This persecution of Gypsies is now the shame of Europe

At the heart of Europe, police have begun fingerprinting children on the basis of their race – with barely a murmur of protest from European governments. Last week, Silvio Berlusconi’s new rightwing Italian administration announced plans to carry out a national registration of all the country’s estimated 150,000 Gypsies – Roma and Sinti people – whether Italian-born or migrants. Interior minister and leading light of the xenophobic Northern League, Roberto Maroni, insisted that taking fingerprints of all Roma, including children, was needed to “prevent begging” and, if necessary, remove the children from their parents.

The ethnic fingerprinting drive is part of a broader crackdown on Italy’s three-and-a-half million migrants, most of them legal, carried out in an atmosphere of increasingly hysterical rhetoric about crime and security. But the reviled Roma, some of whose families have been in Italy since the middle ages, are taking the brunt of it. The aim is to close 700 Roma squatter camps and force their inhabitants out of the cities or the country. In the same week as Maroni was defending his racial registration plans in parliament, Italy’s highest appeal court ruled that it was acceptable to discriminate against Roma on the grounds that “all Gypsies were thieves”, rather than because of their “Gypsy nature”.

Official roundups and forced closures of Roma camps have been punctuated with vigilante attacks. In May, rumours of an abduction of a baby girl by a Gypsy woman in Naples triggered an orgy of racist violence against Roma camps by thugs wielding iron bars, who torched caravans and drove Gypsies from their slum homes in dozens of assaults, orchestrated by the local mafia, the Camorra. The response of Berlusconi’s government to the firebombing and ethnic cleansing? “That is what happens when Gypsies steal babies,” shrugged Maroni; while fellow minister and Northern League leader Umberto Bossi declared: “The people do what the political class isn’t able to do.”

This, it should be recalled, is taking place in a state that under Benito Mussolini’s fascist dictatorship played a willing part in the Holocaust, during which more than a million Gypsies are estimated to have died as “sub-humans” alongside the Nazi genocide perpetrated against the Jews. The first expulsions of Gypsies by Mussolini took place as early as 1926. Now the dictator’s political heirs, the “post-fascist” National Alliance, are coalition partners in Berlusconi’s government. In case anyone missed that, when the Alliance’s Gianni Alemanno was elected mayor of Rome in April, his supporters gave the fascist salute chanting “Duce” (equivalent to the German “Führer”) and Berlusconi enthused: “We are the new Falange” (the Spanish fascist party of General Franco).

So you might have expected that Berlusconi would be taken to task for his vile treatment of the surviving Roma of Europe at the G8 summit in Japan this week by those fearless crusaders for human rights, George Bush and Gordon Brown. Far from it. Instead, Bush’s spokesman issued a grovelling apology to the Italian prime minister on Tuesday for a US briefing describing his “good friend” Berlusconi as “one of the most controversial leaders of Italy … hated by many”.

It has been left to others to speak out against this eruption of naked, officially sanctioned racism. Catholic human rights organisations have damned the fingerprinting of Gypsies as “evoking painful memories”. The chief rabbi of Rome insisted it “must be stopped now”. Roma groups have demonstrated, wearing the black triangles Gypsies were forced to wear in the Nazi concentration camps, and anti-racist campaigners in Rome this week began to bombard the interior ministry with their own fingerprints in protest against the treatment of the Gypsies. But, given that the European establishment has long turned a blind eye to anti-Roma discrimination and violence in the Czech Republic, Hungary and Romania, along with the celebration of SS units that took part in the Holocaust in the Baltic states, perhaps it’s no surprise that they ignore the outrages now taking place in Italy.

The rest of us cannot. There are particular reasons why Italy has been especially vulnerable in recent years to xenophobic and racist campaigns – even while crime is actually lower than it was in the 1990s (and below the level of Britain). The scale of recent immigration from the Balkans and Africa, an insecure and stagnant job market and the collapse of what was previously a powerful progressive and anti-fascist culture have all combined to create a particularly fearful and individualistic atmosphere, the leftwing Italian veteran Luciana Castellina argues.

But the same phenomena can be seen to varying degrees all over Europe, where racist and Islamophobic parties are on the march: take the far right Swiss People’s party, which on Tuesday succeeded in collecting enough signatures to force a referendum on banning minarets throughout the country. In Britain, as Peter Oborne’s Channel 4 film on Islamophobia this week underlined, a mendacious media and political campaign has fed anti-Muslim hostility and violence since the 2005 London bombings – just as hostility to asylum seekers was whipped up in the 1990s. The social and democratic degeneration now reached by Italy can happen anywhere in the current climate.

Italy has a further lesson for Britain and the rest of Europe. Berlusconi’s election victory in April was built on the collapse of confidence in the centre-left government of Romano Prodi, which stuck to a narrow neoliberal programme and miserably failed to deliver to its own voters. Meanwhile, centre-left politicians such as Walter Veltroni, the former mayor of Rome, pandered to, rather than challenged, the xenophobic agenda of the rightwing parties – tearing down Gypsy camps himself and absurdly claiming last year that 75% of all crime was committed by Romanians (often confused with Roma in Italy).

What was needed instead, as in the case of other countries experiencing large-scale immigration, was public action to provide decent housing and jobs, clamp down on exploitation of migrant workers and support economic development in Europe’s neighbours. That opportunity has now been lost, as Italy is gripped by an ominous and retrograde spasm. The persecution of Gypsies is Italy’s shame – and a warning to us all.

the Roma and the Emporer

My biggest concern is the use of the genetic material. Once they have the DNA will they develop someway of defining the Roma as alien, as they did in the Nazi era. The Jews are safe now due to Israel’s alliance with the US. The use of the Nazi data which was developed by the West can still be used to ‘identify’ the Roma as carriers of some virus. I don’t think that the West is developed enough to recognize their own inability to adapt to change, even in the face of oil shortages and the credit crash. It is still all about developing – strong economic growth. At no point do the leaders speak of a need to accept that growth could equate with obesity. An obesity which the planet can survive but the consumer human population cannot. The subsistance communities will survive, but the obese societies will die of heart attack, brought on by the resource wars. The Roma are therefore a test case. How much can we get away with. How much will the rule of law allow us to rule the people to ensure that the consumer can still consume. Who and what is in our way. Who can we exterminate, and who can we divert blame onto.
The Roma I feel are hated more because they just want conform into the clone consumer mentality and there is nothing more dangerous than a minority, that hold values which do not support the ruling elite. It is not that they will become revolutionaries, it is rather they represent something that questions the values of the rulers, a questioning more along the lines of the litte boy who called out – the emporer has no clothes!!!! And in fact we have no ethical clothes in the West otherwise there would be no such things as global poverty. There is enough food to feed everyone, we in the West just don’t want to share.

Shameful indeed, but look @ the inhuman treatment of detainees!

Gypsies’ fingerprinting in Rome is most shameful , but it is nothing in comparison with the harshly inhuman enforced removal of detainees.

Friday 11 July 2008, at 5:00 am , detainees in Harmondsworth IRC woke up on one of the most revolting crimes against humanity. A disabled algerian man and a lybian guy were trampled , crushed and carried by Harmondsworth custody & Immigration officers. The former was an easy target due to his physical disabilities, whereas the latter has been most difficult. He was obliged to surrender because of the brutal force used against him. 2 african officers, three british, 2 asian women were outside the room, whereas two or three were inside. 8 or 9 for what? just to remove a defenceless detainee. A camera man was there, but I doubt if he has recorded this beautiful amazing human scenary.

If this had happened in Zimbabwe, for instance, or in ay third world country , it would have been accepted because we are fully aware of the strict cold machinery of control. In other words, if we put this incident in a Zimbawean context, we know the Mugabist practices, but in the UK, it is , no doubt., shameful. Unacceptable. It is a crime against the country that had carried in its womb the most talented and gifted people in the History of humanity. I wish all the unconditional writers and human rights activists could intervene. Aren’t we human beings? What happened to these guys will happen to me and to many others very soon.

You —unconditional writers/voice of reason/voice of truth— have nothing to say when it comes to foreigners! One sense the sad awareness of the extent to which a foreigner, i.e. detainee or asylum seeker, has become a signifier without signfied.

I was born and brought up in a totalitarian regime, Orwellian state par excellence. But the UK, as far as one have learned, is “ THE VESTAL TEMPLE OF LAW & HUMAN RIGHTS “. It is a crime. A crime against the UK proud traditions, a crime against the glorious past and honorouble present of this country. It is also a crime agaisnt you, writers and politicians!

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