Racism in Italian election campaign


This video from Italy says about itself:

Macerata gunman had extreme right-wing background

4 February 2018

Luca Traini, who shot six African immigrants in a drive-by shooting spree, is known to have extreme right-wing sympathies.

Read more here.

By Marc Wells and Marianne Arens:

Racist rampage in the Italian election campaign

9 February 2018

Four weeks before the Italian elections, a bloodbath shook the small town of Macerata. On February 3, six young people were shot by a racist gunman, who drove around indiscriminately firing at dark-skinned passers-by.

Among the victims, who come from Mali, Nigeria, Ghana and Gambia, there is also a young woman. All are aged between 21 and 33. Five are still in hospital, one is seriously injured and had to undergo surgery. The gunman, Luca Traini (28), shot at but missed five other migrants during his Saturday morning rampage. He also shot at the party headquarters of the Democratic Party (PD), which currently heads the government in Rome under Paolo Gentiloni.

When the mayor realized there was a shooting spree taking place, he halted public transport and called on people to stay at home. After two hours, Traini was captured by police on the steps of a war memorial and arrested. Wrapped in an Italian flag, he gave a fascist salute and shouted, “Viva Italia!”

Traini, bearing a fascist [wolfsangel] tattoo on his temple, is known locally as a fascist and racist. In his apartment, as well as Hitler’s Mein Kampf and books on Mussolini’s social republic of Salò, police also found a flag with the Celtic Cross, which neo-Nazis consider a symbol of the “supremacy of the white race”. Last year, Traini had run as a candidate of the Lega Nord (Northern League) in the local elections in the neighbouring village Corridonia, but without receiving a vote.

The former separatist party is participating in the general election on 4 March as “Lega”. Its nationalism and unrestrained witch-hunting of immigrants undoubtedly encouraged the perpetrator’s fascist delusions. For example, for days, the newspapers had reported on the statement of Lega member Attilio Fontana, who said the most important thing now was “to protect our ethnicity, our white race” from extinction by the wave of migration.

After Traini’s murderous action, [Northern League party leader] Salvini issued another statement, in which he half-heartedly condemned the shooting, but placed responsibility on a lax immigration policy: “Violence must always be condemned. However, I have a duty to tell the Italians HOW to avoid incidents like those in Macerata. For example? By sending the illegals home.”

The Lega is in a right-wing alliance for the election with Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia and the fascists of Fratelli d’Italia. They hope to replace the ruling Democrats with a mixture of right-wing incitement and fanciful election promises. Polling almost 38 percent in surveys, they are currently ten points in front of the government camp (28 percent).

Silvio Berlusconi is also making targeted use of right-wing demagogy. In a TV broadcast on Sunday evening about the rampage, he described the offender as crazy and sweepingly charged all refugees of being “a social bomb that can explode at any time”. According to Berlusconi, there are 600,000 irregular immigrants in Italy allegedly living from the proceeds of crime.

As for the third major party, the MoVimento 5 Stelle (M5S, Five Star Movement) of Beppe Grillo, its lead candidate Luigi Di Maio picked up on the slogan of the “social bomb” and charged that Berlusconi, together with Renzi, was responsible for mass immigration into Italy. For months, the “Grillini” have stood at about 27 percent in the polls, making it the strongest single party.

The policy of the Five Star Movement is just as right-wing, nationalist and xenophobic as that of the other parties. In the EU, it sits in the same political grouping as the far right Alternative for Germany (AfD), the Sweden Democrats and Britain’s UKIP, and also has declared fascists among its VIPs, such as the father of M5S candidate Alessandro Di Battista, who emphasized in front of the camera, “Am I right-wing? No, I’m a fascist.”

In the election campaign, the Five Star Movement benefited from being the only major party that has never been in government. The two other major political camps have been identified for years with the right-wing policies of the banks and the EU. While Berlusconi stands for shameless personal enrichment, the PD restructures the public finances at the expense of the working class.

In a government statement on the bloody crime in Macerata, Gentiloni did not say a word about the racist aspects of the crime but emphasized his confidence in the judiciary and the “sense of responsibility of all political forces.” He concluded his statement with a nationalist appeal, “Hatred and violence will not divide us, the Italian people.”

As a governing party, the PD has long practiced what the right-wing demands: the systematic attack on African migrants. With the active help of the EU, Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni and his Interior Minister Marco Minniti have signed a dirty deal with the Libyan Coast Guard. They finance Libyan Islamists and smugglers in the Mediterranean to keep migrants out of Europe. They consciously accept the fact that people not only drown, but also perish in Libyan torture camps.

In the hospital, one of Trainis’ victims, a Mr. Wilson from Ghana, told about his odyssey of war, flight and expulsion. He had arrived in Italy on a dinghy, saying, “I saw people, especially black Africans, being shot or sold. People were treated like cattle there.”

Italy is in a devastating social crisis. Anyone who is in their twenties today has seen nothing but social decline in their lives. Officially, youth unemployment is at almost 35 percent, and in reality is much higher, especially in the south. Ever-new austerity measures and “reforms” such as Renzi’s “Jobs Act”, the pension reforms, healthcare reforms or the “Buona Scuola” have led to hundreds of thousands of young Italians leaving the country.

All parties, from the open fascists to the PD, are responding to the social crisis by inciting xenophobia and racism to divert social anger and outrage onto the most vulnerable in society, refugees and migrants. This is the dirty mechanism of the Italian election campaign.

Italy’s racist Lega emerges as the big winner from the latest elections: here.

30 thoughts on “Racism in Italian election campaign

  1. Monday, February 12, 2018

    Italy Anti-fascists march against racist shootings

    30,000 demonstrators defy mayor’s bid to call off rally

    THIRTY THOUSAND anti-racists rallied in the Italian city of Macerata on Saturday to mark a week since six black people were shot and wounded by a fascist gunman.

    Demonstrators defied calls from Mayor Romano Carancini for the rally to be called off for fear of provoking “unrest” — far-right activists of the Forza Nuova party clashed with police last Thursday when they held a demo in the town claiming: “people die from immigration.”

    Mr Carancini claimed at the weekend that his heart was with the anti-fascist protest, though he didn’t show up.

    Shooter Luca Traini has told police his rampage, in which he drove around the city firing on anyone black he came across, was a response to the murder of a young Italian woman in which a man of Nigerian descent is the prime suspect.

    While Forza Nuova chief Roberto Fiore claims to deplore the shootings, he also remarked that Mr Traini was “also a victim.”

    But Thursday’s provocation by around 40 right-wing activists was dwarfed by Saturday’s giant rally, which saw participation from the National Association of Italian Partisans (Anpi), an organisation of veterans of the second world war anti-fascist resistance which overthrew and hanged Mussolini, the Potere al Popolo (“power to the people”) left electoral alliance, socialists, communists and trade unionists.

    The crowds chanted: “If there’s unemployment blame the government, not the migrants” and on parts of the route residents clapped and cheered the march as it snaked past.

    “We have a constitution that is, above all, anti-fascist and I want the laws against fascist ideology to be applied,” marcher Giuliano Denti told reporters, while Mafalda Quartu added: “In recent years we have allowed the right to flourish. I have always demonstrated, but now we need to do so more than ever.”

    Interior Minister Marco Minniti told a press conference that he agreed with action against far-right parties, saying “there are limits beyond which we cannot go in a democracy and we will not allow anyone to breach them.” He added that “fascism and nazism are dead forever.”

    But Tuscany President Enrico Rossi retorted: “Fascism and nazism can be reborn. Our task is to prevent that.”

    https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/anti-fascists-march-against-racist-shootings

    Like

  2. In the Umbrian town of Soleto, a priest who has often spoken out against racism and in defence of migrants was believed to have been the target of intimidation by far-right activists after his rectory and home were ransacked.

    Father Gianfranco Formenton, a parish priest at Sant’Angelo in Mercole, had strongly condemned the Macerata shooting.

    “I live alone and in quite an isolated area,” he told the newspaper Il Messaggero. “But I will continue to live here as well as carry out my mission without stepping back.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/feb/21/italian-election-campaign-marred-by-political-violence

    Like

  3. Pingback: Neo-fascist violence in Italy | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  4. Pingback: Anti-fascist demonstration in Rome, Italy today | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  5. Pingback: Big anti-fascist demonstration in Rome, Italy | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  6. Pingback: 100,000 anti-fascist demonstrators in Rome, Italy | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  7. Pingback: Italian left in the elections | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  8. Pingback: Italy after the election | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  9. Pingback: Berlusconi, mafia crony, Italian judge rules | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  10. Pingback: Italy’s new government, anti-worker, pro-war | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  11. Pingback: Italy, Spain and the European Union | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  12. Pingback: Italian racist mafioso murders refugee from war-torn Mali | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  13. Pingback: ‘French police abusing refugee children’ | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  14. Pingback: Italian far-right minister wants persecution of Roma | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  15. Pingback: European Union policies kill refugees in Algerian desert | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  16. Pingback: Italian right-wing government persecutes anti-mafia author | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  17. Pingback: Italian government’s anti-Roma racism | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  18. Pingback: Racist injures African Italian athlete’s eye | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  19. Pingback: Austerity kills in Genoa, Italy | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  20. Pingback: Protests against Italian right-wing government | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  21. Pingback: Naples helping refugees, defying right-wing Italian government | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  22. Pingback: French-Italian governments’ conflict on refugees | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  23. Pingback: French-Italian conflict on Libyan oil | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  24. Pingback: Italian demonstration against right-wing government | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  25. Pingback: Big anti-racism march in Italy | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  26. Pingback: Stop deporting refugees, German demonstrators demand | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  27. Pingback: Saving refugees’ lives, criminal in Italy? | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  28. Pingback: Austria’s right-wing government collapses | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  29. Pingback: European elections, establishment parties defeated | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  30. Pingback: Extreme right power grab attempt in Italy | Dear Kitty. Some blog

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.