Ottawa Citizen

Italian senator chided over racist comments

Premier scolds Northern League party leader for likening black cabinet minister to orangutan

- FRANCES D’EMILIO

Italian Premier Enrico Letta has harshly criticized a top senator who likened the country’s first black cabinet minister to an orangutan, the latest episode of high-profile racial tension in a nation grappling with immigratio­n.

Letta denounced Roberto Calderoli’s words as “unacceptab­le” and “beyond every limit.”

Calderoli, the Senate’s vicepresid­ent and a leader of the antiimmigr­ant Northern League party, made denigratin­g remarks about Immigratio­n Minister Cecile Kyenge while he was speaking at a party rally Saturday in northern Italy, the populist movement’s power base.

“When I see images of Kyenge I cannot help think, even if I don’t say that she is one, of a resemblanc­e to an orangutan,” Corriere della Sera newspaper quoted Calderoli as saying. On Sunday, Calderoli said he was making a joke, and meant no offence to the minister.

Kyenge is a Congolese-born doctor who became Italy’s first black minister when Letta’s Cabinet was sworn in in April. Reactions to her appointmen­t have added to political tensions in Italy this summer, and Letta’s coalition government, which faces economic and other pressures, is extremely fragile.

Calderoli told the rally that Kyenge has done well to become a minister, but “perhaps she should do it in her own country.” He further was quoted as saying she “makes so many clandestin­e migrants who come here dream” that they will find “America” in Italy. The Northern League isn’t in the government but has long been the closest political ally of former Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s centre-right party, which is Letta’s main partner in the coalition government. Calderoli’s remarks sparked calls for him to resign, including from one of Kyenge’s fellow ministers, Gianpiero D’Alia.

D’Alia, a centrist who serves as Letta’s public administra­tion minister, told Sky TG24 that Calderoli’s comments recalled the “language of the Ku Klux Klan,” the U.S.-based white supremacis­t movement.

Kyenge said politician­s should take the occasion to “reflect on what kind of debate they want ... about content or about insults.” Last month, Kyenge, who has lived in Italy since 1983, received death threats before she visited the northern region that is Calderoli’s party base. The xenophobic Northern League expelled a local politician after she suggested on Facebook that someone should rape Kyenge so she “can understand what victims of atrocious crimes feel.” The League’s leaders blame immigrants for violent crime in Italy.

Immigratio­n is a relatively new phenomenon in Italy, where past centuries saw many Italians leave in search of work in North and South America and Australia.

Kyenge, interviewe­d by Sky, said Italy needs to develop a culture against racism.

She said racism “is about hate, the fear of what’s different.”

 ?? ANDREW MEDICHINI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Senate vice-president Roberto Calderoli said of Immigratio­n Minister Cecile Kyenge: ‘When I see images of Kyenge I cannot help think, even if I don’t say that she is one, of a resemblanc­e to an orangutan.’
ANDREW MEDICHINI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Senate vice-president Roberto Calderoli said of Immigratio­n Minister Cecile Kyenge: ‘When I see images of Kyenge I cannot help think, even if I don’t say that she is one, of a resemblanc­e to an orangutan.’

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