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Italian outrage over Gypsy drowning photos

Posted: Mon Jul 21, 2008 10:47 am
by RedGlitter
I find this hard to believe. Am I just naive? Anyone here know about this?

(CNN) -- Italian newspapers, an archbishop and civil liberties campaigners expressed shock and revulsion on Monday after photographs were published of sunbathers apparently enjoying a day at the beach just meters from where the bodies of two drowned Gypsy girls were laid out on the sand.







Italian news agency ANSA reported that the incident had occurred on Saturday at the beach of Torregaveta, west of Naples, southern Italy, where the two girls had earlier been swimming in the sea with two other Gypsy girls. Reports said they had gone to the beach to beg and sell trinkets.

Local news reports said the four girls found themselves in trouble amid fierce waves and strong currents. Emergency services responded 10 minutes after a distress call was made from the beach and two lifeguards attended the girls upon hearing their screams.

Two of them were pulled to safety but rescuers failed to reach the other two in time to save them.

The Web site of the Archbishop of Naples said the girls were cousins named Violetta and Cristina, aged 12 and 13.

Their bodies were eventually laid out on the sand under beach towels to await collection by police. Photographs show sunbathers in bikinis and swimming trunks sitting close to where the girls' feet can be seen poking out from under the towels concealing their bodies. A photographer who took photos at the scene told CNN the mood among sunbathers had been one of indifference.

Other photos show police officers lifting the bodies into coffins and carrying them away past bathers reclined on sun loungers.

"While the lifeless bodies of the girls were still on the sand, there were those who carried on sunbathing or having lunch just a few meters away," Italian newspaper La Repubblica reported.

Corriere della Sera said that a crowd of curious onlookers that had formed around the bodies quickly dispersed.

"Few left the beach or abandoned their sunbathing. When the police from the mortuary arrived an hour later with coffins, the two girls were carried away between bathers stretched out in the sun."

The incident also attracted condemnation from the Archbishop of Naples, Cardinal Crecenzio Seppe. "Indifference is not an emotion for human beings," Seppe wrote in his parish blog. "To turn the other way or to mind your own business can sometimes be more devastating than the events that occur."

Recent weeks have seen heightened tensions between Italian authorities and the country's Gypsy minority amid a crackdown by Silvo Berlusconi's government targeting illegal immigrants and talk by government officials of a "Roma emergency" that has seen the 150,000-strong migrant group blamed for rising street crime.

That has provided justification for police raids on Gypsy camps and controversial government plans to fingerprint all Gypsies -- an act condemned by the European Parliament and United Nations officials as a clear act of racial discrimination. Popular resentment against Gypsies has also seen Gypsy camps near Naples attacked and set on fire with petrol bombs by local residents.

In a statement published on its Web site, the Italian civil liberties group EveryOne said Saturday's drowning had occurred in an atmosphere of "racism and horror" and cast doubt on the reported version of events, suggesting that it appeared unusual for the four girls to wade into the sea, apparently casting modesty aside and despite being unable to swim.

"The most shocking aspect of all this is the attitude of the people on the beach," the statement said. "No one appears the slightest upset at the sight and presence of the children's dead bodies on the beach: they carry on swimming, sunbathing, sipping soft drinks and chatting."

Italian outrage over Gypsy drowning photos

Posted: Mon Jul 21, 2008 11:08 am
by woppy71
Showing a little humility and respect cost very little if anything at all. Regardless of their views on the Gypsies, surely a little humility wouldn't be to much to ask? I am saddened, but not suprised :(

Italian outrage over Gypsy drowning photos

Posted: Mon Jul 21, 2008 1:46 pm
by along-for-the-ride
I read this article on the net earlier today. How sad! Those poor young girls. Atleast someone should have sat with the bodies out of compassion before they were taken away from the beach.

Italian outrage over Gypsy drowning photos

Posted: Mon Jul 21, 2008 1:47 pm
by chonsigirl
:-1 What a sad story.

Italian outrage over Gypsy drowning photos

Posted: Mon Jul 21, 2008 6:28 pm
by Clint
Back when CB radios were in every pickup I was driving on the freeway listening. Ahead Nissan Pathfinder slid sidways and rolled over. One trucker said, "wow, did you see that?". Another replied, "serves the SOB right" (he didn't like 4-wheelers). When I got to the overturned vehicle a 19 year-old was dead and another was injured. Some other truckers stopped and rendered compassionate and helpfull assistance.

The hardened human heart can justify anything.

Italian outrage over Gypsy drowning photos

Posted: Tue Jul 22, 2008 2:42 am
by pantsonfire321@aol.com
Personally i couldn't just sit there sunbathing with a couple of dead bodies a few feet away from me . It's sad ..very sad indeed .