Inverted World: Europe and Roma 
<http://en.rian.ru/international_affairs/20100921/160669863.html> 


17:03 21/09/2010

© flickr.com/ John & Mel Kots

This story by Vladimir Nesterov, political scientist, Strategic Culture 
Foundation <http://en.fondsk.ru/>  expert, was published in International 
Affairs magazine <http://en.interaffairs.ru/> .

In 1974  - a year after the United Kingdom’s accession to the European Economic 
Community – young British author Christopher Priest published his Inverted 
World, which portrayed the united Europe as the city of Earth, being slowly 
winched along railroad tracks on great wheels. The aim of the journey was to 
reach the Optimum, a destination of supposed well-being. As the city moved past 
one track the section was lifted, put ahead of the city, and reused. In a 
structurally similar scheme, money is currently being extracted from Berlin and 
used in Athens to keep Greece going as a EU member.

In The Inverted World, the city eventually reached the shore of an ocean across 
which no bridge could be built and came to a halt. Its residents shut down the 
generator and suddenly began to see the normal world with normal people and 
concerns around them. The generator served to distort space and for years the 
residents saw the world inverted. The citizens of the EU are currently going 
through roughly the same experience.

***
On September 16, the Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou ruled out a 
restructuring of the country's national debt but warned that its default would 
trigger a collapse of the Eurozone. Despite reassuring statements, investors 
are skeptical about Greece's chances of avoiding default, which could seriously 
bleed German and French banks as well as the European Central Bank, whose 
balance sheets are burdened with up to 40 bn Euro of Greek securities. Such a 
development could indeed become a prologue to the demise of the Eurozone which, 
as German Chancellor A. Merkel noted, would likely be tantamount to the end of 
the European project.

Greece is not the only voice to signal alarm in the Eurozone. University of New 
York economics professor Nouriel Roubini (AKA “Dr. Doom”), who is credited with 
predicting the current economic crisis years ahead of its outbreak, estimates 
the probability of collapse of the Eurozone at 30%.

He maintains that the collapse will be caused by the restructuring of sovereign 
debt of the weakest EU economies and by their withdrawal from the Eurozone. 
Roubini does say that this is a worst-case scenario while a more optimistic one 
is that with great difficulty, the EU will overcome the crisis in several years.

Roubini sees common factors that will impede growth in the second half of 2010 
and throughout 2011 in Germany and in other EU countries. Greece is unlikely to 
regain solvency and a mandatory restructuring of its debt is imminent, and 
Spain and Ireland are facing essentially the same problem, he says.

Such was the background in which an informal EU summit convened in Brussels on 
September 16. The plan was to discuss relations between the EU and its 
strategic partners – the US, China, India, and Russia – and to explore 
opportunities to boost trade. The summit was also supposed to focus on the 
novel EU system of economic management, sometimes described as the economic 
government (the idea was originally floated by French president Nicolas Sarkozy 
in October, 2008).

***
Instead, the summit degenerated into a ferocious debate between Paris and 
Brussels over the deportation of Roma from France to Romania, their country of 
origin.

In an attempt to capitalize on the French population's discontent at the tide 
of immigrants, last summer Sarkozy relaunched his customary agenda of fighting 
crime and illegal immigration. The campaign culminated in the roundup of 
numbers of Roma and their deportation to Romania with a farewell allowance of 
Euro 300. Formally, the French government was right – as citizens of Romania, a 
country outside of the Schengen zone, Roma were not entitled to stay in France 
indefinitely. As for Romania, Bucharest opened doors to its own flock only when 
Paris threatened to veto its integration into the European borderless zone. 
Brussels was outraged by Sarkozy's course. EU Justice Commissioner Viviane 
Reding (Luxembourg) said on September 14: “Discrimination on the basis of 
ethnic origin or race has no place in Europe. It is incompatible with the 
values on which the European Union is founded. National authorities who 
discriminate against ethnic groups in the application of EU law are also 
violating the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, which all Member States, 
including France, have signed up to.” In an unusually stinging criticism, she 
further likened the episode to deportations committed during World War II.

At that point, it was Sarkozy's turn to feel outraged. He said France was 
insulted by the statement and added that Mrs. Reding was in any case free to 
take the Roma to Luxembourg. The reply from Brussels was that Mrs. Reding 
expressed regrets concerning the comments over the matter but did not have in 
mind any parallels between the Nazi atrocities and the steps currently taken by 
the French government.

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi predictably sided with Sarkozy. He 
claimed that the scope of the Roma problem was not limited to France but 
spanned across Europe and that, in contrast to the majority of Europeans, the 
French president was aware of the fact. Berlusconi said he hoped the closenews 
of the French and the Italian positions would help to wake up Europe.

It certainly did that. Shortly after the summit, Bulgarian Prime minister Boyko 
Borisov described an angry lunchtime exchange between Sarkozy and European 
Commission President José Manuel Barroso, who said the discrimination of Roma 
in France was unacceptable and stressed that respect for human rights is a core 
EU value. Luxembourg's Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker joined the chorus of 
Sarkozy's critics by saying the French president's statements were malevolent.

Perhaps the row at the Brussels summit came as a shock to European diplomacy, 
but Sarkozy stood firm and declared that Paris would go on deporting Roma and 
eliminating all illegal camps to ensure public order in France.

As for Mrs. Reding, Sarkozy even avoided calling her by name while replying. 
Instead, he said “the woman” had insulted France by criticizing the crackdown 
on Roma and demanded official apologies from the Commission. No apologies 
followed, and evidently Paris will go on deporting Roma against the backdrop of 
Brussels' human rights advocacy. It should be noted that not only Silvio 
Berlusconi, but also Czech Prime Minister Petr Nečas for whom his own country's 
Roma had become a permanent headache, expressed support for Sarkozy.

Like many other countries, Germany also hosts Roma camps. Sarkozy suggested 
Chancellor Angela Merkel had indicated that Germany also planned to get rid of 
them, but that claim was officially refuted by Berlin.

Europe cannot simply pretend that the Roma problem does not exist. European 
Council President Herman Van Rompuy managed to convince the forum to pass a 
five-point declaration saying that the Roma theme would be discussed duly at 
one of the coming EU summits this year, and that put the final dot in the 
story. The September 16 EU summit failed to address the economic issues which 
were supposed to top its list of priorities, as if the Roma problem was the 
most pressing one the EU was confronted with. Isn't that altogether an inverted 
world?

***
No doubt, Europe's Roma problem is not a simple one. In the mid-1990’s I 
happened to walk across a Roma neighborhood in Trebišov, a small town in the 
eastern part of Slovakia. While the concrete apartment blocks around me were 
standard, the scenery left a distinctly strange impression. The entrance doors 
of apartment blocks  were flung open or absent, window panes and, occasionally, 
window frames were missing. I saw the head of a horse in the second floor 
window, and Roma were cooking food on a fire lit on a metallic panel in a 
ground floor apartment. It was clear that no efforts were ever made to 
integrate the people into civilized society, and this seems to be equally true 
in the case of Slovakia and in those of France and other leading EU countries.

By all means, separate Roma statehood is not a possibility and the perpetually 
unwelcome people will go on roaming around various countries. I met Roma in 
Africa and in New Zealand, and would not be surprised to hear that they have 
reached Tahiti. Clearly, taking some kind of care of Roma is imperative. In the 
past Roma used to sell horses or work as smiths. These days they might be 
dealing cars or running automobile repair shops. Perhaps that is what Europe 
could be arranging for instead of deporting Roma? Talking about human rights 
makes no sense given that such rights in no way help the homeless impoverished 
people. Some kind of economic assistance should go first. To that end, however, 
the EU should find a way of dragging its economies out of crisis and 
distributing economic benefits fairly within its societies. After that, the 
inverted world will likely revert to normality, for the Roma and for everybody 
else.

(Views expressed in this article reflect the author's opinion and do not 
necessarily reflect those of RIA Novosti news agency. RIA Novosti does not  
vouch for facts and quotes mentioned in the story)

http://en.rian.ru/international_affairs/20100921/160669863.html

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