Image source: Facebook |
Emmanuel Chidi Namdi
and his wife, Chimiary, had settled in the northern Italian town of Fermo
to escape violence.
Huffington
Post report continues:
A
Nigerian man who had recently fled to Europe to escape Boko Haram militants was
beaten to death on the streets of Italy this week as he tried to defend his
wife against racist abuse.
Emmanuel
Chidi Namdi, 36, and his wife Chimiary, 24, were walking through the northern
Italian town of Fermo on Tuesday when a man called Chimiary a “monkey” and tried to grab her, according
to local priest Vinicio Albanesi, a friend of the couple.
Namdi
intervened, and the resulting fight left him in a coma. He was pronounced dead
on Wednesday.
Amedeo
Mancini, a 38-year-old Italian man who is part of an “ultras” gang of extremist
soccer fans, was arrested Thursday on suspicion of killing Namdi. Mancini told
investigators that he’d insulted the couple because he thought they were stealing a car, and he claimed that he’d acted in self defense
after Namdi attacked him, HuffPost Italy reported.
But
Chimiary told the priest that the attacker had bludgeoned her husband with a
road sign and continued to beat him as he lay unconscious on the ground,
according to HuffPost Italy.
The
couple had made a difficult journey from Nigeria to Italy last
year after their church was attacked by Boko Haram militants.
The
couple had been married just six months, although their tragic love story began
long before that.
They
had originally planned to wed in Nigeria, but when militants from the extremist
group Boko Haram attacked their local church and killed several of their
relatives, the couple decided to flee. Chimiary was pregnant and thought that
Nigeria was not a safe place to bring their child into the world, according to Italy’s Red
Cross.
Boko
Haram’s deadly insurgency has left thousands dead and some 2 million displaced
across western and central Africa. In 2014, the group killed
more people in terror attacks than Islamic State militants did.
Two
weeks before their original wedding date, the couple set off on the perilous
path to Europe through the deserts of Niger and Libya and over the
Mediterranean Sea. They were harassed and beaten by smugglers, and
Chimiary miscarried
the baby along the way, Albanesi said.
They
eventually reached the Italian island of Sicily before being transferred to
Fermo in September. There they moved into a reception center run by a Catholic
charity.
Their
delayed wedding day finally arrived in January. Because they lacked the
necessary documents to get legally married, Albanesi held an informal wedding
ceremony for the couple.
“The
exchange of rings has consecrated a bond that has been able to withstand bombs
and escape a thousand times in a tragedy,” says a statement from
the local Red Cross office celebrating the occasion. “After an exile of many
months, the young couple can start living again, with a new beginning in a
peaceful and supportive community, the warmth of a home and a great family.”
Emmanuel Chidi Namdi and his wife, Chimiary wedded in January through an informal wedding ceremony |
Namdi’s
death this week inspired an outpouring of condolences from officials and
supporters around Italy. It also heaped scrutiny on the anti-immigrant backlash
flaring up across the continent.
“Today
the government is in Fermo with Father Vinicio and local institutions in memory
of Emmanuel. Against hate, racism and violence,” Italian Prime Minister
Matteo Renzi tweeted early Thursday.
Fermo
Mayor Paul Calcinaro said Namdi’s death was “like a nightmare” and condemned
the “creeping
racism that cannot and must not find space in any way in our city.”
While
the town of 40,000 has overwhelmingly welcomed migrants and refugees, there
have been pockets of anti-immigrant sentiment. Several churches hosting
refugees have been targeted
in bomb attacks in recent months.
Across
Italy, the anti-immigrant Northern League party has risen from the margins of
politics to gain the support of some 10 to 15 percent of voters according
to recent polls. The party has exploited Italy’s position on the front line
of Europe’s refugee crisis to stoke
xenophobic and conspiratorial attitudes toward migration.
The
leader of the Northern League, Matteo Salvini, condemned the killing of Namdi
in a Facebook post Thursday, but also said the crime was further evidence that
immigration is “out of control, or rather an organized invasion, and will
not lead to any good.”
On
Wednesday evening, hundreds of mourners gathered in Fermo to pay their respects
to Namdi. Chimiary, dressed all in white, sang a Nigerian song of mourning.
“God,
where are you? Why do you leave me in this wicked world?” she said, explaining
the lyrics in English. “It is very painful for me to stay alone. ... It is
better for me to take my life for us to stay together.”
”You
will not be alone. We
will stand with you,” Albanesi told Chimiary at the vigil, according to a
local newspaper. “I commit to make you finish your studies in medicine. It was
your dream, and it was the dream of Emmanuel. We will make it, even though it
will not be easy.”
Italy’s interior minister, Angelino Alfano, announced on Thursday that Chimiary would be granted refugee status. “Italy isn’t represented by Amedeo Mancini,” Alfano said, calling Namdi’s death a “day of infinite sadness.”
No comments:
Post a Comment