DEATH OF DIEGO MARADONA

Maradona's Italian son granted Argentine nationality

Diego Armando Maradona Sinagra Junior, the Italian son of the late footballing legend, was awarded his father's Argentine nationality on Thursday. 

The Italian son of late football idol Diego Maradona, Diego Armando Maradona Sinagra, known as Diego Junior, poses by a poster of an International Campaign for the Right to Identity, after he was granted the Argentine nationality on March 25, 2021 during a ceremony at the Argentine Consulate in Rome. Diego Junior is joining the International Campaign for the Right to Identity which helps search for the children stolen by the 1976-1983 military dictatorship from their missing parents, and helps Italians who have had links with Argentina between 1974 and 1983 and who have doubts about their identity. Foto: AFP/Tiziana Fabi

Diego Armando Maradona Sinagra Junior, the Italian son of the late footballing legend, was awarded his father's Argentine nationality on Thursday. 

Diego Junior, a 34-year-old retired lower-division footballer, finalised his passport application in a ceremony at the Argentine Consulate in Rome.

Speaking to AFP in Spanish with a distinct Argentine accent, he said he felt half Neapolitan and half-Argentine. 

"I am Neapolitan because I always lived in Naples. I think a Neapolitan always thinks different from an Italian," Diego Junior said. 

"And the other 50 per cent [is Argentine] because my father always passed on to us this great love for Argentina, its people, the country."

Diego Junior was born out of one of Maradona's extra-marital affairs while he played for Napoli, and his father recognised him only after a court battle. Still, he only had kind words for his father. 

"My old man was always the person who could bring joy to people. Not just on the football field ... he had a charisma that sometimes left you speechless," he said. 

Diego Junior also complained about the "many journalists" who "tried to paint [my father] as a monster. He was not like that." 

He described Maradona as a "loving man" who "liked telling jokes" and with whom his family was "very happy" when alone with him. 

Human rights campaign

Diego Junior also endorsed a campaign by Argentina's government for the victims of the country's 1976-1983 military dictatorship.

During that brutal regime, an estimated 30,000 people – including dozens of Italians – went missing or were killed, according to human rights groups.

In hundreds of cases, infant children of the 'desaparecidos' ("disappeared") were given new identities and assigned to other families. 

The Argentine government is now urging these children – including any who may have ended up in Italy – to come forward, offering to help them discover their roots. 

"I believe that identity is a right. I fought for it a lot, albeit in a different way," Diego Junior said, adding that he felt "proud" to contribute to the campaign. 

Maradona, considered by many as the greatest footballer in history, died aged 60 in November, just weeks after undergoing brain surgery on a blood clot, and after decades of battles with cocaine and alcohol addictions. 

He was idolised both in Argentina and in Naples, where he played from 1984 to 1991 and helped local club Napoli lift its only two Serie A titles.