Category Archives: Posts in English

Macedonian Police Target Roma with Excessive Force

The ERRC is deeply concerned about media reports which indicate that a special police unit, along with the regular police force, used excessive and arbitrary force when they entered a Roma neighbourhood to arrest a man who had committed a crime while on leave from prison. Around 50 police officers used force against Roma on 5 May, indiscriminately targeting individuals, including women, in the course of the operation.

Roma from the Topana neighbourhood told the ERRC that officers forcibly entered several Romani houses and local shops without providing any explanation; harassing and pushing people, often in the presence of children. Roma reported that police officers kicked and punched them with fists and police batons. Around ten Romani individuals were beaten up, including three women.

Official reports state that Roma resisted arrest, throwing stones at police forces. However eyewitness reports clearly indicate the police response was indiscriminate and out of all proportion. Media in Macedonia released a video showing the police actions. The Ministry of the Interior made a statement saying that anyone who believes their rights were violated should file a complaint. This response is clearly inadequate.

This police action is in contrary to fundamental rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Macedonian Constitution and international human rights treaties, including the right to physical and moral integrity, right to liberty and security, right to privacy, and ultimately the right not to be subject to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. Such conduct is also incompatible with national codes.

The ERRC calls on the relevant authorities to: conduct an independent, thorough and effective investigation into the legality of the police and action in line with the obligations enshrined in the European Convention of Human Rights; to ensure that the investigation fully explores any evidence of discriminatory action or bias motivation and to make public the scope, methods and findings of the investigation in this case.

For more information, contact:

Sinan Gökçen
Media and Communications Officer
European Roma Rights Centre
[email protected]
+36.30.500.1324

Source: ERRC
Date: 13.05.2013

Marika Schmiedt’s Exhibition at Construction Site in Linz, Austria – Posters Ripped Down, the Artist Threatened and Attacked at Opening by Outraged Hungarian Nationalist and her Austrian Husband.

Marika Schmiedt, one of the most politically engaged Roma activist artists in Austria (and Europe), has been censored, threatened, and attacked for her politically controversial artworks, which expose and critique various forms of racism, nationalism and fascism in Europe. By linking the history of the persecution and killings of Roma and Sinti to the current forms of systematic and violent discrimination and murder of Roma and Sinti in Europe and worldwide, Schmiedt’s work has hit a nerve in the neo-fascist atmosphere of European politics, enraging nationalists from various countries, as well as politicians, intellectuals, and activists who find her work too confrontational.

Source: Marika Schmiedt
Date: 18.04.2013

Fax campaign for solidarity against the censorship of Roma

Among the many reasons of concern about the political, economic and social crisis affecting the European Union’s civil society today, there is one that in our view has reached a critical level. We are very concerned about the re-establishment and re-legitimization of far-right parties in Eastern and Central Europe. We are also very concerned about the involvement of the far-right parties in present dynamics of society, about the participation of the far-right parties and fractions in the official decision-making processes of the political scene, along with the presence of the radical right-wing extremists within daily life under the protection of the authorities.

In the last years, there were many attacks and mobs against Roma people all over Europe; just to recall some of them, the mobs and pogroms against Roma in Bulgaria, the Czech Republic and Hungary from 2011 until today. Despite of the international critics and counter demonstrations, the far-right parties and fractions are still legal and their presence within public spaces is much stronger now than it was before. The legislation of the E.U. is not prepared to face this situation and unfortunately there is no interest from the side of political representatives to fight this volatile situation. Slowly but surely, the European Union turns into a ‘Europe of Nations’ in which minorities are neither respected nor protected.

There are declarations that officially dehumanize minorities: Zolt Bayer, a Hungarian official and a friend of Viktor Orban, declared at the beginning of this year: “Gypsies are animals”. The public opinion has a passive position that legitimates and empowers the far-right. Because of the lack of critics, the structure of the neo-nationalist parties and fractions has become stable and effective. Their strengthened mobs are now much more prepared and – with the support of media platforms that control and filter the information – less visible. Continue reading Fax campaign for solidarity against the censorship of Roma

Czech Republic: Anti-Romani march on Hitler’s birthday is a fiasco

Yesterday’s attempted march against Romani people in the Předlice quarter of Ústí nad Labem can be described as an enormous fiasco. The demonstration, convened by Josef Bareš on the 124th anniversary of Adolf Hitler’s birth, was attended by one person. However, it has cost the state and the taxpayers no small amount of money, as about 70 police officers were deployed to the radical event.

„Police measures are necessary, you never know if it might be a pretext for something else,” one of the police officers present told the Ústí regional daily. “It can always happen that suddenly one or two busloads of radicals show up.”

The organizer called the demonstration a “March against Inadaptables” (Pochod proti nepřizpůsobivým). The announcement to the local government lists the place of the demonstration as Předlice. According to a Facebook invitation featuring the logo of the Workers’ Social Justice Party (Dělnická strana sociální spravedlnosti – DSSS) and many crude expressions, the event was supposed to have started at 13:00 at the Západní train station and was supposed to have passed through Tovární and Hrbovická streets to Školní square and back before ending at 14:30. In reality the event ended after just 15 minutes and only Bareš was there.

In his announcement of the event to the local government, Bareš expected 100 – 120 participants to attend. However, only one person confirmed his attendance on Facebook prior to the event, and even he did not show up, leaving Bareš alone at the scene.

The Konexe civic association is criticizing the relevant town representatives for not informing the residents of Předlice about the planned march with sufficient advance notice. „The town of Ústí nad Labem has once against chosen a maximally paternalistic strategy. The town leader decided not to inform the Romani residents of Předlice, the targets of this hate march, that it would be happening – why scare Romani people unnecessarily in advance when they won’t understand it anyway? The result of this is that trust in the town leadership and majority-society institutions has fallen to an historic low in Předlice,” representatives of Konexe said.

„The Romani community did not find out about this march until Friday evening. Local residents did not have enough time to decide what to do should anti-Romani demonstrators show up in front of their buildings. At moments of time pressure and great stress, advocates of short-sighted solutions and hotheads often gain the upper hand,” Miroslav Brož of Konexe told news server Romea.cz. „If the relevant authorities had the information that very few people would be attending the march, they should have shared that information with the residents. The situation would not have been as stressful for them as it was with no information.”

Source: Romea.cz
Date: 21.04.2013

Slovakia: Romani man from Czech Republic and others beaten by 20 skinheads

The Slovak media are reporting that allegedly as many as 20 skinhead attackers brutally beat up a Romani man from the Czech Republic at a party in the Central Slovakian town of Banská Štiavnica. The man lost consciousness as a result of the brawl. Two Georgians and the man’s girlfriend, who is a local resident, were also targeted for attack. It is not yet clear whether the conflict was racially motivated.

The incident occurred on the evening of Saturday 6 April at a local discotheque. There was some discord between two girls and shortly thereafter the brawl was unleashed. The Georgians and the Romani man were working in the town, the Georgians as part of an EU-sponsored volunteer program. The assailants beat Romani victim Pavel H. to such a degree that he lost consciousness twice. They also broke his girlfriend’s nose. The injured girl is filing criminal charges and the Georgians are considering informing their embassy of the incident. Witnesses claim the attackers pushed their victims to the ground and kicked them wildly. None of the discotheque’s other customers or its staff came to the aid of the victims. Discotheque owner Zuzana Kaníková insists her security personnel did what they could, but believes they had no “powers” to intervene against the attackers out on the street.

The Georgian volunteers are not able to say with 100 % certainty whether the assault was racially motivated, but they do have the feeling that the brutality of the attack was caused by the fact that they are foreigners. Both of the Georgians are dark-skinned and spoke English at the start of the incident. „My friend from Georgia got punched inside and his colleague came to his defense. Then everything went down very fast. The conflict moved into the vestibule, then the bouncers sent us outside and the assailants went out after us. I was struck from behind and that’s the last thing I remember. Maybe the fact that I was unconscious is what spared me,” Pavel H. told news server Sme.sk. “The most I can tell you is that we really are not able to confirm that this was racially motivated. However, the fact that it was 30 against three is completely unacceptable,” victim Pavel H. told Czech Radio. Pavel H. had previously worked in Banská Štiavnica as a volunteer before being hired there as an auto mechanic. “I have never had this big of a problem anywhere before. I am planning to keep on living here and I’m a bit afraid for my safety now,” he admitted.

Source: Romea.cz
Date: 11.04.2013

Neo-Nazi Golden Dawn Thugs Clash with Roma in Kalamata Hospital Raid

Anti-foreign nurse swoop on Peloponnese hospital explodes in violence as Roma patient’s friends confront Nazis

Members of Greece’s neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party have clashed with a group of Roma in a raid on Kalamata Hospital in the southern Peloponnese. The extremists, led by MP Dimitris Koukoutsis, swooped on the hospital hunting for foreign nurses. Earlier this year, four women from Bulgaria were forced to leave the Panarkadiko hospital in Tripoli, Peloponnese, after dozens of Golden Dawn members evicted them.

This time, however, they were confronted by Roma who had taken to the hospital a 22-year-old victim of a racially motivated attack. Violence broke out between the two groups but was broken up by police.
Koukoutsis accused the Roma of „involvement in delinquency“ and said Golden Dawn would not regard them as equal citizens until they gave up crime. He said delinquency was „in their DNA“, according to ENET website. Hospital director Yirgos Bezos said that Golden Dawn’s raid on the hospital was „unacceptable.

The row came days after a leading member of a Roma settlement in Komotini, northern Greece, threatened Golden Dawn with a provocative video on YouTube. In the footage, two Roma men wield guns, axes and chainsaws and dare the neo-Nazi party to launch a raid on their camp. „You will have to send a lot of guys to my camp,“ says one man. Addressing Nikos Michaloliakos, chairman of Golden Dawn, the unnamed Roma leader brags about having many „crazy guys“ watching his back. „Michaloliakos, round up your mongrels,“ says the man.

Source + Video: International Business Time
Date: 10.04.2013

The New Roma Ghettos: Slovakia’s Ongoing Segregation Nightmare

Throughout history, sometimes events seem perfectly aligned to spark racial violence. On March 10 of last year, the residents of the small village of Krásnohorské Podhradie, in the mountains of eastern Slovakia, looked up to the hilltop at the center of town to see their beloved 14th-century Krásna Hôrka Castle being engulfed in flames. By the time firefighters made it up the hill, the roof was gone and three bells had melted down into the tower.

The next day, a police spokesman announced that the fire had been caused by two Roma boys, aged 11 and 12, who lived in a ghetto on the edge of the village. They had allegedly been trying to light a cigarette at the bottom of the hill when an unusually strong gust of wind carried a piece of smoldering ash up the mountain, where it ignited wood strewn on the castle grounds. Whether or not they were responsible, the accused and their families were terrified – perhaps because, in the last two years, according to data from the European Roma Rights Center, there have been dozens of violent attacks on Roma in Slovakia – the ethnic group better known as Gypsies. Fearing reprisal, the boys were quickly spirited out of town to stay with relatives, while Roma men prepared throughout the night to defend their community. Ultimately, the boys weren’t charged with any crime because they’re minors, but the damage was done: the image of Gypsy kids setting fire to a hallmark of Slovak national heritage seemed to only reinforce the prejudices many white ethnic Slovaks have toward their country’s poorest citizens. With the burning of Krásna Hôrka Castle, the far right in Slovakia had their equivalent of 1933’s Reichstag fire – the symbolic event needed to justify a crackdown.

In mid-March, I flew to Slovakia and drove out to Krásnohorské Podhradie for a rally to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the burning of Krásna Hôrka. Marian Kotleba, a former teacher and leader of the far right People’s Party-Our Slovakia – named in honour of the clerical-fascist regime that ruled the Czechoslovak Republic between World War I and II – had pegged his dim electoral prospects on Krásna Hôrka and his stand against “Gypsy criminality.”

On arrival, I entered a lot beside the municipal offices. A crowd of about 150 people – skinheads, tough-looking townspeople and about 12 of Marian’s green-clad officer corps – stood around listening to Marian’s speech. My translator suggested parking away from the crowd so that there would be less of a chance of anyone noticing the Hungarian plates on our rental car. “If there’s one thing the neo-Nazis like less than Roma, it’s Hungarians,” he said, only half joking, referring to Slovak resentment of their former imperial neighbour.

A short, mustached man in black fatigues, Marian Kotleba stood in front of his blue zebra-striped Hummer flanked by two skinheads waving the party’s massive green flags. “We don’t like the way this government deprives polite people in order to improve the position of parasites,” he said in a stern, steady voice. An enormous yellow crane loomed above the castle on the hilltop, making repairs on the castle’s roof. “This burned castle is a symbol of the way it will go if the government doesn’t do anything with this growing and increasing menace,” Marian continued. “If we don’t do anything about it, the situation will continue getting worse… If the state wasn’t creating surprisingly good conditions for these Gypsy extremists, what do you think would happen? They would all go to England. They can go anywhere; they have freedom to move. If they suffer so much in Slovakia, no one is keeping them here. No one will miss them. I don’t have to tell you that I wouldn’t miss them at all.” Continue reading The New Roma Ghettos: Slovakia’s Ongoing Segregation Nightmare

Slovakia: Punishment for shooter of three Romani victims called absurdly low

The sentence of nine years in prison and an order to undergo psychiatric treatment handed down by a court in Slovakia against municipal police officer Milan Juhász, who shot dead three people and injured two others in Hurbanovo last year, has prompted much reaction. The defendant originally faced the possibility of life in prison, but the judges chose a lighter sentence for him at the suggestion of the prosecutor and after experts testified that he had not been completely sane when he committed the shooting. The verdict has taken effect, as neither side has appealed.

„The Romani Union Party sharply protests the nine-year sentence for the shooter from Urbanovo [sic], Milan Juhász, who committed a triple murder and seriously injured two people. The party cannot agree with the court’s findings and there is no excuse for this behavior with respect to protecting public order and the residents of the town. The psychiatrist did not unequivocally testify that Milan Juhász was incapable of telling right from wrong when he committed this crime. As a member of the municipal police, he had previously undergone psychological testing and knew what legal procedures he could have used to settle any dispute he had with troubled residents. He did not deny that he committed premeditated murder, and his confession was evidence of the fact that he recalls his actions very well and therefore knew what he was doing. We disagree with this absurdly low sentence, as well as with the fact that he will be under protective supervision for three years only, and we consider this sentence disproportionate to the seriousness of this crime, which we believe was racially motivated. Experts have even claimed that they cannot rule out the notion that he might repeat this behavior, so this person decidedly does not belong at large until the end of his life,“ said František Tanko, chair of the Romani Union Party in Slovakia (Strana romské unie na Slovensku).

According to psychologist Róbert Máthý, a detention center would be an ideal place for Juhász. However, there is still no such facility in Slovakia.

„There is no doubt that this person needs psychiatric treatment. In my view, that is even more important than punishing him. Since that kind of treatment takes a long time and the patient must be tested to make sure it really has had an effect, a certain detention period would be appropriate,“ Máthý told news server Aktuálně.sk.

„Any attempt to compare the lengths of sentences for completely different criminal cases runs the risk of ending very badly, but there are moments when one cannot help oneself,“ commentator Roman Pataja wrote in the daily SME. „In October 2012 a court in Považská Bystřica sentenced a 19-year-old first-time offender to 12 years in prison for kicking a policewoman in the knee and attacking two other people while drunk (the sentence has not yet taken effect). If, purely theoretically, we believe that sentence was proportionate, what are we to make of the verdict in the trial of the police officer Milan Juhász?“

„The quasi-expert evaluation provided by the psychiatrist and psychologist did not sound reliable, because according to the law on the police corps, all police officers must pass capacity tests to perform their jobs. This inadequately low, stupid sentence is an encouragement to everyone who sets their heart on taking the law into their own hands and then being declared insane afterward with the help of psychiatrists and psychologists,“ said Václav Kappel, chair of the Romani Initiative of Slovakia (Romská iniciativa Slovenska.

Source: Romea.cz
Date: 28.03.2013

Teacher making anti-Roma statements had to resign in Hungary

On the proposal of Zoltán Balog, Minister of Human Resources in Hungary the institution maintenance center laid off the teacher from Konyár who, in a meeting held in Érpatak, Szabocs-Szatmár-Bereg county, Hungary, while expressing his extremist views, spoke in public in an excluding and pejorative way about his pupils of Roma origin.

The video of the teacher speaking up for corporal punishment and radical educational principles, urged generally by the extreme right, exclusively at the expense of Roma children, was made public on YouTube at the end of January 2013. As the result of the efficient co-operation of the school, the educational district, and the maintenance center, the teacher was laid off with immediate effect after a duly completed investigation procedure, two weeks after the video’s appearance, by the president of the Klebelsberg Institution Maintenance Center acting as employer.

With this provision, it has been made obvious that in Hungary the extremists cannot have a place in education.

While it is important to speak openly both in front of the public and the children about the conflicts occurring between Roma and non-Roma Hungarians, we cannot allow this talk to harm the dignity of anybody. Especially a teacher has to take special care of this.

The case of the young man teaching history and Roma ethnography is a good example of finding solution to problems considered to be unmanageable in previous years. The state has not just the right, but also the obligation to proceed against those who became unworthy to further practice their profession as pedagogues. It is indeed the right of the state, as the relation between the school, the educational district and the maintenance center is ensured by law. It is also the obligation of the state, for in Hungary no one can be discriminated on grounds of his or her origin, and especially a teacher cannot harm the dignity of his or her pupils.

Source: Roma Buzz Monitor
Date: 02.04.2013

French minister accused of racism following Roma comment

Ethnic Roma living in France are considering legal action against Interior Minister Manuel Valls who said in an interview that Romani migrants from Bulgaria and Romania didn’t want to be integrated into society.

In an interview with the French daily Le Figaro published on 15 March, Valls said that around 20,000 Roma migrants from Bulgaria and Romania living in some 400 camps had no interest in integrating into French society.

This, he said, was „for cultural reasons or because they are in the hands of begging or prostitution networks.“

Valls, a firebrand Socialist who has continued the much criticised repatriation policies of the previous conservative French government, has defended police raids to break up Roma camps near Paris, Lyon and Lille on health and safety grounds.

The activist group Roma Voice („Voix des Roms“) said Valls’s comments were „concentrated lies“ designed to smear the entire community.

„This interview is a very bad sign,“ the organisation said in a statement. „It signals a hardening of a policy that has been in place since 2003, when [former President] Nicolas Sarkozy became interior minister,“ it stated.

Considering a complaint under French law, Roma Voice said they would be reporting Valls‘ latest comments to the European Commission, which has questioned the legality of France’s policy of systematically dismantling illegal camps and repatriating Roma to Bulgaria and Romania.

The expulsions of Roma immigrants to their countries of origin “have never been a solution” to the problem, the NGO adds.

France and Romania signed a deal on the voluntary repatriation of Roma last September.

Source: EurActive
Date: 18.03.2013