Italian plan to fingerprint Roma gypsy children in bid to end begging sparks uproar - News - Evening Standard
       

Italian plan to fingerprint Roma gypsy children in bid to end begging sparks uproar

A Romanian gipsy girl in Giugliano, a quarter of Naples, south of Italy


Italy has announced controversial plans to fingerprint thousands of Roma gipsy children in a bid to clamp down on street begging.

Interior Minister Roberto Maroni said mass fingerprinting by police would allow them to identify those caught begging instead of going to school.

Their parents would then be questioned and risk losing custody of them.

Mr Maroni said this would protect the children by deterring families who sent them out to accost passers-by. But the scheme, which will also involve fingerprinting all adult Roma, was immediately criticised as unacceptable discrimination and 'ethnic screening'.

In recent months, there has been an angry backlash against Roma in Italy, with petrol bombs thrown at a camp in Naples and sporadic vigilante attacks.

Many Italians blame gipsies for the rising crime rate and Silvio Berlusconi's new government has launched a tough crackdown on crime and immigration.

There are estimated to be around 160,000 Roma gipsies in Italy, often living in appalling conditions in makeshift camps with little basic sanitation.

Officials plan to bulldoze all illegal camps and a recent opinion poll found that 68 per cent of Italians want all gipsies expelled.

Vincenzo Spadafora, of the UN children's organisation Unicef, said of the fingerprints plan: 'If this is being brought in to protect the rights of Roma children, Italian children should also be fingerprinted to protect them as well.

Tough stance: Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi

Tough stance: Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi

'Most importantly, children should not be treated as adults.' Opposition MP Rosa Bindi said: 'The minister may deny it's ethnic screening, but it is frankly unacceptable.'

Jewish groups also attacked the plan. Amos Luzzarto, a former leader of Italy's Jewish community, said: 'There is a latent form of racism which manifests itself in cycles in Italian culture.

'I remember as a child being stamped and tagged as a Jew and as such could not be trusted.

'I think Italy is forgetting its past here. The racism of this initiative is evident and unacceptable. This is not a new form of fascism  -  this is racism.'

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