意大利内阁总理候选人涉嫌学历造假
It was revealed that Giuseppe Conte, an attorney and law professor nominated by Luigi Di Maio from the populist Five-Star Movement and the League's Matteo Salvini to head Italy's 66th government last Monday, may have lied about or exaggerated his educational credentials. Conte's curriculum vitae states he studied at some of the world's most prestigious universities, including Yale and New York University in the US, France's Sorbonne and Cambridge in Britain. But a report from The New York Times quoted a representative from New York University as saying the institution had no record of Conte studying there. Other Italian media noted that Conte's reported coursework at other universities may have been misstated. Commentators said it was unclear how much damage the charges would cause. "This kind of thing has happened in Italy before: Valeria Fedeli (the current Italian minister of education) inaccurately claimed to have graduated from university when she hadn't, and she was not forced to step down," Vincenzo Emanuele, a researcher with the Italian Center for Electoral Studies at Rome's LUISS University, said in an interview. "Conte's misrepresentation is less serious than that, but being prime minister is also a more high-profile job than being minister of education," he said. |