Local rivals Lazio and Roma share the stadium.Nicola Zingaretti, president of the Lazio region, of which Rome is the capital, was leading a group of historians at the Nazi death camp of Treblinka in Poland when he heard of the incident. He said it had provoked "added indignation". Anne Frank was born in Germany but her family fled to the Netherlands to escape the Nazis. They lived in hidden rooms in Amsterdam before they were discovered by German occupiers and deported to concentration camps.She died in the Bergen-Belsen camp aged 15 and her diary recounting the family's time in hiding became a center piece of Holocaust literature.Nicola Fratoianni, the head of the small Italian Left party, said those guilty of the antisemitism at the stadium should be made to memorize Anne Frank's diary.Lazio fans left stickers of Anne Frank in a Roma kit and anti-semitic messages in the Curva Sud https://t.co/fXA0PijwOA pic.twitter.com/f1chJ5gQIg
— Supporters (@footysupport) October 23, 2017