
Over 140 migrants and refugees, mainly from Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal and Sierra Leone who were transported by the German navy frigate Werra as part of the European external action service EU Navfor Med, wait to disembark at the Augusta harbour in eastern Italy on September 27, 2015. Some 500 migrants were rescued in seven operations launched over the weekend in the Mediterranean, the Italian coastguard said. The EU Navfor Med is a military operation launched at the end of June to identify, capture and dispose of vessels and rescue migrants undertaking risky journeys in a desperate bid to try and get to Europe from war-ravaged Syria and other trouble spots. AFP PHOTO
Hundreds of mourners attended the funeral Sunday of a Nigerian migrant who was killed by a right-wing football fan in a racist attack which has sparked much soul-searching in Italy.
“He came to live in peace, he found death”, read one of the many messages left with flowers for Emmanuele Chidi Nnamdi, whose widow, dressed all in white, sat near his rose-topped coffin in the cathedral of Fermo in central Italy.
Nnamdi, 36, died in hospital after he was punched by farmer Amedeo Mancini during a fight in the town on Tuesday which broke out after Mancini called Nnamdi’s wife Chinyere an “African monkey”.
Mancini, 39, who was arrested, admitted to police that he had insulted the woman, but said he believed the pair had been about to steal a car, and only assaulted Nnamdi after the latter hit him first with a road sign.
He also defended his use of the term “monkey” as not racist but simply an expression commonly used at the football stadium.
The deadly incident was met with outrage but also questions on how to tackle xenophobia in a country where prominent right-wing politicians have also been known to use the term.
In perhaps the most high-profile case, Cecile Kyenge, a DR Congo-born Italian MEP, was minister for integration in July 2013 when a senator from Italy’s anti-immigration Northern League party publicly compared her to an orangutan.
Despite widespread outrage over the slur, the Italian senate blocked legal action against the politician.
Nnamdi’s funeral was attended by parliamentary relations minister Maria Elena Boschi and the president of the lower house of parliament, Laura Boldrini.
Nnamdi and Chinyere fled Nigeria last year after an attack on a church by the Islamic extremist group Boko Haram in which their two-year-old son and other members of their families were killed.
Chinyere reportedly later suffered a miscarriage during the boat journey across the Mediterranean to Italy after being attack by a trafficker in Libya. Since their arrival, the couple had been housed in a shelter run by Catholic organization Caritas.
Disclaimer
Comments expressed here do not reflect the opinions of Vanguard newspapers or any employee thereof.