A Rome court on Tuesday convicted six men of spreading pro-fascist and anti-Semitic ideas with banners, posters and graffiti in the Italian capital, according to The Associated Press (AP).

A 1993 law forbids use of slogans, gestures and actions evoking Nazi and fascist ideologies or inciting racial hatred.

Sentences for the convictions ranged from one and a half years to eight months. A seventh defendant was acquitted.

Two of those sentenced had previously been convicted in a separate case of attempting to re-establish the Fascist party, the legacy of 20th-century dictator Benito Mussolini.

Rome Jewish community spokesman Fabio Perugia welcomed the verdict and said it rendered a “clear-cut condemnation of neo-fascism and of all racist and xenophobic cultures.”

The graffiti and posters targeting the city’s tiny Jewish community and its leaders were spotted in several neighborhoods from 2008-2011, noted AP.

Source: Israel National News