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Evicted Rome immigrants scuffle with police (6)

Aid groups protest as two arrested

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - Rome, August 24 - Around 100 immigrant squatters evicted Saturday from a building in Rome's central Piazza Indipendenza on Thursday scuffled with police who cleared them from the square.
    Over 400 Eritrean refugees and asylum seekers had been in the apartment block for the last four years.
    The immigrants threw rocks, bottle and gas tanks at police who were trying to move them out of gardens in the square. Two immigrants were arrested.
    One of them was arrested as he was giving an interview to La7 TV. The incident spurred cries of "shame, shame" from other immigrants.
    One refugee woman said "we were woken up by the fire hydrants and some women were beaten with truncheons".
    The vast majority of the immigrants are Eritreans, who have fled harsh living conditions and duress in the army where they were forced to enlist. Fire hydrants were used against the immigrants evicted as women knelt on the ground and raised their arms to stop being removed, crying "shame".
    One woman fell to the ground and was slightly hurt.
    After the clashes with police, the immigrants dispersed into streets adjacent to the nearby Termini central rail station.
    Fresh scuffles broke out in front of the station after immigrants tried to block traffic in Piazza dei Cinquecento.
    A woman had a bad turn because of the fright she was given, sources from the movements for housing said. A police officer chasing evicted refugees outside Termini is heard saying "if they throw things break their arms" on a video posted to Facebook.
    Rome Prefect Paolo Basilone congratulated the police on their "hard work", saying that "legality has been restored to the square".
    She said the immigrants had been "infiltrated" by the leftist Movements for the Struggle for Housing who had allegedly persuaded them to refuse alternative accommodation. Anti-immigrant Northern League leader Matteo Salvini lauded the police operation.
    "Bottles and rocks against the police this morning at dawn by 100 or so immigrants illegally camped out in the gardens of Piazza Indipendenza in Rome," Salvini said on Facebook.
    "Come on boys, evictions, order, cleanliness and deportations! The Italians are with you." Giorgia Meloni of the small rightist Brothers of Italy party said "anyone who commits crimes must be deported".
    The chair of the Senate human rights committee, Luigi Manconi of the ruling centre-left Democratic Party (PD), on Thursday criticised what he said was Rome city council's "neglect" of an immigrant housing issue that he said led to the scuffles.
    "For the second day running, the police has intervened to clear a building that for years has hosted hundreds of Eritrean refugees, in Rome's Via Curtatone," Manconi said.
    "As it was easy to foresee, considering the absence of any alternative proposal and the irresponsible neglect by the city administration, the case has caused violence and left people injured".
    Humanitarian organisations protested against what they said was a further sign that the centre-left national government was aping rightwing stances on immigration.
    The Missionaries of St Charles Borromeo said that the evicted immigrants were "victims twice over", calling for "concrete measures" to help them.
    "Firstly they are victims in their homeland from which they were forced to flee to hope in a semblance of better life, worthy of the name; and now again here, in Italy, where even though they have regular permits they have no kind of guarantee for a roof over their heads they can call home," said the order, also called Scalabrinians, in a statement.
    Small leftwing parties including the Progressive and Democratic Movement (MDP), a splinter group from the PD, said Interior Minister Marco Minniti, a member of the PD, should report to parliament.
    They also said it was "essential" to find temporary accommodation for the immigrants and then map out a "definitive" solution for them, pointing out that they had valid residency permits.
    There are "numerous families with children" among the refugees and asylum seekers, the MDP said.
    SAP, a police union, said "we have to do the dirty work, picking up the pieces after government mistakes".
   

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