Italian police arrested a man on Thursday suspected of killing a Nigerian refugee in a racist attack that has shocked Italy, further fuelling political debate on the long-running immigration crisis.
Emmanuel told police that her husband was knocked unconscious by a man wielding a road-sign pole.
"The assailant continued to kick and punch him even when he was lying on the ground," said priest Vinicio Albanesi, who had offered the couple shelter in a nearby centre that is home to more than 100 migrants and asylum seekers.
Namdi died in hospital on Wednesday.
The
pair came to Italy last year on a boat from Libya after escaping an
attack on their church in Nigeria by the Islamist militant group Boko Haram. Their child and both their parents died in that assault, friends told Italian media.
Police
said they had arrested Amedeo Mancini, 38, on suspicion of murder
motivated by racism. The suspect's lawyer told AGI news agency that the
dynamics of the incident had not yet been established.
Italian
Prime Minister Matteo Renzi dispatched his interior minister to the
town on Thursday to discuss the killing with local authorities. "The
government today is in Fermo, alongside father Vinicio and the local
institutions in memory of Emmanuel. Against hatred, racism and violence," Renzi said in a tweet.
Politicians
from all parties condemned the killing, but the leader of the
right-wing Northern League party, Matteo Salvini, said the incident
showed immigration had to be controlled.
"Whoever kills, rapes or assaults another human being has to be punished. Without exception. Regardless of race," he said in a post on Facebook, adding: "It is ever more clear that illegal immigration is out of control ... and will bring no good."
Italy
has been on the frontline of Europe's immigration crisis. About 170,000
migrants reached Italy by sea in 2014 and 153,800 came in 2015. So far
this year, more than 75,000 migrants have arrived, the vast majority of
them Africans.
Many have moved swiftly on to
wealthier countries in northern Europe, but tightening border controls
mean increasing numbers are remaining in Italy and are being sent to
reception centres around the country.
The Roman
Catholic Church has looked to provide homes to migrants and father
Albanesi told reporters that the arrival of Africans had caused problems
in Fermo. "More than hate, I see discomfort," he said.
"People
see folk of different ethnicities begging, selling goods ... wandering
around town. But the problem is also that the migrants have to wait one
or even two years to hear if their asylum requests have been accepted."
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