They just won't let this lady be.
This is how CNN reports it.
Racist taunts against
Kyenge's
appointment as Italy 's
minister of integration three months ago isn't sitting well with right-wing
radicals whose racial slurs and antics have overshadowed her tenure.
The banana
incident is just the latest.
It took
place Friday in Cervia, where Kyenge was speaking to supporters. A man popped
up out of the crowd and launched two bananas toward the podium, Kyenge
spokesman Cosimo Torlo said.
The bananas
fell short of the stage, landing between the first and second row of
spectators.
Giancarlo
Mazzuca, chief editor of the daily newspaper Il Giorno, was sitting two chairs
away from Kyenge.
"I was
able to verify which levels can be reached by human stupidity," he wrote
in a column.
Police
haven't found the person who hurled the bananas. There will be increased
security around the minister, Torlo said.
Kyenge
shrugged off the episode -- as she has with the other incidents.
In a
Twitter post, she called it a sad waste of food when so many people are dying
of hunger.
Kyenge, who
was born in the Democratic Republic of Congo, moved to Italy in the
1980s to study medicine. She became an Italian citizen and is an
ophthalmologist in Modena .
While her
ascent to a top government position reflects the success of immigrants, it also
has stoked nativism.
Just before
Kyenge arrived for Friday's rally, a group smeared blood-red paint and
anti-immigrant messages onto mannequins.
"Immigration
kills," read signs attached to the dummies.
The
far-right political group Forza Nuova ("New Force") claimed
responsibility for the mannequins.
The scene
was also littered with fliers that said Italy 's future growth depends on
"protecting the Italian identity," according to the ANSA news agency.
Two weeks
ago, Italian Sen. Roberto Calderoli likened Kyenge to an orangutan. Calderoli,
a member of the anti-immigration Northern League party, made the remarks at a
political rally.
"I
love animals -- bears and wolves, as everyone knows -- but when I see the
pictures of Kyenge, I cannot but think of, even if I'm not saying she is one,
the features of an orangutan," he was quoted as saying.
After his
comments were published, Calderoli said "if I've offended her, I
apologize."
"It
was a joke, a comment in a joking way. There was nothing particularly against
her," he said. "It was just my impression. ... It is all very well
that she be a minister but in her own country. Given that this government needs
to govern Italy ,
I hope that it is done by Italians."
Kyenge
responded diplomatically, saying Calderoli "does not need to ask
forgiveness to me, but he should rather reflect on the political and
institutional role that he carries. It is on this that he needs to make a
profound reflection also to then apologize."
She added,
"Also, he must go beyond putting everything on a personal level. I think
the time has come for us to study the problem of communication."
Kyenge has
also received death threats before visiting an area where the Northern League
is powerful.
A local
politician recently said on Facebook that Kyenge should be raped so she can
understand the pain felt by victims of crime, which some politicians blame on
immigrants.
She's been
called a "Congolese monkey," "Zulu" and "the black
anti-Italian." One Northern League official said "she seems like a
great housekeeper" but "not a government minister."
Italian
Prime Minister Enrico Letta appealed to Northern League leader Roberto Maroni
to "close this chapter right away."
In tough
times, some Italians focus their anger on immigrants, Mazzuca, the newspaper
editor, told CNN.
"The
economic crisis is worsening the situation," he said. "Jobs that
until a few years ago wouldn't have even been considered by Italians are now
becoming precious."
There have
recently been more and more reports of Italians beating foreigners,
particularly street vendors, Mazzuca said.
He said
doesn't believe that Italians generally are racists and hopes Kyenge will be
able to ease racial tensions.
"I
really think that Kyenge is the right person in the right place," he said.
"As an eye doctor, she is able to see in the distance."
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