Roberto
Calderoli, an Italian senator, compared Cecile Kyenge, the country's first
black Cabinet minister, to an orangutan. He also is quoted as saying that
Kyenge's success has encouraged illegal immigration to Italy and that
she should be a minister "in her own country."
There's
been an uproar since he uttered the words, and there are calls for him to
resign -- one news channel poll said more than 80% of viewers believe he
should. An online petition calling for his resignation has been started.
Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta said the talk is "unacceptable beyond
any limit."
It is the
latest in a string of racial slurs and insults directed at Kyenge, a
Congolese-born member of the Democratic Party. She assumed her integration
minister post last April in the country's coalition government.
Calderoli,
a member of the anti-immigration Northern League party, made the remarks this
weekend 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.
"If
I've offended her," Calderoli said after his remarks were publicized,
"I apologize."
"It
was a joke, a comment in a joking way. There was nothing particularly against
her. 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," he said.
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.
"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," she said.
Kyenge
moved to Italy
in the 1980s to study medicine. She became an Italian citizen and is an
ophthalmologist in Modena .
Her ascent to a top position reflects the success of immigrants but also has
fanned the flames of nativism.
She
received death threats before visiting an area where the Northern League is
powerful, and the reports of slurs have emerged persistently.
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."
Letta, who
called the episode "shameful" and "intolerable," made an
appeal to Northern League leader Roberto Maroni to "close this chapter
right away."
If he
doesn't, "we will enter a logic of complete confrontation which I don't
believe he needs, no one needs it," Letta said. "Neither does the
country need it."
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