Italy sees anti-gay crime wave

More than 1,000 people marched in Rome on 4 September in protest of an ongoing anti-gay crime wave.

 

 

 

15 September 2009

More than 1,000 people marched in Rome on 4 September in protest of an ongoing anti-gay crime wave.

In one incident, a gay couple was attacked outside a gay club, allegedly by a far-right activist nicknamed "Little Swastika." According to Amnesty International, one of the victims was stabbed and required surgery to save his life.

On 29 August, a nightclub that hosts a popular gay night was set alight by someone who broke a window and tossed in a flammable liquid. Firefighters extinguished the blaze quickly.

On 2 September, skinheads threw large firecrackers into a crowd in Rome's very gay Via di San Giovanni in Laterano (St. John Lateran Street). One person was slightly injured and a scooter was damaged.

Leading gay group Arcigay said that Italy had seen as many anti-gay incidents nationwide by the end of August as in all of last year.

Arcigay President Aurelia Mancuso said the attacks highlight the fact that Italy desperately needs a gay-inclusive hate-crimes law to stop "dangerous fringe elements" from thinking "they can get away with violence."