India

Do Black lives matter in Italy?

Four weeks have passed since Charity Oriakhu suddenly became a widow. Yet, she still goes mute whenever her children — a son and daughter ⁠— ask where their dad is.
“My son asks me: ‘where is daddy?’ thinking his daddy is in the hospital,” the Nigerian woman, who lives in Italy, told DW.
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The kids often gaze at the door expecting their father, Alika Ogochukwu, to return home.
“On his way back, he buys them many things. This time is summer; he buys them ice cream, a lot of things,” Oriakhu explained.
Since July 29, 2022, the two kids have wondered why there’s been no ice cream and other goodies.
Murdered in broad daylight
According to sources who spoke to DW, Ogochukwu was done with the day’s work that fateful Friday and waiting for his bus at the same bus stop in Civitanova Marche, central Italy — to go home. Ogochukwu was a street vendor.
Then, a young Italian woman accompanied a white man passed , and Ogochukwu greeted her, saying: “Ciao bella,” an informal Italian expression meaning ‘hi or goode beautiful.’
Oriakhu also confirmed this. “People that were there said my husband said ciao — he greeted the boy’s girlfriend: ciao bella — just like that. Finish.”
But in a fit of rage, the 32-year-old Italian man launched a physical attack on Ogochukwu despite seeing that he was living with a disability.
He was living with a disability after being hit a car and consequently losing his job.
Aided his crutch, Ogochukwu tried to run, but the Italian man overpowered him, snatched his crutch, and used it to hit him.
He shoved the visibly shaken Nigerian to the ground, unleashing torrents of blows before strangling him with his bare hands.
The attacker then used his knee to crush Ogochukwu’s head to the ground before fleeing the scene after stealing his phone.
All these happened in broad daylight while passers used their phones to record what happened.
A simple, quiet man
People who knew Ogochukwu described him as a simple, quiet, happy, and easy-going man who believed all humans are one.
He loved and respected everyone he met, so he greeted and complimented people effortlessly.
“He was not even telling the Italian woman to buy anything. Instead, he greeted,” Oriakhu stressed.
“This is, unfortunately, a familiar story,” Ojeaku Nwabuzo, Director of Policy, Advocacy, and Network Development at the European Network Against Racism, said.
“It is due to a long hory of rac violence in Italy,” the anti-racism activ told DW. She said she does not understand why the onlookers could not help.
Nwabuzo said Italy has a notoriety for racismacross the board, noting that political and law enforcement institutions are not comprehensively addressing the issue.
Do Black lives matter in Italy?
At the center of Ogochukwu’s murder is a disregard for the lives of Africans, said Kudus Adebayo, a fellow at the African Center for Migration and Society at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa.
“Africans have been framed over the years as a burden to the European bliss,” Adebayo told DW.
“Not just the media but also politicians who ride on the back of popul ideologies to seek votes and in the bid to do this, frame certain bodies as disposable.”
He said that explains the blatant disregard for Black lives and the killing in the public glare of a vulnerable individual.
“Not just someone that’s having issues with disability, but also a Black man who is on the street trying to make ends meet.”
African migrants used as scapegoats
Those interviewed for this article said many Italians believe African immigrants were a burden to the country, bring disease, and are responsible for increasing crimes.
Right-wing supporters have taken up this narrative and turned it into an immigration issue.
Africans in central and southern Italy whom DW spoke with on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals said the country has a problem of rac crimes, but it has never been acknowledged.
They said political rhetoric at the highest level fuels the violence leading to attacks such as in Civitanova and other parts of the country.
A number of Africans told DW that Italy was home to institutional racism.
“This problem holds a very notorious and uncomfortable position in that particular country,” Adebayo said.
He went on to say that it is easy for people with whatever ideas in their heads to go out feeling that they have the backing of the state, ‘to mete punishment’ against people they think shouldn’t be in their country.
“This is the pattern in Italy and it doesn’t seem there is a very proactive approach to dealing with this issue in a very decisive manner.”
Rac slurs and mimics
Justin, a 45-year-old Nigerian automobile expert in Civitanova, said rac slurs are sometimes hauled directly to the faces of black Africans. At other times, rac actions do the insulting.
“Racism deprives us from competing equally, from learning the language, from being who we are,” he told DW.
“We are being suppressed in different ways, we cannot even go to school, we are just mreated,” he added.
“They [Italian racs] give you this feeling everywhere that you are nothing. So, you have lots of fights and we are psychologically damaged and suppressed.”

“We don’t have equal rights here,” Edewor said as he recalled some ugly personal experiences. “Somebody once told me: ‘you are an ancient ape, get out of here; you’re too dark’.”
He didn’t end there. “They call you monkey, they call you names and, they ask what are you doing here; we don’t need you here, you cannot do anything [about the rac attacks].”
So he ignored them because he wanted to acquire his [car mechanic] certificate. “I want to be successful, so I concentrated on myself.”
Edewor said he understands the rac attacks: “They want to pull me down with all these words and some of these people sometimes come apologizing because they see I’m really strong, even stronger than them.”
Plastic smiles, hearts filled with venom
Kennedy, 47, who works as a delivery man and has been living in Parma — a city in northern Italy — for the past 20 years, describes some Italians as pretentious people with plastic smiles on their faces but hearts full of venom.
“I have experienced a situation where I delivered electronics to a customer and she even offered me coffee, I accepted. When I left, she called the office that next time, they should not send a black man to her house again.”
This was not the only experience. “When I brought in something to deliver to the house, she [another white Italian client] refused to open the door. She called the office that she was not expecting a black man to bring her stuff.” The company told her that if she does not want to receive the package from a Black man she as the right to reject the item, which she then did.
Black children not spared
Omonigho, another Nigerian in Italy, told DW she had experienced rac actions for most of her young life.
At two months old, her father, an engineer, and mother, an African food store owner, took her to a daycare center in Cremona, Northern Italy.
When the father would sometimes pass to check on his ba, “they would take care of other children, maybe hold them. My daughter would be on the bed all alone in a hall,” the father told DW. “Which is not supposed to be, but we don’t have an alternative,” he added. “Nobody wants to carry a black child.”
Omonigho has always felt unwelcomed and unaccepted though she was born in Cremona, Italy.
While non-African kids who pooped on themselves in kindergarten were taken to the school’s cleaners to be cleaned and taught how to use the toilet, Omonigho was always told to go alone while the cleaners would refuse to wash or teach her how to use a potty.

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