February 2011, the Italian prosecutors investigated all 19 judges of San Marino for "fictitious residence", but San Marino law provides that they are foreigners, so their position was then removed by the prosecutor of Rimini; the decision to investigate the San Marino judges was judged by the San Marino government as a decision that "undermines the foundations of the Republic"[2]
Other situations that have made the relations between San Marino and Italy tense is the search of the San Marino Consulate of Rimini by the Guardia di Finanza on 21 July 2009, to look for information on a domiciled person in the consulate: the search was defined by the San Marino government as "an unjustified and disrespectful act of a sovereign state" and led to formal protests to the Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini, while by the Italian authorities the San Marino court was accused of not collaborating with Italy.[3]
Furthermore, the State Congress of San Marino, on 12 May 2009, sent a warning to the Italian ambassador in San Marino and formally protested about the RAI, the Financial Police and the program Report by Milena Gabanelli, which aired on Rai 3 an episode dedicated to San Marino, the content of which was defined by the Secretary of State for Finance, Gabriele Gatti, "negative and misleading for San Marino".
To date, four out of eleven presidents of the Italian Republic have visited San Marino:
Sometimes Italian police or military forces have erroneously trespassed into Republic, which has always made formal protests against the Italian government, the trespasses occurred:
In 2010 the then Secretary of State for Foreign and Political Affairs Antonella Mularoni defined the trespassing as "serious facts" and said that "the people of the Titan are fed up with external harassment".[10]
The Embassy of Italy is located in Viale Antonio Onofri in the City of San Marino.