Italian Jews say plan for Roma registry has echoes of fascist past

Italy’s Jewish community condemned a call by the country’s hardline interior minister to take a census of Italy’s Roma population.

The Union of Italian Jewish Communities, or UCEI – the country’s EJC affiliate -said in a statement issued on Tuesday that the call by Matteo Salvini to create a “registry” of Roma in Italy recalled the antisemitic legislation introduced by Italy’s fascist government on the eve of the Holocaust in 1938.

Salvini, who leads the far-right League Party, told a TV station on Monday that he had asked the ministry to prepare a dossier on the situation of Roma in Italy “in order to see ‘who,’ ‘how,’ and ‘how many.’” His statement drew sharp protest from the centre-left opposition. Later, Salvini said he had no intention of “creating files or taking digital fingerprints” of individual Roma.

Salvini’s “announcement of a possible, specific census of the Roma population in Italy worries us and reawakens memories of the racist measures taken just 80 years ago and, sadly, increasingly forgotten,” the UCEI statement said.

Salvini’s party in the March 4 elections scored victories in much of northern Italy with a strident anti-immigrant platform.

The UCEI statement said there was no “search for consensus, no anxiety about public order that justifies the disturbing proposal to single out specific social categories of citizens, to censor them and subject them to special security policies reserved only for them.”

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