EUROPE 


Citizen Rights Don't Apply to Roma 



By Claudia Ciobanu



August 7, 2010, Inter Press Service



http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=52415



BUCHAREST, Aug 7, 2010 (IPS) - All major European countries

plan mass expulsions of Roma or demolitions of Roma

settlements. Rights groups warn that these measures entail

the criminalisation of an entire ethnic group, and break EU

law.



The French executive announced Jul. 29 that 300 illegal Roma

camps would be demolished in the next three months. According

to the President's office, the camps are "sources of illegal

trafficking, profoundly shocking living standards,

exploitation of children for begging, prostitution and

crime."



By the end of this year, France is set to adopt legislation

to expel undocumented Roma residing in the country, "for

reasons of public order."



Germany is set to deport 12,000 Roma back to Kosovo over the

next years. Half of them are children and adolescents who

grew up in Germany.



Sweden has this year deported 50 Roma from Eastern Europe for

begging, even though begging is not a crime in this country.

Denmark deported 23 Eastern European Roma in July. In

Belgium, 700 Roma were forced to exit Flanders in July, and

given only temporary shelter in Wallonia.



The UK government last month announced legislation that would

lead to the eviction of tens of families of Roma and

travelers, pushing them into illegality.



The steps taken by Western governments come right in the

middle of the Decade of Roma Inclusion (2005-2015), "an

unprecedented commitment by European governments to improve

the socio-economic status and social inclusion of Roma."



In 2008, Italy declared a state of emergency over Roma

immigrants.



Around 10 million Roma are estimated to be living in Europe.

The largest concentration is in Romania, at two million

according to unofficial estimates. Hundreds of thousands live

in other Central and Eastern European countries.



The measures of Western governments are mainly directed at

Eastern European Roma who have moved west in search of a

better life following EU expansion. Despite being European

citizens, they are now threatened with expulsion, in breach

of the EU basic right to free movement.



Targets of evictions and demolitions are also "travelers",

groups of people who often have Western European nationality

but maintain a traveling lifestyle in keeping with their

culture. Between 300,000-500,000 travelers (gens de voyage)

are estimated to be living in France, while the UK is thought

to host around 18,000 Roma and traveler caravans.



Human rights groups say that some Western politicians are

keen on blurring the lines between travelers and Roma (itself

a highly heterogeneous population made up of mostly sedentary

groups but also of nomads) in order to give the impression

that Roma are difficult to integrate.



Additionally, claim the activists, politicians are

emphasising crimes committed by some Roma to create a sense

that entire communities of Roma are threats to public safety,

thus creating grounds for mass expulsions.



"Indeed there are Roma who are in charge of trafficking

networks, but they represent less than one percent of this

population, the rest are victims," says David Mark, head of

the Civic Alliance of Roma in Romania (a coalition of over 20

Roma NGOs).



"But because that one percent commits crimes and the

authorities are not able to stop them, all Roma are being

criminalised," Mark told IPS. "The announced expulsions and

demolitions of camps are based on the criminalisation of an

entire ethnic group, when criminality should be judged on a

case by case basis in courts of law."



"What we are seeing is a greater call by receiving countries

to restrict freedom of movement inside the EU," argues Rob

Kushen, executive director of the European Roma Rights

Centre. "The danger is that this will negatively affect Roma

rights and the rights of all EU citizens."



The European Commission (executive body of the EU) has thus

far steered clear of criticising member states for breaching

EU freedom of movement. "We are not here, as the EC, to judge

on individual cases of Roma people," said EC spokesman

Matthew Newman. "It's for each government, each authority to

make those decisions."



The French government has insisted Roma social inclusion is

the responsibility of sending states, putting pressure on

main sender Romania to take measures to contain the Westward

migration flow.



But there have also been calls for a European approach to

Roma rights. The Swedish government has demanded a European

action plan for guaranteeing access to housing, education and

jobs and even the establishment of truth commissions to

investigate anti-Roma abuses.



Rights activists, however, argue that the main obstacle to

Roma social inclusion is the blatant lack of political will

in all European countries.



According to David Mark, EU legislation is solid on Roma

rights and European funding is available, but the

irresponsibility of national governments makes it hard for

these to materialise in progress for Roma.



"If even mainstream parties (such as France's governing Union

for a Popular Movement) start adopting far-right anti-Roma

discourses, where will we end up?" Mark says.



"Much of the problem is with the willingness of member states

to use the available resources," Kushen told IPS. "Member

states do not see the size of the problem. The EC should

compel member states to collect information on the Roma that

could serve as the basis for policies. It could impose

conditions on funding to make sure it is used for Roma or at

least does not violate their rights."



Even though he considers the recent measures of Western

governments dangerous, Kushen hopes the outrage they caused

leads to a positive momentum for a comprehensive EU inclusion

programme.



Mark is more pessimistic. "We, the Roma, will always be

persecuted," he says. "The first step made by Nazis towards

dehumanisation was to stereotype. They started by classifying

Roma as anti-social. Politicians today use stereotyping of

Roma for their political goals. There is a serious danger in

this." (END)


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Christoph Reuss
Sent: Tuesday, August 10, 2010 8:57 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Futurework] "America "on the unlit, unpaved road to nowhere."

> Of course I would need to have a well-recognized partner in the armed
> security business, such as Blackwater. There would be guarded walls, prime
> farmland, renewable energy systems, stockpiles of essentials, fallout
> caverns, as well as necessary amenities like tennis courts and pools.
> Presumably, beyond the walls would be squalor, misery and violence.

Sounds like Israel.  This also gives a hint of where such ideas come from.

Chris




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SpamWall: Mail to this addy is deleted unread unless it contains the keyword
"igve".


_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to