Italy to fingerprint all Roma gipsy children Around 80,000 gipsy children are to be fingerprinted by the Italian authorities under a new scheme that has drawn comparisons to the policies of Benito Mussolini.
The Italian government has blamed immigrants, and particularly Roma gipsies, for the country's crime problems.
Since Silvio Berlusconi became prime minister in April, gypsy camps in the south and north of the country have been burned by vigilante mobs.
The home minister, Roberto Maroni, has now announced that all the Roma will be fingerprinted, including children. "This is not ethnic cataloguing, this is the ultimate safeguard of their rights," he said.
"We will take the children's fingerprints in order to stop those occasions when parents send their children out to beg. It is a proper census to make sure that those who have the right to stay here can live in decent conditions," he said.
According to the la-*test*-('") figures, there are 160,000 Roma gipsies in Italy, almost half of whom have Italian citizenship. The last census recorded that 80,000 of them are children.
The move has triggered memories of the segregation of Jews imposed by Benito Mussolini in 1938. "I remember when I could not go to school with the others," said Amos Luzzatto, a former president of Italy's Union of Jewish Communities.
"There is a latent racism in Italian culture and it manifests itself cyclically," he added. "Taking the fingerprints of youngsters from one ethnic group implies that you consider them to be congenital thieves."
Unicef, the United Nation's children's rights body, said it was "shocked and deeply worried" by the plans. "We hope this is a provocative proposal that will never be carried out," said a spokesman.
"Roma children are no different from other children and children cannot and should not be treated like adults anyway," he added, citing the UN convention on the Rights of Children that was ratified by Italy in 1991.
However, Mr Maroni dismissed Unicef's concerns. "This is the right path," he said. "There are children in these camps living with mice. Is that the right of an infant? The people like Unicef who complain should visit the camps and see the conditions in which children live."
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http://tinyurl.com/6y37wb
I think this is disgusting and hails back to the Nazis.
Why is the EU saying/doing nothing about this activity in a founding member state?
Jerri- 07-26-2008
Maybe the EU sees this as a -*test*-('") case and plans to subject us all to it eventually. That could be why they turn a blind eye to what Nu-Labour are doing in the UK too.
We don't elect the EU leadreship, and maybe they want a guaranteed method of keeping tabs on and control of those who might oppose them in future.
Bulldog- 07-26-2008
Jerri, sadly, I think that maybe nearer to the truth than we'd like to think.
uncle albert- 07-27-2008
Jerri, sadly, I think that maybe nearer to the truth than we'd like to think. no doubt about it ,it is the truth!!
Jeffpaul- 07-28-2008
And to think that, apart from the Jews, the Gypsies of Europe suffered most under the Nazi regime.
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