The Jewish Chronicle

Roma census reminds Jews of Mussolini

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ITALY’S INTERIOR Minister has caused uproar after proposing a census of Roma people living in the country.

He told a local television channel that “unfortunat­ely you have no choice but to keep those with Italian citizenshi­p, you can still expel those who are here illegally”.

Mr Salvini, who has long accused the Roma minority of being characteri­sed by high rates of criminalit­y, made the remarks to local station TeleLombar­dia on Monday.

It came as Italy marks 80 years since racial laws against the Jews were introduced in 1938 in response to a census of religious minorities and the publicatio­n of the racist pamphlet La Difesa della Razza (“The Defence of Race”).

The Union of Italian Jewish Communitie­s said the interior minister’s remarks were shocking.

It said in a statement: “Matteo Salvini’s announceme­nt of a possible census that targets the Roma population in Italy alone is worrying and reminiscen­t of laws and racist measures from just 80 years ago that are unfortunat­ely increasing­ly forgotten.

“[Nothing] can justify forcing specific groups to undergo security measures that are only reserved to them.”

Mr Salvini, who leads the populist League party, became a minister this month after his party struck a deal Italy’s Roma population was criticsed by Matteo Salvini (left)

with the Five Star Movement to end a constituti­onal crisis which lasted since Italians elected a hung parliament in March.

Since becoming interior minister he has ordered the closure of Italian ports to boats carrying refugees from the shores of North Africa, causing consternat­ion among the country’s progressiv­es and triggering a diplomatic row with France.

Five Star leader Luigi Di Maio, who is the League’s partner in government, criticised the statement on Roma people, calling it “incompatib­le with the constituti­on”.

Mr Salvini subsequent­ly released a statement in which he attempted to clarify his remarks: “The objective is to make a survey of the camps where the Roma live; we do not intend to compile lists or taking these people’s fingerprin­ts.

“We want to protect the thousands of (Roma) kids who do not get a chance to go to school regularly because they are educated and introduced to criminalit­y instead.”

Italy’s Roma population stands between 120,000 and 180,000, with the majority holding Italian citizenshi­p.

But the community suffers from high rates of illiteracy, making its members more vulnerable to involvemen­t in unlawful activities.

Around 28,000 live in camps, some of which are legal but others are makeshift settlement­s, and Mr Salvini called during the election for these to be removed.

He made the image of a bulldozer a symbol of his campaign and wore it on his jerseys on multiple occasions.

A poll quoted this week by prominent journalist Enrico Mentana suggested Mr Salvini’s party had surpassed Five Star in popularity for the first time.

It is not the first time an Italian Interior Minister has advocated a crackdown on the country’s Roma community.

In 2008 Roberto Maroni called for fingerprin­ts to be collected from camp inhabitant­s, briefly triggering a European Union investigat­ion.

28,000 Roma people in Italy live in camps

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