http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/world/04-slovak-roma-outcry-qs-01


Wall dividing Slovak village sparks Roma outcry 

Wednesday, 02 Dec, 2009 
     
 
Recent picture of young Roma mother Lucia Kucharova, standing behind a window 
with her daughters Lucia, Patricia and Iveta as she chats with Alena Kalejova, 
holding her baby Daniela, outside a mud-hut in eastern Slovak village of 
Ostrovany, on November 11, 2009. - AFP 

OSTROVANY, Slovakia: Lucia Kucharova never cared much about the view from her 
window until its main feature became a wall separating her and more than 1,000 
other Roma from the rest of their village.

The white concrete wall, built recently in Ostrovany, a village of 1,800 in 
eastern Slovakia, has locals as well as Roma and human-rights organisations 
fuming.

'It's discrimination, the mayor should have used the money to build houses for 
us instead,' Kucharova, a 25-year-old Roma, told AFP.

The wall, which is 150 metres long and more than two metres high, cost 13,000 
euros to build and begins where the road ends in Ostrovany.

But Cyril Revak, the village mayor since 1991, is careful to avoid calling it a 
wall.

'The fence doesn't prevent the Roma from coming to the village,' he said.

'It just prevents them from entering private gardens and stealing. It wasn't 
just petty theft, especially in autumn.

'People don't grow vegetables in their gardens any more, there's no use - 
everything gets stolen.'

To get from the village to Kucharova's house on the other, rubbish-strewn side 
of the wall - and the destitute world of some of the 27-member European Union's 
most impoverished citizens - one has to splosh through mud along a slippery 
downhill path.

At the foot of the hill, Alena Kalejova sorts through the ubiquitous litter for 
butt-ends that she gratefully picks up from the muddy ground on a chilly, rainy 
day.

'The children have been stealing apples from the gardens but what can we do - 
they are just children,' admitted the 21-year-old Roma mother of one.

Apologetically, she adds: 'Cigarettes are too expensive, we can hardly live on 
unemployment benefit at 150 euros a month.'

Joblessness in this Roma community is almost 100 per cent with most living on 
unemployment benefits and so-called activation work - community service aimed 
at improving job skills.

'These days even the 'gadzos' have problems finding a job,' concedes Lucia 
Kucharova, using the Roma word for 'white people'.

Her own education ended after nine years of school.

The wall dividing Ostrovany - whose name can translate as 'island village'- has 
outraged human-rights and Roma associations.

'We have filed a suit with the prosecutor, we think the wall was built 
illegally and it discriminates against the Roma minority in Ostrovany,' 
Alexander Patkolo, chairman of the Roma Initiative of Slovakia (RIS), told AFP.

Ostrovany is by no means the only island of Roma poverty in the country, which 
joined the European Union in 2004.

There are more than 600 Roma settlements in Slovakia where people live without 
electricity, sewage or running water, most located far from the relatively 
affluent capital Bratislava.

Behind the wall, in a shack of wood and corrugated iron, Lucia Kucharova's 
partner Martin proudly tells how he himself built their home, tensing his 
muscles to display a woman tattooed on his shoulder as he speaks.

'We are lucky to have a fridge, a stove and running water here,' he said.

The young couple share a narrow bed with two daughters, while their youngest 
girl sleeps in her stroller.

Just a few kilometres from Ostrovany lies Slovakia's largest Roma settlement 
near the village of Jarovnice. Floods killed 58 people there in 1998.

A nation of 5.4 million, Slovakia is officially home to around 89,000 Roma, 
according to the 2001 national census.

But in reality, the Roma population is much higher.

'The actual number might be approximately 350,000 Roma,' says Arne Mann, an 
ethnologist at the Slovak Academy of Sciences. The EU's entire Roma population 
is estimated to be 11-12 million.

Mann blames communism for having pushed Roma further toward the margins of 
Slovak society.

'Before World War II, there was good cooperation between Roma and farmers.
Roma used to help during the harvest or with the laundry,' he said.

'But after the post-war collectivisation, their help wasn't needed any more and 
segregation began.'

In a 2008 survey, 82 per cent of Slovaks said they did not want to have a Roma 
neighbour.

'The segregation of the Roma can lead to similar problems as France had to cope 
with during nationwide riots in suburbs in late 2005,' ethnologist Mann warns.

Rioting in France, the country's worst urban violence since the 1968 student 
revolts, was concentrated in deprived out-of-town housing estates largely 
populated by people of Arabic or African origin.

'It's a natural defence mechanism of people pushed to the fringes of society,' 
Mann said.



Tags: Roma community,Slovakia 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke