Salvini insists: "Enough with the do-goodism towards the Roma, and we must act with social services that are often cautious with them."

Yesterday he returned to calling for bulldozers to "raz" the Roma camp in Milan where four Roma children, all under 14 , live. They ran over and killed 71-year-old Cecilia De Astis in a stolen car. "Enough tolerance and do-goodism towards the Roma," Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini said today.
The incident that occurred a few days ago on Via Saponaro has drawn political attention. The League leader, as is his custom, wasted no time: he called for the camp's eviction, the arrest of the pseudo-"parents," and the revocation of parental rights. He also implicated Milan's mayor, Sala , and the left-wing parties, who responded by calling it political "scavenging."
But Salvini isn't satisfied. This morning, he returned to the fray on social media. "We can't ignore it: what happened in Milan is serious. We need to act immediately, with the intervention of social services—too often cautious when families living in caravans or shacks are involved—to help those children and prevent them from repeating the very serious crimes they just committed. Enough with the tolerance and do-goodism toward Roma people and people who are truly difficult to call 'parents.' In all of this, surprise and sadness for those left-wing politicians and journalists for whom the main problem in this whole affair isn't minor thieves and murderers or absent Roma families, but... the League and Salvini," he wrote on Facebook.
Debora Serracchiani , MP and Justice Minister for the Democratic Party, spoke: "I think that nomads are not all the same, just as Italians are not all the same. There are nomads who make mistakes and must pay for them, and there are nomads who want to integrate. That camp is not the one on Via Chiesa Rossa...the one on Via Chiesa Rossa is pursuing an integration project...where the issue of education is fundamental."
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