Italy - 2011
If there is a legal provision on racist motivation as an aggravating factor, how often is it applied? What kind of sanctions/penalties are issued?
- Code:
- RED30
- Key Area:
- Anti-racist Crime Legislation & Implementation
- Strand(s):
- Racism
Short Answer |
Yes. |
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Qualitative Info |
Italian law provides for increased prison sentences for crimes aggravated by racial motivation, but the statute has yet to live up to its promise, Human Rights Watch said. The 1993 statute has often been interpreted by prosecutors and the courts only to apply to cases where racial hatred was the sole motivation, leaving serious racist crimes prosecuted as though they were ordinary offences. The state prosecuted Abdoul Guiebre's murder as an ordinary crime, for example, despite the racist insults uttered by the perpetrators during the attack. Source: http://www.hrw.org/news/2011/03/21/italy-act-swiftly-end-racist-violence |
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Groups affected/interested | Migrants, Refugees, Roma & Travelers, Muslims, Ethnic minorities | |
Type (R/D) | Extremism - organised Racist Violence, Anti-migrant/xenophobia, Anti-semitism, Islamophobia, Afrophobia, Arabophobia | |
Key socio-economic / Institutional Areas | Anti-discrimination, Anti-racism | |
External Url | ||
Situation(s) |
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