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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/10/11/AR2010101105815.html

Italy's crackdown on Gypsies reflects rising anti-immigrant tide 
in Europe

By Anthony Faiola
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, October 12, 2010; 12:25 AM

MILAN - This venerable city, long known for savory saffron risotto 
and the leggy models of Fashion Week, is moving to establish 
itself as something else: a zero-tolerance zone for Gypsies.

Anti-Gypsy campaigns in neighboring France have sparked 
international criticism, with officials there in recent months 
deporting more than 1,000 ethnic Roma - a clannish people 
migrating west in large numbers from Eastern Europe. But with 
great bravado, Milan is taking the lead in responding to Italy's 
own "Gypsy Emergency."

Blaming rising crime on the new waves of Roma immigrants, 
authorities are moving to dismantle Milan's largest authorized 
Gypsy camp, Triboniano, a teeming shantytown of street musicians 
and day laborers that officials decry as a den of thieves. At the 
same time, Milan is bulldozing hundreds of small, impromptu camps 
inhabited by newer arrivals and issuing mass eviction notices to 
Roma families living in another long-established camp in the 
city's largest immigrant neighborhood.

"These are dark-skinned people, not Europeans like you and me," 
said Riccardo De Corato, who is Milan's vice mayor from Prime 
Minister Silvio Berlusconi's ruling party and who is in charge of 
handling the camps. He later added: "Our final goal is to have 
zero Gypsy camps in Milan."

The campaign underway here is part of what observers are calling 
the most intense wave of anti-immigration sentiment to wash over 
Western Europe in years.

The immigration debate in Europe, just as in the United States, 
has dramatically intensified in the wake of the Great Recession, 
with voters increasingly blaming immigrants such as the Roma for 
taking away jobs, driving up crime rates and disturbing 
time-honored traditions.

Across the continent, governments are boldly throwing up new 
barriers to immigration, increasing enforcement and targeting 
groups such as the Roma, who are also known as Gypsies. Even in 
some of the most progressive nations in the region, such as 
Sweden, voters are showing new support for ultra-right politicians 
whose platforms center on a tougher line on immigration.

In Britain, the new Conservative-led coalition government has 
slapped a temporary cap on immigration from non-European Union 
nations, limiting the ability of companies to hire foreign 
nationals in a bid to drive down the unemployment rate. A 
permanent cap set to go into effect next year is expected to make 
it more difficult for even Americans to get long-term work visas 
there.

In France, a proposed law could strip citizenship from foreigners 
naturalized for less than 10 years if they commit violent crimes 
against the police or a government official. New detention centers 
would be set up to make it easier to deport illegal immigrants. 
Citizens of other European Union countries - who theoretically 
enjoy freedom of movement across the 27-nation zone - would find 
it harder to stay in France if they are not law-abiding and 
gainfully employed.

For a region that prides itself as a bastion of progressive 
thought, the campaigns in Europe have nevertheless taken on a 
decidedly ethnic and religious bent similar to the debates in the 
United States over the proposed Islamic center in Manhattan and 
the Arizona law targeting illegal immigrants.

A new law in France will ban Muslim women from wearing full-face 
Islamic veils in public, with similar laws pending in the 
Netherlands and Spain. Switzerland has prohibited the construction 
of mosque minarets. But the campaigns against the Roma in France 
and Italy have stoked accusations that politicians are targeting 
unpopular immigrant groups to shore up flagging support.

"There is a worrying trend in Europe in which we are seeing the 
embrace of populist policies," said Benjamin Ward, the Europe 
deputy director for Human Rights Watch in London. "They are 
creating a new climate of intolerance in Europe with movements in 
some countries now openly hostile to ethnic minorities and migrants."

Few nations, though, have gone as far as Italy, where the number 
of immigrants has more than doubled over the past decade, to more 
than 5 million.

Since Berlusconi was reelected in 2008, his fragile conservative 
coalition has made immigration and domestic security priorities, 
passing a law that imposes a fine of up to $13,600 on illegal 
immigrants and increasing salary and housing requirements for 
legal immigrants trying to bring in family members.

Last year, Italy virtually stopped issuing new work permits for 
non-European Union immigrants and set up a policy aimed at 
preventing refugees from entering the country by sea from North 
Africa. The result, according to the U.N. refugee agency, has been 
a dramatic drop in boat lifts across the Mediterranean from Libya, 
which had become a major transit route not only for thousands of 
economic migrants but also for asylum seekers from Somalia, Sudan 
and other African nations.

"It would be difficult now for immigration policy to get any more 
restrictive in Italy, unless we started to build walls," said 
Oliviero Forti, immigration director for the Catholic charity 
Caritas in Rome.
'Packing our things'

Inside the ramshackle Triboniano camp in northern Milan, Vladimiro 
Ilie, a Roma from Romania, stared at boxes brimming with clothes, 
pots and pans in the two-room trailer he shares with his wife and 
two children. "My family has been packing our things over the last 
few days," said Ilie, 41. "We have been warned by the city that at 
any moment, they will show up and tell us to leave."

The clearing of Triboniano, an encampment of 600 established in 
2001, is at the center of the city's plan to expel Roma. The 
effort underscores the stresses tearing at the E.U. over the flow 
of Eastern European immigrants into the West, even as it aspires 
to be a unified and nearly borderless region. Although the 
citizens of E.U. nations largely have access to the labor markets 
in other nations, countries may still use legal loopholes to expel 
those who commit crimes, are considered a threat to public 
security or go without a job for lengthy periods.

Originally a nomadic people who came to Europe from South Asia 
centuries ago, Roma were persecuted by the Nazis during the 
Holocaust. They have lived in Italy for generations, but their 
numbers soared after their traditional homeland of Romania was 
admitted into the E.U. in 2007. Since then, the number of 
Romanians in Italy - a substantial portion of them Roma - has 
almost tripled, to 800,000.

Famously insular, the Roma have tended to cluster in caravan 
camps, preserving their language and music and often earning 
hardscrabble livelihoods on the streets. They have been long 
associated with crime. After the rape and murder of an Italian 
woman by a Roma man, the national government declared a "Gypsy 
Emergency" in 2008 - long before France's campaign this summer - 
granting extraordinary powers to cities to address the influx.

Nowhere has that campaign been as sharp and swift as in Milan, 
Italy's center of industrial wealth, which is dominated by 
Berlusconi's party and the ultra-nationalist Northern League. Over 
the past two years, Milanese officials have expelled 7,000 Roma, 
leveling 346 illegal settlements.

Now the city is targeting several formerly authorized camps. 
Although officials initially said Triboniano must go to make room 
for a new highway, De Corato described the move as more of a 
social decision.

"Many of them are criminals," the vice mayor said in an interview. 
"They prostitute their own women and children." He later said that 
"there is no reason for the camp to stay."

A few families, including Ilie's, were to be granted public 
housing to show Milan's willingness to embrace Roma prepared to 
integrate into Italian life. But two weeks ago, officials 
rescinded the offer after an outcry from local residents and the 
national government. Officials say camp dwellers who do not leave 
voluntarily will be taken to the city limits; those with criminal 
records or no jobs could be deported.

Privately, even some in Triboniano say the camp maintains an 
unemployment rate of more than 60 percent and is home to some 
engaging in criminal activity. But Ilie, a carpenter who left 
Romania for Italy with his family in 1999, said Roma are being 
painted with a broad brush and that many, like him, are eager to 
integrate.

His children - Ana Maria, 16, and Luigi, 11 - no longer speak 
their native dialect. Both go to Italian schools and have Italian 
friends. "I don't care what happens to this camp anymore; what I 
care about is my family," he said. "We want to integrate, but they 
won't give us the chance."

The hard-line approach in Milan contrasts sharply with one in 
Rome. There, the local government is relocating Gypsies to camps 
with tighter security and constant video surveillance but also 
with better sanitary conditions, including running water and 
electricity. Gypsy immigrants from Eastern Europe will be given 
four years to find jobs and educate their children. Those who do 
will be allowed access to public housing. Those who don't, 
officials say, will face deportation.

"Italy," said Giuseppe Pecoraro, Rome's special representative on 
Gypsy issues, "is still a tolerant country."

Special correspondent Rebecca Omonira-Oyekanmi contributed to this 
report.

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