Italy starts controversial fingerprinting of Gypsy population
Italian authorities have started fingerprinting tens of thousands of Gypsies living in nomad camps across the country - adults and children alike - brushing aside accusations of racism by human
rights advocates and international organisations.
Interior Minister Roberto Maroni told parliament this week the move was needed to fight crime and identify illegal immigrants for expulsion, but also to improve the lives of those legally living in
the makeshift, often unsanitary camps.
"We intend to make a census to see who lives in Gypsy camps, who has a right to stay and to live in humane conditions. Those who don't have a right to stay will be repatriated," he said.
More than 700 encampments have been built, mainly around Rome, Milan and Naples, populated almost entirely by Gypsies, also known as Roma.
The measure by Silvio Berlusconi's conservative government, part of a crackdown on street crime, has provoked a storm of protests at home and abroad. Officials have spoken recently of a "Roma
emergency" in Italy's big cities, blaming them for rising crime.
Maroni, a leading member of the anti-immigrant Northern League party, said the census will be completed in October. Critics, including the centre-left opposition, claim the measure is not a census
and is unfairly singling out a minority. Italy has an overall population census every ten years that does not include fingerprinting.
The Interior Ministry said prints would only be taken from people who did not have a valid Italian or EU document, which would exempt Gypsies who come from EU member Romania. Maroni said Red Cross
members would be present to ensure that the rights of the Roma were respected.
Maroni contended the fingerprinting would be especially beneficial to Roma children whose parents send them to beg or steal instead of going to school. He said those children would be removed from
their parents' custody.
Charges of discrimination have rained in from international groups including the UN's Children Fund and the Council of Europe. The Italian chapter of Amnesty International called the move
"discriminatory, disproportionate and unjustified".
"Checks targeting a specific minority and affecting that minority, including its most vulnerable members, are discriminatory," the organisation said.
Italian newspapers published photos of gloved officials taking prints from the ink-stained hands of Gypsies living in Naples - and reported today that fingerprinting would begin in Rome next
week.
Some authorities were also identifying those fingerprinted by their religion and ethnicity. A Catholic lay organisation, the Sant'Egidio Community, distributed what it said were census papers from
Naples today, which included fields listing religion and ethnicity.
"I won't call it a racist measure, but the fact that a country that belongs to the G8 and the European Union is discriminating against people on the basis of ethnicity is unacceptable," Marco
Impagliazzo, Sant'Egidio's president, told a news conference.
The EU parliament will debate the issue next week, but EU officials have been cautious in their comments.
"I don't fully understand all aspects of the Italian proposals," EU Social Affairs Commissioner Vladimir Spidla said on Wednesday. "However, it is clear that in Europe it would be impossible to
grant rights to certain citizens and not grant them to others based on their ethnic origin."
Italians, and others in Europe, have a long history of distrust of Gypsies.
In Naples, camps had to be evacuated in May after attackers set huts on fire and angry residents in neighbouring areas protested against the alleged attempt by a Gypsy woman to kidnap a baby.
Authorities in Rome have raided camps to check for proper papers and tear down illegal housing.
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