"She refused treatments that could have saved her. A young life shattered by choices that, in all likelihood, matured in a context of strong emotional and psychological conditioning."

Thus Mayor Giovanni Daga, the day after the death of Diana Zanin, who ran a shop in the town, at just under 50. A disease she refused to fight with medicine took her away.

But the story may not be over yet: "Diana's story deeply affects and saddens us," adds the mayor. "In these cases, everyone around them sees, senses, tries to speak out, but often doesn't know how to truly intervene."

The mayor, "in my own small way," did what he thought was right by "filing a formal report to the competent authorities. It's painful to know that institutional mechanisms aren't always activated in time, not because of ill will, but because the boundaries between self-determination, fragility, and psychological influence are extremely difficult to assess."

Today, Daga explains, "what remains above all is the bitterness of a tragedy that perhaps could have been avoided. And it remains a duty for all of us: not to look the other way when we perceive signs of isolation, manipulation, or emotional dependence. Diana deserved better."

(Unioneonline)

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