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Leaguer calls Romano 'neo-terrorist'

Police patrol Milan street where rescued aid worker lives

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - Rome, May 13 - There was a row in the Lower House Wednesday after opposition League MP Alessandro Pagano called Silvia Romano, an aid worker who converted to Islam during an 18-month detention by Somali Islamist militants, "the neo-terrorist".
    Pagano was chided by Deputy House Speaker Mara Carfagna, a member of the League's ally, the centre-right Forza Italia (FI) party of former three-time premier Silvio Berlusconi, with Carfagna calling Pagano's words "unacceptable". But protests continued and the ruling centre-left Democratic Party (PD) called on the League to apologise for Pagano.
    Meanwhile in Milan, where prosecutors have opened a probe into a campaign of Web-based hate against 25-year-old Milan native Romano, police cars kept patrolling the street where she lives.
    Romano was freed at the weekend after 18 months in captivity by the Somali Al-Shabaab group.
    On Tuesday night Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio denied an Al-Shabaab spokesman's statement that the militants had received a four-million-euro ransom for Romano.
    Hatred on social media has been directed against Roman's conversion to Islam, the fact that she did not criticise Al-Shabaab, and her alleged naivety in travelling to a hotspot without proper protection. On Tuesday a former League councillor in Veneto said she should be hanged.
    Di Maio, former leader of the ruling anti-establishment 5-Star Movement (M5S), said Wednesday "spine-chilling things have been said about Silvia, they have gone beyond any acceptable limit." He said he felt "deep embarrassment" over Pagano's words.
    The commander of he ROS security police, Andrea Loy, paid what he said was a "courtesy visit" to Romano at her home on Wednesday.
    Romano was freed after a joint operation by Italian, Turkish and Somali intelligence services.
   

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