EU should co-ordinate its policies on Roma, argue MEPs
26.01.2005 - 17:40 CET | By Lucia Kubosova

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - The EU should unite its policies towards Roma
citizens, a new forum in the European Parliament proposed on Tuesday (25
January).

"We need to move beyond declarations and to create a coordinated framework
for actions that improve the economic status and social inclusion of the
Roma population", said Socialist MEP Katalin Levai, who opened the first
meeting of the forum held in the European Parliament.

Other participants pointed out that despite huge sums pouring into EU
projects for the Roma, the biggest ethnic minority in Europe remains
segregated in many countries.

"Several programmes to help the Roma people in the member states ended up,
say, in 'special schools' for the mentally disabled, attended mainly by the
Roma children � in many cases for behavioural or language problems, not
because of real mental disabilities", Viktoria Mohacsi, a liberal Hungarian
Roma MEP told the Euobserver.

She suggested that "instead of promoting their integration with children of
the majority population, these funds in fact reinforce the system as it
currently exists".

Statistics prove the case, according to Mrs Mohacsi: three-quarters of Roma
children in the Czech Republic, as well as 80 percent in some areas of
Germany attend "special schools", while a large number of Roma pupils do not
go to school at all.

Ms Mohacsi said that a better quality education for Roma would contribute to
the EU's Lisbon agenda, which aims to build a "knowledge-based economy" and
boost employment. In some Roma communities in Europe, unemployment stands at
90 percent.

A Roma Commissioner?
Several debaters at the Roma forum suggested that the EU needs a clearly
indicated authority, responsible for the Roma minorities.

"In fact, it is a 'minority' spreading across the European borders and its
size is higher than the population of several member states", said Austrian
MEP Hannes Swoboda, the Vice-Chairman of the European Socialists.

"So, as the smallest one of them has its own commissioner, we should also
consider appointing a special commissioner for the Roma people", he added.

However, Odile Quintin, Director General of Employment and Social Affairs in
the European Commission, argued that the problems of the Roma citizens would
be better tackled by a coordination of actors responsible for different
areas, rather than by a single person.

"We have reached an approval to use the European Social Fund for dealing
with the social exclusion of the Roma people, and we are currently working
on a coordinated strategy to fight the problem", Mrs Quintin told the
Euobserver.

The new platform was created to provide exchange of views among MEPs and
other actors involved and to monitor EU funds on Roma programmes.

There are approximately seven to nine million Roma in Europe today,
according to the World Bank Group.

(C) EuObserver.com

http://euobserver.com/?aid=18252&rk=1

Vali







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