Mother, father and 17-year-old son were stuck in Sardinia due to a problem with the Green pass: "He was denied the right to study, we were denied the right to work, all three were denied the right to return to their own lives".

His parents, a couple of half Sardinian origins who live in Rome, report it to Ansa. The two regularly vaccinated and equipped with a Green pass valid for travel, at Christmas they went to Sassari with their 17-year-old son to spend the holidays with her relatives.

The parents, however, took Covid and all had to postpone the departure. And the boy, who left with a valid certificate to take the plane, now finds himself without the reinforced Green pass, which became mandatory from 10 January.

"He has to stay here, he is missing weeks of school for a technicality - mother and father complain - we turned to the Court of Sassari and the Minister of Health, but for now, nothing to do". The boy arrived in Alghero on 23 December: "We should have left again on 8 January".

"At the airport we discovered that the boy, although negative when we were positive, could not get on the plane," says his father. On January 18, the mother wrote to the Minister of Health, Roberto Speranza, via the e-mail from his secretariat. He rewrote on January 21, to the same address and then twice to another ministerial mail. "We understand that there is some reserve in granting him a derogation in order not to create a precedent", they say perplexed.

The couple on January 26 wrote an urgent petition to the Sassari court. "The tutelary judge declares that he does not have the power to derogate from the current health regulations", they report disconsolately. And worried, because "the head teacher comes to meet us, but from today my son is no longer entitled to Dad because he is not sick or in trust quarantine", explains the mother, who turns to Minister Speranza: "Let us return to our lives and guarantee my son the right to education ".

(Unioneonline / D)

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