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#8592 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Wed Oct 1, 2008 2:37 pm
Subject: A CALL FOR HELP
valery_novos...
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A CALL FOR HELP

 

To all humane people willing to help family Memetovski from Kumanovo

 

Their family house located in the Romani settlement Sredorek in Kumanovo burned down in fire on August 04, 2008.

Due to their bad economic position they cannot themselves cover the costs to adapt the burned down house for normal living.

 

We plead for help. We thank you in advance!

 

You can give your voluntary contributions for the family Memetovski on the following account on name of

Sebijana Memetovska

Giro account: 380-4-30141900273

Bank deponent: Prokredit Bank

 

 


#8593 From: Iulian Stoian <wider_europe@...>
Date: Wed Oct 1, 2008 4:50 pm
Subject: The Declaration of the Roma NGOs on the occasion of the EU Roma Summit
wider_europe
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Dear colleagues,

Please find below the list of signatures of the Declaration's supporters (chronological order), collected before and during the EU Roma Summit in Brussels, 16th September 2008 (
http://www.acrr.ro/index.php?page=stiri&id_stire=19 ).

The Declaration and its list of supporter organizations was submitted to the European Commission - the Presedent Barosso's office, Commissionaire Spidla and Commissionaire Barrot. Feel free to disseminate and use as an advocacy tool in your countries.

Kindest regards,

Iulian Stoian
Roma Civic Alliance of Romania




The Declaration of the Roma NGOs on the occasion of the EU Roma Summit
Brussels, 16th of September 2008



This statement was elaborated and agreed by a group of Roma non-governmental organizations  active in EU Member States, as well as in Western Balkans , having as purpose to bring together a common Roma voice on the EU policies and actions towards Roma minority at the EU Roma Summit held in September 16th, 2008 in Brussels


We, the organizations signatory of this statement,

Deeply concerned that the European Commission fails to fight against and firmly sanction the recent anti-Gypsyism actions and by the decision of the Commission to consider that “Italian authorities in early August showed that no EU principles of human rights protection or non-discrimination were violated”;

Considering that the European Commission has created a precedent in blatant violation of European Union human rights standards; which could be used by member states to justify intolerance and discriminatory practices;

Being aware that the existing European, regional and national policies to ensure equality and to promote inclusion of Roma population in Europe have failed and that there is a common, consistent understanding that Roma’s living and working conditions have not improved over the last two decades, as the Commission Staff Working Document noted ;

Having regard that the existing  policies do not pay attention to the diversity of Roma population  and do not reflect the European realities and diversities for minorities and other vulnerable populations such as third countries’ immigrants, disabled people and women belonging to minorities;

Noting that EU institutions, national governments, civil society conducted in the last two decades rather fragmented approaches which targeted merely few aspects of the complex issues confronting Roma or ad-hoc actions

Noting that other EU policy inconsistency in case of Roma, EU Enlargement Policy has implemented no systemic and sustainable measures targeting Roma Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in Serbia, refugees in the western Balkans and returnees from western European countries .

Worried by the increased elasticity of terminology used by both the European Union and member states in general when it comes to Roma which equates “social inclusion” with assimilation, “indicators” with wishful thinking, “assessment” with ambiguous  diplomatic language and “progress”  with paper work and empty rhetoric.

Taking into consideration the clear signals from both the European Parliament and Council of the European Union related to the need of a European Policy on Roma having as a result an highly increased responsibility of the Member States and EU acceding countries.



We ask  the European Commission:

1.    To adopt a Framework European Strategy on Roma at the level of EC and to submit a Commission communication to the Council and to the European Parliament, focused on implementation of the European Policy for Roma.
The Framework European Strategy on Roma should be developed in close complementarity with different community actions and Member State's activities as well as EU acceding countries in order to maximize the benefits from the results obtained; 
The development of such a paper should put at work the participatory principle: for Roma with Roma and must follow the principle of equal opportunities when addressing the needs of women and children;

2. To establish a long term dedicated and funded coordination structure on Roma issues at the level of the European Commission capable to ensure the needed improved coherence and efficacy of its policies and reduce the discrimination towards Roma in all areas. Such a structure should also ensure a permanent platform of dialogue with the Roma review and redesign of existing mechanisms targeting empowerment, grassroots development anti-Gypsyism and in general the social inclusion of Roma.


3. To develop an efficient monitoring mechanisms of the internal situation related to Roma in their countries of origin and ask the Member States and EU acceding countries to submit annual reports on the status of the implementation of the national policies towards Roma, with clear statistical data and reliable indicators, as well as an analysis of the data in order to determine the existing gaps, trends and ways forward;

4. To ensure that the European Statistical System will develop Community data relating to Roma people;

5. To support the development of a European academic network of Roma experts in order to provide scientific data and support through researches, analyses gathering evidences and recommendations; the Commission can build on an existing mechanism and experience offered by the Decade of Roma Inclusion, and to valorize the local Roma expertise of the ten country DecadeWatch teams  in the monitoring the progress under the Decade.

6. To support Roma NGOs both at European and national/local level in order to monitor the implementation of policies, programs related to Roma as well as community education for democracy and human rights;

7. Critical situation of Roma Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), refugees and returnees from Western Europe should be addressed by a Framework European Strategy on Roma, since these are the issues of interest to not only Serbia and the region, but the EU Member States as well.
 

List of supporter organizations:

European Roma Policy Coalition
David Mark, Coordinator

European Grassroots Roma Organisation
Valeriu Nicolae, General Secretary

Roma Civic Alliance of Romania (a network of 16 Roma NGOs in Romania), Bucharest, Romania
Iulian Stoian, Executive Director

Impreuna Development Community Agency, Bucharest, Romania
Gelu Duminica, Executive Director

Resource Center or Roma Communities, Cluj Napoca, Cluj county, Romania
Florin MOISA, Executive President

Asociatia pentru Dezvoltarea Economica a Romilor, Dej, Cluj county, Romania
Adrian Moldovan, Executive Director
 
Asotiatia Romilor Fratia – Campina , Prahova county, Romania
Mioara Pavelescu , director executive
 
Fundatia pentru Dezvoltarea Sociala a Romilor – Ramses, Dej , Cluj county, Romania
Irina Negru – vicepresedinte
 
Fundatia pentru asumare a identitatii etno culturale a Romilor – "Emirul Tziganilor"  Dudesti,   Braila county, Romania
Caton Musceleanu – director executiv

Asociatia Democratica a Romilor Liberi  (A.D.R.L), Localitatea Petrosanimm Hunedora
Toader Burtea, Excutive  Director
 
Organizatia Gaborilor cu Palarie din Romania, Satu Mare, Romania
Burcea Ambrus, President

Organizatia -Amare Prhala, Cluj -Napoca  Cluj   county, Romania
Doghi Pavel, President

Izvorul Tamaduirii Nascatoarei de Dumnezeu, Stefan cel Mare si Sfant. (ITSM)
com.Sascut, Bacau county, Romania
DURA FLORIN,   Executive Director

Asociația FORUM ART, Buzău, Romania
Director executiv - Călin Iosif

Organizatia Romilor Caramizari, Craiova DOLJ county, Romania
Balteanu Ion,  President

RWAR - Roma Women Association in Romania, Bucharest, Romania
Violeta Dumitru, Coordinator RWAR

Asociatia Femeilor Tiganci"Pentru Copiii Nostri", Timisoara, Romania
Mark Letitia, President

Asociatia Pro-educatia Rromilor Europeni in Cintextul Intgerarii Euro-atlantice si Mondiale, jud. Ilfov, Romania
Salomeea Romanescu, President

Phoenix Women Take Back the Night, Phoenix, Arizona, USA
Dianne Post, State Coordinator

La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia
Dr Shannon Woodcock, Lecturer, School of Historical and European Studies

Uniunea Social Democrata a Romilor din Romania, com. Floresti, Jud. Prahova, Romania
Ionel Marghiolescu, President
Centrul Regional De Educatie si Drepturile Omului   Rom Star, Bacau, judet Bacau
Balan Paustin, Presedinte

Association of Young Roma From Macedonia, Skopje, Macedonia
Hanriet Iseni, President

Asociatia Pro Vertical, Targu Jiu , Gorj county, Romania
Petru Zoltan, Vicepresedinte

Roma Education Fund/Roma Oktatasi Alap, Budapest, Hungary
Erzsebet Bader, Comminication and Administrative Assistant

Odessa Regional Roma Congress, Odessa, Ukraine
Niko Rergo, Chairman

Centrul National al Romilor, Chisinau, Republica Moldova
Nicolae RADITA, Chair,

Romano Sinti United Community Association of Queensland INC., Queensland, Australia
Yvonne Slee, Secretary

Observatorio sobre conflictos étnicos de Argentina (OSCE)
Dr. Juan Carlos Radovich, Cordinator

ROMAWOOD, Serbian/Kosovo
Sami Mustafa, Independent documentary filmmaker/Coordinator

NGO Pedagogical center of Montnegro, Podgorica
Biljana Maslovaric, coordinator

Foundation Open Society Institute, Podgorica , Montenegro
Sanja Elezovic, Director

Roma Virtual Network, Kiryat-Shemona, Israel
Valery Novoselsky, President

Vzajemne souziti (Life Together), Ostrava, Czech Republic
Sri Kumar Vishwanathan, Director

Antica Sartoria Rom, Roma, Italia
Marco Brazzoduro, President

Jewish Human Rights Coalition, London, United Kingdom
Elizabeth Harris, Co-ordinator

Federazione Roma e Sinti Insieme,Italy
Gabrielli Radones

L.R.S. Roma Emancipation, Netherlands
Gjulner Abdula

Opština ŠUTOORIZARI, Macedonia
Ljuan Selini

Opština ŠUTOORIZARI, Macedonia
Erdjan Iseni

Council of Roma Center BZH/Roma Information, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Sanela Bésic, Coordinator

Roma Union of BIH, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Sejdic Dervo, President

SOS Racismo, Portugal
João Antunes

Medecins du Monde Network, France
Nathalie Simonnot

Laboratorio Architettura Nomade – LAN, Italy
Alexander Valentino

Center Amalipe Bulgaria, Bulgaria
Dejan Kaleo, Chair

Center Amalipe Bulgaria,
Teodora Krumova

Integro Association ERGO, Bulgaria
Bagryan Maksimov

Amnesty International    London, UK
Ignacio Jovtis

ARCI, Italy
Sergio Giovano

Them Romano, Italy
Santino Spinelli

Fundation Secretariado Gitano, Spain
Juan Reyes

Fundation Secretariado Gitano, Spain
Belén Sanchez-Rubio

Fundation Secretariado Gitano, Spain
Carolina Fernandez

Unirs.Net, Italy
Cizmic Kadim

BEGV asbl, Belgium
Crutzen Marie Christine

EPGO/Integro, Bulgaria
Kadrin Hasanov

Bundesministerium für Arbeit und Soziales (Federal Ministry for Labor and Social Affairs), Germany
Overkämping  Sabine

FOYER BXL, Belgium
Bala Gabriela

Romani Regissor ande Belgia, Belgium
Cols Mande Aïda

FOYER BXL, Belgium
Koen Geurts

Center on Housing Rights and Eviktions – COHRE, Switzerland/ France/ Netherlands
Claude Cahn

Nantes Métropole, France
Dominuque Raimbourg

Nantes Métropole, France
Jéróme Richard

Rosa-Luxemburg Foundation Brussels, Belgium
Daiber Birgit, Head of Unit

Amaro Drome V Berlin, Germany
Hamze Bytyli

ARCI, Italy
Mariangela Deblasi, Project Manager

ZABAR 34, France
Robin ARIYU

Romano Them, Denmark
Murat Maliti

Uniunea Romilor Craiova, Romania
Velcu Vasile, President

Madhouse  Gmbh, Germany
Alexander Diepolt

Madhouse  Gmbh, Germany
Starke Michael

Madhouse  Gmbh, Germany
Mailer Detlef

Zvule Prava, Ćzech Republic
Barbora Stejskalova

Sinti und Roma Forum Nord-Rhein-Westfalen, Germany
Herfin Demir

National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, USA
Catherine Pajic, Deputy Director

Carmen e.v., Germany
Sami Dzemilovki




#8594 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Wed Oct 1, 2008 4:41 pm
Subject: Sign the NGO Declaration on the Impact of the FCNM
valery_novos...
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Dear Colleagues,

The Council of Europe's Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities (FCNM) is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year. On this occasion, a conference is organised aimed at assessing the impact of this premier legal instrument for the protection of minority rights in Europe. The conference Assessing the Impact of the Framework Convention: Past Experience, Present Achievements and Future Challenges will be held in Strasbourg from 9-10 October 2008.

An important component of this conference is the participation of NGOs who over the past decade have carried out work on the promotion and strengthening of the implementation of the Framework Convention.

Some 32 minority rights NGOs from the Council of Europe area have worked together and drafted a Declaration on the impact of the Framework Convention. The document will be presented at the Conference. The purpose of the Declaration is to provide a strong NGO perspective on the FCNMs impact to date, how implementation can be strengthened, ratification expanded and greater impact secured in the future. The Declaration contains specific recommendations for a variety of stakeholders involved with the Framework Convention such as the Advisory Committee, the Council of Ministers, CoE Member States, as well as civil society organizations.

Please find the NGO Declaration in the attachment.

In order to make this document as strong as possible, we hope that other minority rights NGOs, beyond the original group which prepared the text, will join this initiative. If you support the Declaration and would like your organisation to be among its signatories, please send an email by 7 October to FCNM.conference@...

Thank you in advance for your cooperation.

With best regards,

Galina Kostadinova
Human Rights Law Officer (Europe)
Minority Rights Group International
54 Commercial Street
London E1 6LT
United Kingdom
Tel. +44 (0)20 7422 4217
Fax. +44 (0)20 7422 4201
 

#8595 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Wed Oct 1, 2008 11:01 pm
Subject: Hindus urge European Union to formally apologize to its Roma population for centuries of abuse
valery_novos...
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Hindus urge European Union to "formally apologize" to its Roma population for centuries of abuse

Hindus want European Union (EU) to offer "formal apology" for centuries and generations of maltreatment of the Roma (Gypsy) people of Europe, who still live in apartheid like conditions.

Acclaimed Hindu and Indo-American statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada (USA) today, said that apology was the right thing to do in view of the continuous human rights violations and brazen structural discrimination suffered by them, which unfortunately was still continuing. Roma, who numbered around ten million and who mostly migrated from India many centuries back, continued to face social exclusion in Europe.

Zed, who is the president of Universal Society of Hinduism, also stressed reparations for the sufferings of Roma people in the form of affirmative action and community rehabilitation programs to bring them at par with rest of the population. European Union and member countries should show more responsibility and take care of their Roma population instead of cracking down on them.

Zed also urged His Holiness Pope Benedictus XVI Joseph A. Ratzinger, Patriarch of Orthodox Christian Church His All Holiness Archbishop Bartholomew, and The Archbishop of Canterbury Dr. Rowan D. Williams, all of whom were very influential in Europe, to immediately come up with a White Paper on the plight of Roma people of Europe.

Rajan Zed asked how Europe, which prided itself for its human rights record, was tolerating such widespread prejudice against a segment of its own society. Maltreatment of Roma was simply immoral and a dark stain on the face of Europe.

Zed further said that references to Roma people reportedly went as far back as ninth century AD. How many more centuries they had to reside in Europe to prove that they were "real and equal" Europeans like any other, Zed asked and added that in some European countries, many businesses still refused them entry.

Although the participants in the much-publicized first-ever high-level European Roma Summit organized by European Commission in Brussels (Belgium) in September agreed that Roma faced deeply embedded institutional discrimination and social exclusion, but it failed to deliver any concrete results to improve their plight. Describing this Summit as just a "sweet talk", Zed said that Summit failed to secure commitments for actions, which was one of its main aims.

Zed further said that on paper, Roma were fully covered by EU legislation, which prohibited discrimination on grounds of ethnic origin in employment, social protection and education as well as access to goods and services, including housing. But in reality, Roma reportedly regularly faced racism, substandard education, hostility, social exclusion, joblessness, rampant illness, inadequate housing, lower life expectancy, unrest, living on desperate margins, language barriers, stereotypes, mistrust, rights violations, discrimination, marginalization, appalling living conditions, prejudice, human rights abuse, racist slogans on Internet, unusually high unemployment rates, etc.

Rajan Zed stressed that a comprehensive, sustainable, cohesive and integrated Europe-wide policy with strategic focus was needed to target discrimination against Roma and their integration; providing them equal access to education, employment, public services, housing, and health care; empowerment through participation; increased transparency of authorities; improving their material and human rights situation, etc.

Zed said that all world religions, denominations and religious leaders should also come out in support of the cause of this distinct ethnic and cultural group of Roma, because religion taught us to help the helpless.


#8596 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Thu Oct 2, 2008 10:21 am
Subject: Call for Applications on Policy Writing and Advocacy Skills Development Programme - Deadline October 6, 2008
valery_novos...
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EXTENDED DEAD-LINE: MONDAY, OCTOBER 6th, 2008

Call for applications for:

Policy Writing & Advocacy Skills Develpoment Programme for Roma NGO leaders

The Roma Initiatives Office (RIO) and the Local Government and Public Service Reform Initiative (LGI) of the Open Society Institute (OSI) are pleased to announce a new initiative targeting the development of policy writing and advocacy skills of Roma NGOs, networks and experts in the countries of the decade of Roma Inclusion. Building on the success of a similar initiative which took place in 2007 for an international group of Roma activists directly involved the decade watch monitoring process, this initiative aims to strengthen local Roma NGO networks by providing training in advocacy and policy writing in local languages based on the LGIs highly successful Policy Communication Training Programme (http://lgi.osi.hu/documents.php?m_id=184).

The programme consists of 2 training events and the supported production of a policy brief to support the advocacy efforts of participants. It is designed to be run over a 2 month period (See the short programme description attached). The language of instruction is English.

Application procedure:

Applicants should be one or more of the following -

    • Employed in NGOs which represent and/or provide services to Roma populations in Hungary, Croatia, Bulgaria and the Czech Republic;
    • Employed in NGOs which represent or provides services to Romani women from all countries participating in the Decade of Roma Inclusion;
    • Alumni of the EC Internship programme of the Roma Participation Programme (OSI) from all countries participating in the Decade of Roma Inclusion. 

To be eligible for the programme all applicants should be -

    • Involved in the writing and/or commissioning of policy papers;
    • Directly involved in advocacy for their organizations;
    • Interested in the development of more evidence-based policy advocacy initiatives;
    • Proficient in English to a level where you are comfortable reading, writing and discussing complex policy issues and decision-making processes.

Priority will be given to female applicants in this programme.

Applicants should submit the following by email by Monday, October 6th, 2008:

    1. Your current CV
    2. A completed application form (see the attachments to the email)
    3. A letter to approve your application from your organization  

These 3 documents should be sent by email attachment to - imihalache@...

All documents provided must be in English.

The programme will take place in Budapest with the first policy writing workshop scheduled for October 25th-27th, 2008 and the second advocacy workshop for December 5th to 8th, 2008.

OSI will cover all travel and expenses for selected programme participants.

Background to the call

The programme is part of a broader initiative to build policy advocacy skills among Roma NGO leaders. In parallel with this international programme, the training will be delivered in local languages in 5 decade countries: Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania, Serbia, and Slovakia.

<<Call for applications for policy advocacy programme in English - Extended (3).doc>>

<<Policy Advocacy Programme Application Form - Sep 08.doc>>

<<Policy writing & advocacy for Roma NGO leaders - programme overview.doc>>


#8597 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Thu Oct 2, 2008 11:39 am
Subject: NATIONAL COUNCIL OF ROMANY NATIONAL MINORITY - REPORT
valery_novos...
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______________________________________________________________________________

 

Masarikova 5, 12.sprat/1202, 13.sprat/1309, Beograd 11000, tel/faks:+381 11 3061603, 3061548

 

 
REPORT

 

FROM THE FIRST CONFERENCE OF ROUNDED TABLE OF NATIONAL COUNCIL OF ROMANY NATIONAL MINORITY ABOUT CONSTUTION OF BOARD FOR POLITICAL PARTICIPATION OF NATIONAL COUNCIL OF ROMANY NATIONAL MINORITY IN SERBIA

 

 

Belgrade, 2th October, 2008.

 

First conference Initiative about constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia has been held on Saturday, 20.09.2008 at 14:00h, in rooms of National Council of Romany national minority in Belgrade. Conference was organized by National Council of Romany national minority. Prof. Vitomir Mihajlovic, president of National Council of Romany national minority, opened first conference Constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia.

 

ATTENDANTS ON THE MEETING: Vitomir Mihajlovic, president of National Council of Romany national minority, deputy in Serbian Parliament and member of Council for improvement of position of Roms and realization of Roma Decade in Serbia, Jovan Damjanovic, vice-president of World Roma Parliament, deputy in Serbian Parliament and president of Romany Federation-Republic of Serbia, Zoran Jovanovic, judge, Sava Aleksandrovic, economist, Ljubisa Todic, economist, Ana Sacipovic, economist, Julijana Arandjelovic, Dr physiotherapeutic, Alen Demiri, student of medicine, Dejan Marinkovic, engineer, Milan Jovanovic, chief of Romany chancery, Zoran Radosavljevic, member of National Council of Romany national minority, Vladica Amzic, director of Culture Centre in Leskovac, Peja Raimovic, traffic technician, and Bajram Haliti, PR of National Council of Romany national minority.

 

FLOW OF MEETING:

 

  • Initiative about constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority
  • Miscellaneous

GREETING AND INTRODUCING WORD:

 

PROF. VITOMIR MIHAJLOVIC, president of National Council of Romany national minority, deputy in Serbian Parliament and member of Council for improvement of position of Roms and realization of Roma Decade in Serbia: 

 

Respected participators of conference Constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia, it is my honor to most-heartily greet all

 

 

of you, venerable participators on behalf of organizer - National Council of Romany national minority, and in my personal name.

 

Constitution of Republic Council for national minority, in which rows participated both representatives of National Council of Romany national minority, gives us for right to create necessary institutional framework for constant and joint work of representatives of authorities and minorities on improvement of legally-political position of our national minority and on protection of our individuality, which will be called Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority.

 

According to clauses in Law, National Councils of national minorities are partners and consultative bodies of state authority, and their representatives are participating in decisions about questions from significance for individuality of national minorities.

 

National Council of Romany national minority has some substantive mandates in areas which are involved in Roma Decade: deracination of poorness, solution of residential, health-care and educational problemacy.  We are talking about mandates which are crucial for manifest and preserve of individuality of national minorities, and which can be consigned to them by law. Exposed solutions are making new approach in domestic and comparative legislation and should enable participation of minorities in public jobs which are significant for preserve of their individuality. 

 

It is necessary to harmonize stabile program of objectives, areas, methods, instruments, time guidelines and obligations of all partners, that policy of Roms animated through Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority could be successfully realized.

 

Mayor and Assembly, during their obligation on realization of global policy of equality, should harmonize and sign contracts with all sides which are included into problemacy of Roms on local level.

 

All measures which are determined by such deal have to be periodically supervised, for example after realization of some measures or entire project.

 

From this reason, equality policies and methods of its pursuing have to be exhaustively examined and defined.  

 

Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority, as a contract side, needs to have access to staff and governance of unit of local self-government, for consultations and analyze of questions.

 

System of informations for all associates has to be established, which will, at any time, allow deliberation of details of policy and insight into momentarily situation.

 

Reports about achievements and eventual set-backs have to be delivered to publicity ordinarily. During construe of framework into single points, following standards are important:

 

Foremost, main criteria for equal treatment from authorities have to be evolved. Basic rights which are concerning to minorities, established by international and national laws, could at that be from value.

 

In that case, positive legitimacy should be interpreted, for example points which are subscribed have to be protected by incorporation of them into policy of local self-government, and departments are incurred for their realization, and they have to apprehend them as a duty. Portion

 

of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority have to be

clearly specified, especially exchange of knowledge with local administration in area of methods and summary of policy of equality.

 

We wish to develop our society on dynamic potentials of our nation, aware that sometimes we have to confront with passivism. Yet, we build our policy on premises which we regard as correct, and not necessary on premises which at current moment have major support. Matter is always in fact that we build future on what is positive, and not on those which are easily available. 


Program objective of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority is inclusion of our country into European community in fastest real deadline. We wish from European structures and standards to become part of our society, and that our country becomes concurrent member of European community of states. Our obligation is to, on every location where we are acting, assert European values and to prepare country for truly European integration.

 

JOVAN DAMJANOVIC, vice-president of World Roma Parliament, deputy in Serbian Parliament and president of Romany Federation Republic f Serbia:

 

Respected attendants of conference Constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia, personally, I believe that initiative about constitution of Board for political participation is from great significance for our national community, and that question of socialization and participation of Roms in all kinds of public life is one of the most important question of our joint future in Serbia.

 

Political pluralism already deeply steeped into social reality of democratic world. This, till yesterday proscribed theme, now became almost usual part of every day of not so small number of democratic countries, and in some of them even institutional factor of system.

 

Wave of democratization which has overtaken Southeastern Europe didnt override Republic of Serbia. I would like to remind that Serbia is now in process of social, industrial and economic reform.

 

Roms, as well as other citizens of Serbia, with right expect that fruitage of these reforms should be richer and nicer life of every citizen of this country. Many national minorities already formed their political Boards and have developed their political activity premises for pluralistic grouping and organizing have been created.

 

Objectives and tasks of our Board for political participation will be: to establish basis of social security of people, especially of unemployed, to pawn that children, helpless and handicapped persons must become subject of social protection in first row. That would be basically what we will insist on, besides, of course, array of other objective, starting from freedom of press, then ordination on legal basis of equality, and when we are talking about Roms, pawn for full national equality, i.e. to fully allow education and development of our culture on mother tongue, and that every attempt to interfere and disable this right something which should be treated as an active attempt of realization of genocide on cultural level.

 

We will pawn to have right to establish our own institutions, our cultural institutions, right to secure for us learn of Romany language in schools, to develop our culture in much greater measure. That would be shortly when it is about our program, principles and objectives of constitution of Board for political participation.

 

Expert education has been identified as area in which standards of equality should be applied. Maybe, standards which will provide to Roms equal personal treatment from side of local authorities should be foremost developed. That would be first step towards implementation of standard of equality and test of good will, if they really want to realize this in practice.

 

It is very important to apply policy of equality in areas of ambience organization and local urbanity plans, whereby culture and tradition of Roms will be respected.

 

So, improvement of standard is a precondition for achievement of sustainable equality of Romany community, equality with majority nation with who they live, which will finally bring us do evenness.

 

Institutions and services of our state should be in condition to satisfy all substantial interests of all our citizens, for which is required their radical reorganization. Serbia is a country with its clear identity and institutions, which should be reformed and improved, that they could be empowered for chances and challenges of 21st century. Future is opened, and for every option we have to be maximally prepared, that we could be in position to maximally realize our interest. That implies efficient institutions, successful industry, international credibility, stabile political scene. Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority will continue to work on realization of those conditions for successful citizens state.

 

ZORAN JOVANOVIC, judge

 

Respected attendants of conference Constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia, I will be speaking about improvement of standard of policy of equality which can be realized in entire area of life conditions of Roms. Most-important conditions are obvious. There are few Roms on faculties, few Roms in high schools. Problem of health-care and primary health protection is obvious.

 

Most-recent inquiries on the field are also indicating on inadequate representation of members of minorities in state bodies, municipalities, courts, prosecutors offices and other public services, which is hitch with regulations of ratified Framework Convention. Hope remains that finalized, and for our country such needed, modern law about protection of rights and freedoms of national minorities, will remove at least part of existing problems, regarding position, rights and protection of national minorities.

 

Our obligation is to uplift all institutions which are protecting safety and rights of citizens, from institutions of legal state, till adjustment of working rights, social security and pension insurance. We want Serbia as an country of protected citizens protected equally from criminal and misusage of authorities, as well from financial speculations, interests groups, monopolies and unnecessary social and economic risks.  

 

 

SAVA ALEKSANDROVIC, economist

 

Respected attendants of conference Constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia, at my opinion, basic characteristic of socio-economical position of Roms in Serbia is low level of economical activity and high unemployment. Low level of economical activity of Roms is repercussion of social-economical backwardness, prejudges from side of employers in view of employment of Roms and

 

 

demographical factors (Romany population is extremely young, in which working-active

population, older than 15 years makes 58,3%). Level of unemployment of Romany population in 1991 were 38,3%. Besides un-differenced social-professional structure of working power and low level of education, increased concurrence on job-market for unqualified occupations, demands of scientific-technological development on which Roms cant adequately react, are implicating on high level of unemployment amongst Roms.

 

Factors which are determining economical position of Roms are including inordinacy of income related to kind of jobs with most of Roms are occupied with, increase of level of unemployment as consequence of economical transition and small requirement of job-market for low-qualified workers. Because of that, they arent in possibility to enjoy rights which plans of social insurance are providing, which further complicate life of already jeopardized families.

 

Measures of social policy should be realized jointly with measures which are aimed to give new economical authorizations, improvement of level of education, residential and health-care life conditions of Roms. These measures can be at the same time regarded as part of wider strategy for decrease of poorness, which is taking care about social consequences of economical transition for jeopardized groups.

 

LJUBIA TODIC, economist

 

Respected attendants of conference Constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia, at my opinion, Board for political participation should see in initiative of individuals main engine of successful economy. Objective of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority is to set clear rules of economical life, adjusted for national interests and international economical relationships. Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia should encourage and support economical activities of individuals, deflect constraints for their initiative and facilitate their participation in international concurrence.

 

We are permanently pawning for all kinds of support for small and medium enterprises, family business and local economy. Experience of successful countries is showing that this segment of economy is employing the biggest number of people, that it is most-vital - because it is based on willingness and team spirit, that from it is arriving new initiatives and innovations. 

 

Our permanent objective of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia will be: more workspaces, better working places and life standards, which are providing for every family and individual free choice of way of life.

 

For realization of this objective, entire social system has to be reordered, aimed towards quality and results, responsibility of individual, on constant learning and improvement, on qualifying for new requirements of market, on active attitude towards all changes in the world.


ANA SACIPOVIC, economist

 

Respected attendants of conference Constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia, I will be speaking about possibilities of Romany NGOs for active inclusion into process of creation of donator strategies, through education and improvement of communication with donator organizations they are crucial for further progress of third sector in Serbia, with which Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority should rather deal with.

 

Intensive communication between Romany NGOs and donor organizations is basis of their partnership and extension of efficient response on requirements of society. If we return to function of donator as an investor, with his objectives and missions like, for example, protection of human rights, protection of members of national minorities, development of local community, or ecology and protection of life environment, than NGOs are really organizations which do have knowledge and organizational infrastructure to recognize and solve some problems, and to satisfy requirements on the road till realization of those objectives. If NGOs want to gather investments for solution of some problems, they are obligated to meet donators with problemacy which is subject of their work. In counterpart, donators are forced to define priority problems independently. For active communication between donators and NGOs, project proposals arent adequate, yet ordinary informing about needs and problems, their progress and price of its dissolving.

 

I hope that in Roma Decade, start of initiative for constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority is very important, because with its policy, forever will be impeded one number of Roms who have been, till now, aggrandizing and foremost used resources which should belong to Romany nation personally for themselves and their own interests, and neglected development and interest spheres of Romany national minority.

 

JULIJANA ARANDJELOVIĆ, Dr physiotherapeutic

 

Respected attendants of conference Constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia, I will give my proposal of thinking with which Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority should intermit by its policy in solution of health-care problem of Roms in Serbia.

 

Roms arent in opportunity to buy medicines and pay participation, which are required by program of health insurance. Statistic is implying on fact that probationers maybe havent been adequately informed about system of functioning of health-care protection, and therefore, lack of access to sanitarian services.

 

Romany children are especially risk group in sanitarian sense, which is mirrored in high level of mortality of babies. Health of women is one more problematic subject, regarding social-economical factors (poorness, inadequate nutrition, lack of access to sanitarian services) and cultural models (relatively early and numerous childbirths).

 

Problems with access to sanitarian services are also important. That is partly consequence of cash payment which is required from recipient; although payments are relatively small, they are often too high for many Roms. Limited access to sanitarian in some countries derives from lack of required personal documents and Epitomes from Mother Book of born persons, which are required for inclusion into system of health insurance.

 

Truly, I expect from this initiative for constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority that it will contribute for ascendance of health-care policy of Roms towards state institutions, and on the best way hold up misunderstanding of sanitarian problem of Roms in Serbia.

 

 

 

 

ALEN DEMIRI, student

 

Respected attendants of conference Constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority in Serbia, regarding myself, I fully support constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority, and I suggest that within National Council of Romany national minority should be formed Youth Romany organization, whose objectives would be:

 

  • Creation of perspectives and possibilities for progress and success in life of youth
  • Afirmation and promotion of young people for active role and getting participation in political, cultural, academic and public life;
  • Development of useful knowledges and skill which arent offered by society and education;
  • Development of tolerance and global, cosmopolite view onto the world;
  • Organization of better, more quality and more purposely life;
  • Promotion of quality living through dealing with sport, art and science;
  • Protection and improvement of life environment.

 

CONCLUSIONS:

 

1        That Jovan Damjanovic should be president of Initiative Board till constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority,

2        That attendants on conference should become members of Initiative board of National Council of Romany national minority,

3        That 3 conferences should be held till constitution of Board for political participation of National Council of Romany national minority, in Novi Sad, Prokuplje and Beograd,

4        That greater participation of Roms in political structures is required, whether through participation of Roms in existing political parties which arent Romany, or through constitution of new parties with Romany leadership,

5        Representatives of Roms would have velvet when they would participate on seminars which will train them how political lobbing and intercession should be done, so that their problems could be represented upfront existing political parties on coherent and evenly modality,

6        That bodies of authority and international community must do some strain to help to increase capabilities of Romany NGOs to actively participate in political and social happenings, especially in those which are proximately related to their community.

 

Those strains have to include following:

 

1        Bodies of authorities and international community should give greater financial support to National Council of Romany national minority and Romany NGOs.

2        Seminars for Romany associations should be held, on which could be learned how to write projects and make evaluation of budgets, so that proposed projects could be

3        efficiently represented when will be some asking for resources for their financing.

4        National Council of Romany national minority, mother organization of all Romany NGOs in Serbia, should play lot more active role in coordination of work of local Romany associations.

5        One seminar for Romany representatives and officers of different institutions for human rights (including Ombudsman on state level) should be held, that sense and informativity of Romany representatives about role and mandate of these institutions to solve matters related to discrimination and harassment could be increased.

6        Institutions of Ombudsman in Serbia should ask for advice from Romany officers who are now working in bureaus of Ombudsman in other countries.

 

 

Bajram Haliti

PR of National Council

of Romany national minority

 


#8598 From: "ERIO News" <news@...>
Date: Thu Oct 2, 2008 4:50 pm
Subject: European Roma Information Office - E-news - 2 October 2008
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European Roma Information Office
 
EUROPEAN ROMA INFORMATION OFFICE
 
E-NEWS 02/10/2008
 
 
Dear readers!
 
These are the titles of the articles that you will find on our latest e-news:
 

- ERIO at the equality summit in Paris

- ERIO at the Steering Committee of the Platform for Intercultural Dialogue

- ERIO in North-Eastern Italy

- Strasbourg Court: Travellers children face bias in Romania and Ireland

- European Commission: New EU web portal on social affairs

- OSCE: 'Bleak picture' of Roma discrimination, hate crimes in report

- Italy : MEPs visit to the Roma camps: questions yet to be answered

- Italy: Gentilini from the Northern League inquired for racism

- Italy: Thousands of people lead invisible life

- UK: Council seeks destruction of Dale Farm Youth Centre

- UK: the Homes and Communities Agency will take on responsibility for the Gypsy site grant

- Czech Republic: Roma plan gets mixed reviews

- Czech Republic: Romani ghetto may emerge in mountain village

- Romania: Over 300 projects for the Roma

- Serbia: Romanian minority will not accept Roma as neighbours

- Bulgaria: Annual Report on Youth for 2007

- Bulgaria: country below average European index for unemployment in youths, says State Agency

- Roma musician Spinelli presents his Cds in Rome, 3 October

 

 
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The ERIO cooperates with a network of a large number of organizations and acts to combat racial discrimination and social exclusion through awareness raising, lobbying and policy development.
 
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#8599 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Thu Oct 2, 2008 8:44 pm
Subject: Final Document of the 6th World Congress for the Pastoral Care of Gypsies
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http://www.zenit.org/article-23779?l=english

ZE08100201 - 2008-10-02

Permalink: http://www.zenit.org/article-23779?l=english

Final Document of Congress on Gypsies

"A Social Group That Has Fewer Opportunities"


VATICAN CITY, OCT. 2, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Here is the final document of the 6th World Congress for the Pastoral Care of Gypsies, which was held Sept. 1-4 in Freising, Germany. The text was released today by the Pontifical Council for Migrants and Travelers.

* * *

I. THE EVENT

From 1 to 4 September 2008, at the Bildungszentrum Kardinal-Dpfner-Haus in Freising, Germany, the Sixth World Congress for the Pastoral Care of Gypsies took place. This event was organised by the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People in collaboration with the German Bishops Conference. The 150 delegates (including archbishops, bishops, priests, deacons, religious, lay pastoral workers and Gypsy representatives), from 26 European countries, as well as from Latin America and Asia, explored the theme Young Gypsies in the Church and Society.

With this the Congress wished to highlight the role that the young generation of Gypsies may play in the human and Christian promotion of its people. During the four days of study the participants considered the spiritual and material needs of young Gypsies, partly with a view to condemning the unfavourable situations that actually burden them and also to foster genuine integration and their increased participation in the projects, decisions and activities that concern them. Moreover, an attempt was made to identify more adequate means for supporting their human, professional and religious formation.

The opening of the Congress, on Monday 1 September, was preceded by a press conference at which the theme of the meeting was presented by Archbishop Agostino Marchetto, Secretary of the Pontifical Council, and Bishop Norbert Trelle, the Episcopal Promoter of the Pastoral Care of Gypsies in Germany.

The opening session, during which the ecclesiastical and civil authorities presented their warm and hospitable greetings, was chaired by Msgr Norbert Trelle. Archbishop Marchetto had previously read the telegram sent by the Holy Father for the occasion, in which the Pontiff hoped that the meeting would give rise to renewed commitment and support for the integration of young Gypsies within the Church and society. A speech was then given by H.E. Msgr Jean-Claude Prisset, the Apostolic Nuncio to Germany, who reminded the participants that the work they were getting ready to carry out should be based on recognition of the dignity of mankind. He then recalled the pre-eminent place that Christ has in the lives of all believers and the pastoral care of the Church.

The welcoming speech to the participants from Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, President of the German Bishops Conference, who was unable to attend, was read by Bishop Norbert Trelle. Greetings from Dr Wolfgang Schuble, MdB, Minister of the Interior of the Federal Republic of Germany, were read out by his representative. Then, Mr Bernd Sibler, Secretary of State of the Ministry of Education and Worship in Bavaria, greeted the participants. Finally, Mr Dieter Thalhammer, the Mayor of Freising, hoped that the special nature of the place chosen to hold the Congress might contribute to the success of its proceedings.

Then Msgr Marchetto read the welcoming speech to the participants from His Eminence Renato Raffaele Cardinal Martino, President of the Vatican Dicastery that is responsible for the pastoral care of Gypsies. After expressing his sincere gratitude to the authorities and participants for attending in large numbers, the Cardinal addressed a message of encouragement to the young people, reminding them that they are an asset for the Church and society. At the same time, he pointed out that due to their precarious living conditions and scarce educational and employment opportunities, they feel uprooted and unfairly treated, losing confidence in themselves and the family, as well as in political, legal, educational, social and ecclesial institutions. Therefore, continued the Cardinal, the Church calls on all men and women, and especially Christians, to assume their responsibilities, in the service of society or in political commitment, in order to guarantee the full respect of the dignity and rights of every human being, with love, peace, justice and solidarity. Regarding Governments -- emphasised the Cardinal -- they are called on to provide support to educational bodies and Gypsy groups, to the various clans, schools and associations, where in accordance with rules and regulations of civil coexistence, balanced and responsible personalities may develop, and which give rise to people who are fit to participate fully in community life. Finally, Cardinal Martino recalled that during previous Congresses the need for a centralized service of the Church had been highlighted. Such a service would promote cooperation and dialogue with national and international organisations and with the various Christian denominations, in order to eliminate any form of discrimination and violence against Gypsies.

Once the letter of greeting from Cardinal Martino, who was unable to attend the Congress, had been read out, Archbishop Agostino Marchetto gave his opening speech on Young Gypsies, a Resource for Civil and Ecclesial Community. Before going into the core of the argument, the Archbishop briefly explained his use of the term Gypsies which, in a world context, is more appropriate than the terms Roma and Sinti that are widely used in parts of Europe to indicate these populations. After a brief introduction on the Churchs teaching regarding young people, the Archbishop presented the five key points of his speech: formative background; modern-day challenges for Gypsy youth; factors/norms for effective inclusion within society; the initiatives of organisations and institutions in favour of Gypsies; and relations between the Church and young Gypsies. Msgr Marchetto particularly emphasised the difficulties that young Gypsies have to deal with in the fields of education and employment, often due to a lack of anti-discrimination laws and regulations. He then condemned discrimination regarding issues of housing and access to healthcare, which unfortunately Gypsies are often still subjected to. Amongst the challenges that the younger generation must face, the Archbishop also mentioned the lack of objectivity of the mass media, to whom he made an appeal to offer an awareness-raising service to combat prejudices and negative stereotypes rooted in society. Regarding the relations between the Church and young Gypsies, Msgr Marchetto mentioned a series of initiatives already underway, and also put forward proposals to encourage greater integration of young people in the life of the Church and society. In conclusion, he reminded the participants of their duty to undertake the pastoral care of the new generation of Gypsy Christians.


At the end of the opening session, the 14 Archbishops and Bishops, the more than 70 priests and the many participants at the Congress, took part in a procession to the Cathedral of Freising, where a solemn Eucharistic Concelebration was held, led by H.E. Msgr Reinhardt Marx, Archbishop of Munich-Freising.

The first day concluded with a friendship evening, a real opportunity for cultural and social sharing, in an amicable and very warm atmosphere.

On Tuesday 2 and Wednesday 3 September the sessions were divided into two main parts. In the mornings speeches were given, and then discussed by the whole assembly, whilst in the afternoons two round tables were held, one for National Directors and the other for young Gypsies, coordinated, respectively, by two experts in youth issues: H.E. Msgr Josef Clemens, Secretary of the Pontifical Council for the Laity, and H.E. Msgr Domenico Sigalini, the Assistant General Chaplain of Italian Catholic Action.

During the morning of 2 September the religious and socio-political situations of young Gypsies were illustrated. Rev. Denis Membrey, the former National Director of the Pastoral Care of Gypsies in France, in dealing with The Religious Situation of Gypsy Youth and Related Challenges for the Church, highlighted how multi-facetted the situation of Gypsy youth is. Young people ask pastoral workers many questions about faith, religion and the Church, and their desire and thirst for faith -- Fr Membrey emphasised -- is striking. Therefore, the pastoral response requires knowledge of the Gypsy environment as a whole, including its history and the various characteristics of its culture and mentality. The speaker asked the participants to reflect on the need and the means for building a Church communion together.

Dr Eva Rizzin, a young Sinti and member of the Roma and Sinti Together Federation and the Research centre for action against discrimination towards Roma and Sinti -- OsservAzione, referred to the The Socio-political Situation of Gypsy Youth, with Particular Reference to Europe, and Prospects for the Future. The speaker began by condemning acts of violence, instigation of racial hatred and other forms of abuse against Roma and Sinti. However, acting as a spokesperson for the majority of young Gypsies, she strongly maintained that awareness, educational training and a will to participate in politics are now part of their experience. Nevertheless, according to Dr Rizzin, training for Roma and Sinti activists and mediators is required. The speaker also pointed out the vital importance of education for young people and schooling as a tool for improving their self-representation and increasing their emancipation. She also drew attention to the recognition of the minority status of Gypsy people, whilst, with reference to strategies in favour of these populations, she pointed out that they should be integrated, participatory and cultural.

In the afternoon a round table of National Directors took place, coordinated by H.E. Msgr Josef Clemens. Six National Directors, representing three continents, discussed the theme Evangelisation and Human Promotion of Young Gypsies in front of the Challenges of Religious, Cultural and Ethical Pluralism. Rev. Wallace do Carmo Zanon illustrated the situation in Brazil for Latin America, whilst Dr Jaya Peter presented the situation in India, in the context of Asia. The other four National Directors, Sr Karolina Miljak (Croatia), Fr Jozef Lančarič, SDB (Germany), Rev. Federico Schiavon, SDB (Italy) and Fr Francisco Sales Diniz, OFM (Portugal), referred to problems and prospects regarding the theme in the context of Europe, from the viewpoint of their respective countries.

In the evening the participants were received by the Deputy Mayor of Freising at the historic Asamtheater. In the beautiful setting of the Asam-Saal, Dr Rudolf Schwaiger briefly introduced the participants to the history of the town, which is known as the heart of old Bavaria, as well as to its cultural, social and spiritual treasures.

On the morning of 3 September Mr Nicolae Gheorghe, formerly OSCE-ODIHR consultant on Roma and Sinti issues, and Sr M Beln Carreras Maya, a Spanish missionary, spoke about Opportunities for Gypsies to Associate in Structures with Educational, Professional and Political Aims: Collaboration between Church and Civil Institutions. Mr Gheorghe illustrated these opportunities from a political point of view, whilst Sr Carreras Maya highlighted the value of education and the need for professional qualifications as indispensable conditions for achieving a dignified quality of life. Sr Carreras Maya then pointed to the Church as an expert in humanity and tireless defender of the dignity of the human person, which is therefore capable of having open and constructive dialogue with Gypsies, of necessity conducted using the same language.

The afternoon was dedicated to young Gypsies, with a round table facilitated by H.E. Msgr Domenico Sigalini. The theme, Young Gypsies as Protagonists: Motivations and Aims, Expectations and Needs, was discussed by Ange Garcy (France), Remo Allguer (Germany), Gyz Balogh (Hungary), Savic Branislav (Italy) and Mădălina Burtea (Romania). Their accounts, which are particularly moving as they reveal painful past moments and experiences, present certainties and future hopes, generated many questions and expectations regarding the Church and society. Amongst others, emerged the dream of a world without barriers between people, and without discrimination between races, and the desire to be able to go into church through the main door, to have the same educational and employment opportunities as gağ and to be no longer considered as different. Moreover, the hopes of young people rest on being able to obtain adequate training, on a change in the perception of Gypsies by the majority community and on the desire of young Gypsies to be able to overcome mistrust and fear in their relations with gağ. Regarding the Church, the youngsters have opted for a greater religious awareness which, at the co-operative level, enables the safeguarding of their rights and active participation in ecclesial life.

The work carried out at the Congress was supported by prayer, especially the early morning Holy Mass concelebrated every day in the Bildungszentrum chapel. The principal celebrant on 2 September was Archbishop Agostino Marchetto, whilst on the following day the Eucharistic Concelebration was led by H.E. Msgr Jos Edson Santana Oliveira, the Episcopal Promoter of Brazil. On 4 September the Holy Mass was led by H.E. Mons. Leo Cornelio, Archbishop of Bhopal and President of the Pastoral Care of Nomads in India (PACNI). Each Bishop also gave a homily.

The Congress offered the participants a wide range of opportunities to discuss the various aspects of the problems of young Gypsies, including study groups, debates and discussions, the results of which were gathered together in a series of conclusions and recommendations. On Thursday 4 September, the final day of the Congress, the following conclusions and recommendations were read out and unanimously approved.

II. CONCLUSIONS

An obvious fact: the future lies with young people. Whether Gypsy or gağ, they should be considered in their dignity and given an opportunity to be a resource for the Church and society. Young Gypsies, although undergoing great change, bear values that we should discover to enrich ourselves.

THE CHURCH

1. When speaking about young Gypsies, we easily resort to generalisations that are in fact improper. On the one hand, our image of them often depends on our own representations; young people are seldom considered in themselves, in their originality and fullness. On the other hand, their situations are very different: some are nomadic and others are settled, the degrees of marginalisation are different and sociological and cultural groups vary greatly, as do family situations (some young people are already married and are fathers and mothers).
Young people are confronted with a dual conflict:

-- generational conflict, which are resolved in accordance with customs (for example, shortening of the period of adolescence in the case of early marriage);

-- cultural conflict, exacerbated by modernity.

Like young gağ they are subject to the demands of a society in the face of which they are vulnerable and ill prepared.

2. This perspective gives rise to two golden rules, suggested by young people themselves:

-- know how to listen: take time to understand them in order to know them better;

-- act for them, but above all with them.

3. As for young "gağ", God has a plan for all young Gypsies which must be discovered and responded to, despite their unstable situations and possible marginalisation.

Young people represent the hope of the Church, and the hope of the world. They are prophets of hope, and artisans of renewal. For the Church, Acting for them, but above all with them means encouraging them to develop the implementation of pilot programmes, initiatives and projects aimed at strengthening their participation in evangelisation and the human promotion of their brothers and sisters.

4. Whatever opinion one might have about it, secularisation is a reality in many countries today. The current transnational mobility of Gypsies leads to completely new encounters between young people with different religions and cultures; family behaviour is changing. These circumstances pose young people new questions and challenges that their parents never knew. God was an obvious fact for them, which is no longer always the case for young people. Hence the pressing need for a new accompaniment, and a pastoral care that is more directly in touch with situations, current affairs and diversity.

5. A specific pastoral care that should be considered as normal and not sporadic in the Church presupposes the training of pastoral agents, both Gypsy and "gağ". They should exploit the possibilities already provided for by the adaptation of the Liturgy to Gypsy culture: something that is alive should not be standardised! Moreover, the Church is reflecting on how to make pastoral structures evolve to have them more intimate and personal.

6. Parish communities should also be deeply concerned about the local situations of Gypsies. They should have the prophetic evangelical boldness to offer young Gypsies a warm welcome as sons and daughters of God. These encounters should eliminate obstacles, prejudices and racist attitudes and allow young Gypsies and "gağ" to recognise that they are brothers and sisters, to become builders of peace and reconciliation together in a meeting of cultures and thus ward off the unsuitable behaviours that generate violence.

SOCIETY

7. The Gypsy issue is increasingly institutionalised, especially at the level of European authorities. This institutionalisation also affects educational and employment issues, and equally concerns young people. Therefore, it has the advantage of leading to greater awareness and responsibility amongst governments and encourages the development of overall projects. But it runs the risk of becoming merely administrative and neglecting the warmth of human relations, generating decisions that are unsuited to concrete situations and tending towards assimilation of Gypsies without taking their specificity into account.

8. A process of inclusion within society should be set in motion so that young people may play a role in decision making and responsibility, achieve a good level of education and take part in social and political activities, with joint responsibility and active solidarity.

9. Without a changeover period, young Gypsies go from family tradition into a world dominated by technology. They too are not protected from certain by-products of society, such as drugs and alcohol.

10. Today young Gypsies are also the victims of prejudices and social stereotypes. They belong to a social group that has fewer opportunities and must face problems of discrimination and inequality regarding the educational system, employment, housing and healthcare. According to recent studies conducted in Europe, they belong to the group that is least desirable as neighbours. They are subjected to segregation, especially territorial.

Discrimination, xenophobia and even racism sometimes lead to acts of violence that particularly affect the most vulnerable, children, young people and women, and have repercussions on social structures.

III. RECOMMENDATIONS

1. The situation of young Gypsies differs according to the countries where they live. Therefore, a degree of flexibility is needed in approaching the means for encouraging a process of genuine integration. Certain principles should be taken into account in this process.

2. Above all, the responsibilisation of everyone is vital for the integration of young Gypsies in accordance with anti-discrimination standards and regulations in order to ensure equality of opportunity. Governments should guarantee rights of full participation in society, facilitate access to nationality for foreigners and stateless persons and create opportunities for learning and mastering the national language. The question of a clear status for minorities should be envisaged.

3. Moreover, young people have to be guaranteed the necessary support, resources and opportunities to enable them to lead an independent and autonomous life, and have the possibility of full social and political participation. Lack of access to basic services, such as welfare protection, healthcare and safe and healthy living conditions is a factor that can deprive young people of their necessary autonomy and thereby of effective responsibility.

4. Education is a fundamental process for fulfilling personal potential and is necessary for integration within society. This is why sending Gypsies to special schools that engender humiliation should be forbidden, although certain special beneficial projects should continue to be encouraged. Special importance must be given to preparatory initiatives.

Education is a pre-condition for participation in political, social and economic life, on an equal footing with other people. It should also encourage rightly critical thinking and responsibility which, in turn, are necessary for building an ever more human society, based on the principles of justice, equality and fraternity.

5. Work is one of the keys to full integration within society. Consequently, young people must be guaranteed the possibility to work in decent conditions. Occupational training is a major concern insofar as young people must overcome barriers, partly due to the shortcomings of the educational system, which hinder their access to employment.

6. Access to various fundamental rights (decent housing, employment, education and healthcare) can be assisted by the training and deployment of Gypsy socio-cultural mediators.

7. The mass media bear a great responsibility in informing public opinion without drawing on stereotypes and generalisations regarding Gypsies. They should play a role in raising awareness and training in order to combat prejudices against Gypsies. Moreover, the training of young Gypsy journalists must be encouraged in order to promote freedom of expression. Finally, conferences and round tables involving media representatives and Gypsies should be organised.

8. Regarding women, forced sterilisations and campaigns that tend to destabilise Gypsies perception of the family should be condemned. The education of women regarding fundamental rights should be guaranteed, as well as intercultural dialogue, the participation of young people in democratic citizenship, social cohesion and the development of policies for young people.

9. The Church has many things to say to young people and young people also have many things to say to the Church. This mutual dialogue, which must be conducted with great friendliness, clarity and courage, will encourage meetings between generations and exchanges, and will be a source of richness and youth for the Church and civil society.

10. Given the mentality of young Gypsies, pastoral action will be more incisive if it takes place in the context of small groups, where it is easier to personalise and share experiences of faith and individual encounters with the Lord. In such groups young Gypsies meet together in their own cultural context. However, it should not be forgotten that pilgrimages have a special importance and value as opportunities for different groups to meet each other.

11. In this specific pastoral care, a special role could be played by the ecclesial movements and new communities that the Holy Spirit gives rise to in the Church. With the deep feeling of the community aspect, and with openness, willingness and friendliness, they too can be a specific place where the emotional religiosity of young Gypsies can be expressed.

Likewise, it would be useful if grassroots religious congregations, Catholic associations and ecclesial communities became involved in the specific pastoral care of young Gypsies.

12. Excluded, relegated to the margins of humanity and humiliated in their dignity, Gypsies need a living Church, a Church-communion (cf. "Guidelines for the Pastoral Care of Gypsies," nos. 96-98), which is capable of training and helping them to overcome the difficulties that high politics has been unable to get beyond. However, introducing oneself with love and the desire to proclaim the Good News is not enough to create a trusting relationship between Gypsies and "gağ", given the weight of history and after all the wrongs that Gypsies have endured. Therefore, Gypsies remain wary of initiatives proposed by anyone who tries to penetrate their world. It is only possible to overcome this initial attitude by starting with concrete gestures of solidarity, and also via a sharing of experiences, and the development of projects on a human scale that encourage the participation and support of young Gypsies.

13. The Church, as Christ so wished, with its preferential option for the poor, should know how to offer young people the Word of Truth and Life on which they can build their faith. As no. 65 of the Guidelines says: Pastoral care regarding confirmation, a sacrament that is almost unknown among the Gypsy community, is important, especially for young people. Preparation for confirmation allows for educating members of the Gypsy population towards a free and informed belonging to the Church. Whilst introducing the baptised person to full participation in the life of the Spirit, the experience of God and witness to the faith, confirmation also enables him to discover the meaning of his Church membership and missionary responsibility. It is also vital to give importance to the community, the other subject of the sacrament. This should be included in the catechesis, in an intergenerational manner, so that on the occasion of celebrating its confirmed members, the community itself may experience the grace of a new Pentecost, itself being confirmed by the breath of the Holy Spirit in its Christian vocation and evangelising mission.

14. The Word of God proclaimed to Gypsies in the various fields of pastoral action is more likely to be well received if it is proclaimed by someone who has concretely shown solidarity with them in everyday situations. Moreover, in the specific area of catechesis, it is important always to include dialogue that allows Gypsies to express how they perceive and live their relationship with God (Guidelines no. 60). For young people, in particular, certain significant people are very important: through their acquired trust, these people should serve as a model.

15. Young people have all the qualities to tackle all the challenges that a new evangelisation -- linked to human promotion -- pose for the Gypsy world at the cutting edge. Young people are capable of innovation and often manage to associate new solutions with traditional systems, by taking advantage of and benefiting from the experience and wisdom of their culture which, even though it is not written down in books, is not any less eloquent for that. So lets take advantage of their virtues!

16. We must manage to create a larger number of centres -- especially ecclesial ones -- which provide opportunities for leisure, study and professional training. Another suggestion regards the promotion of cultural exchange activities amongst young Gypsies, so that they can discover the values of their milieu. To this end, short study visits (if and where possible) should be promoted, as well as meetings between youngsters from different regions and countries, in order to encourage them to acquire greater awareness of other cultures and to consider common subjects (history, news, perception of identity, etc.) from a new perspective. Youth actions should be promoted, including meetings during pilgrimages and faith schools for young people, as well as their integration within wider humanitarian solidarity projects.

17. Finally, youngsters should be offered activities (voluntary work, associations, sports groups) and prevention initiatives to drag them away from inertia, lack of interest, drugs, alcohol, etc. Identifying and training leaders within their communities is very important.

18. It would also be useful to ask humanitarian organisations, such as Caritas, to issue and subsequently monitor micro-loans for families and communities that are most capable of using such funds on behalf of their ethnic group.

A young Gypsy said:

We must fight racism,
Not with weapons,
But with love, work and humility,
By proving that beyond our shortcomings
We also have values.


Innovative Media, Inc.


#8600 From: David Cezara <cezara@...>
Date: Fri Oct 3, 2008 9:35 am
Subject: Hunger strike caused by non-observance of ECHR judgments
valery_novos...
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Hunger strike caused by non-observance of ECHR judgments

By the friendly settlement in the case of Moldovan and others v.
Romania (5 July 2005), Kalanyos and others v. Romania (26 April 2007)
and Gergely v. Romania (26 April 2007), the European Court of Human
Right took notice of Romanian Government's declaration according to
which the Government committed itself to adopting general measures
with the purpose of combating discrimination, following that the
Council of Europe's Committee of Ministers to monitor the observance
of this commitment.

In the first case, there was a project elaborated at level of Hadareni
village, but not finalized, as the Government repeatedly blocked the
funds allocated to this purpose (thus, so far, the main objective of
the project, namely the reconstruction of the destroyed houses and
creation of job offers was not accomplished by the Government of
Romania); in the second and third case the Romanian Government
abandoned the projects claiming that the mayor of Plaiesii de Jos
locality would opposite them.

The Council of Europe's Committee of Ministers, although informed by
the situation, did not undertake any measure.

As I was involved in solving these cases and I saw that the
Governments of Romania since 1993 till present have repeatedly lied
the Roma people in Hadareni and the Romanian and international public
opinion, I decided to go on hunger strike in order to obtain the
observance of ECHR's judgments. My action does not concern only the
victims in these cases, but all the persons on Romanian soil which may
become victims of authorities' abuses and which need the protection
provided by the European Convention on Human Rights. If the European
Council allows Romania not to respect the ECHR's judgments, our rights
are not really protected.

I shall go off the hunger strike if:

1. Government of Romania

a) allocates the entire amount of money remained unspent in Hadareni
project for the reconstruction of houses and creation of job offers
for the victims, with the firm promise that these funds would not be
blocked again and could be of use until the mid of year 2009, when the
project is completely finalized;

b) allocates a fund four times larger than the one in Hadareni project
for the two projects in Plaiesii de Jos locality ((Casinul Nou and
Plaiesii de Sus),

or

2. The Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe takes concrete
measures to sanction Romania for not observing the ECHR judgments.

Comitetul de Ministri al Consiliul Europei ia masuri concrete de
sanctionare a Romaniei pentru nerespectarea hotararilor CEDO.

I please note that in order to protect my health, I shall take one
tablet of multivitamins per day and  liter of yoghourt or buttermilk.

Also note that this action, of which I will inform the press and some
embassies periodically, has no connection with my current status of
member in the Steering Committee of the National Council for Combating
Discrimination, as Secretary of State.

Haller Istvan

E-mail: haller_istvan@...

Tel. +40 (0)730 240 549

#8601 From: "Union Romani" <u-romani@...>
Date: Fri Oct 3, 2008 10:31 am
Subject: El Alcale de Treviso dice que hay que eliminar a los nios gitanos
u-romani@...
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EL ALCALDE DE TREVISO (Italia) DICE QUE HAY QUE ELIMINAR (?) A LOS NIOS GITANOS

 

 

Rezar?, llorar?, gritar?, protestar?, no s que ms podemos hacer

 

Queridos amigos: La situacin est llegando a unos lmites insospechados en Italia. Acabo de recibir de un amigo italiano el anuncio de un vdeo “colgado” en YouTube verdaderamente increble. En ese vdeo, me dice mi comunicante, aparece el alcalde de TREVISO, llamado GIANCARLO GENTILINI. Treviso, de 100.000 habitantes, es la capital de la provincia del mismo nombre y pertenece a la regin del Vneto, al norte de Italia.  Pues bien, este bestia —que no merece otro nombre— que pertenece al partido de la Liga Norte que gobierna en coalicin con Silvio Berlusconi, ha dicho en un mitin, ante miles de personas, QUE HAY QUE ELIMINAR  —quiere decir ASESINAR?— A LOS NIOS GITANOS que roban a los viejos. Este miserable presume de haber destruido dos campamentos de gitanos y se jacta pregonando que en su ciudad YA NO QUEDAN GITANOS!!

 

Giancarlo Gentilini es un personaje que gobierna desde hace ocho aos, que presume de ser un fascista porque el fascismo le ense “el orden y la disciplina”. l mismo se ha autoproclamado el sheriff de Italia, y como tal se ha hecho famoso pregonando que contra los gitanos hay que practicar la “tolerancia DOBLE CERO”.

 

Este nazi pertenece al mismo partido de UMBERTO BOSSI, aquel que amenaz con sacar las armas a la calle. “Los fusiles siempre estn preparados, –dijo–, nosotros estamos preparados. Si quieren enfrentamientos tengo trescientos mil hombres siempre dispuestos".

 

Como veis, queridos amigos y hermanos, estamos llegando a un punto de autntica perversin. No se trata de alarmismo injustificado. Las palabras y las imgenes son sumamente elocuentes. No s que ms podemos hacer nosotros desde Espaa para aliviar las angustias y el horror que estn padeciendo tantos seres inocentes por tantos lugares del mundo (no slo en Italia). Rezar?, llorar?, gritar?, protestar?, no lo s, bien lo sabe Dios que no lo s.  Slo s que me gustara que se equivocaran aquellos que dicen que “la historia siempre se repite”.

 

 

 

Juan de Dios Ramrez-Heredia

Presidente

 

 

Si queris ver el fragmento de la pelcula donde aparece este elemento diciendo estas barbaridades situaros en la pgina web de nuestra organizacin.

 

En otra parte de su discurso arremete contra los medios de comunicacin y dice, textualmente, que hay que silenciar a la televisin, a la radio y que a los periodistas hay que ponerles un tapn en la boca y otro en el culo.

 

Vean la pelcula donde este infame dice estas groseras.

http://www.unionromani.org/videos/video040.html

 

 

UNION ROMANI
Direccin Postal/Postal Address:
Apartado de Correos 202
E-08080 BARCELONA (Spain)
 
Tel. +34 934127745
Fax. +34 934127040
E-mail:
u-romani@...
URL: http://www.unionromani.org/index_es

 

 


#8602 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Fri Oct 3, 2008 12:09 pm
Subject: Press release: Major gaps still divide Roma from mainstream populations across Europe, says OSCE report
valery_novos...
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Press release

Major gaps still divide Roma from mainstream populations across Europe, says OSCE report

WARSAW, 2 October 2008 - Roma and Sinti populations continue to face discrimination and remain divided from mainstream society across Europe, says an OSCE report launched on the margins of the Organization's annual human rights conference in Warsaw today.

The report, prepared by the OSCE's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), says significant gaps remain in areas such as education, housing, employment and access to social services and justice.

The report reviews progress made by governments in implementing an OSCE Action Plan on improving the situation of Roma and Sinti adopted in 2003.

"Five years after the adoption of the OSCE Action Plan, we unfortunately have to conclude that progress has been minimal," said Ambassador Janez Lenarcic, the Director of ODIHR.

"The picture is still bleak, and it is clear that improving the situation of Roma and Sinti is unfinished business."

The report stresses that, in a positive step, many OSCE states have tightened their anti-discrimination legislation and adopted national policies and strategies to address the situation of Roma and Sinti during the past years.

"Too often, however, the implementation process suffers from a lack of political will at the national level, and from a failure to implement policies at the local level," says the report.

Insufficient funding, and scattered and piecemeal programmes mean that efforts to improve the situation of Roma and Sinti have been largely ad hoc and symbolic, with little hope of long-term sustainability.

"We do not need any more new declarations, strategies and policy papers. What we need is a genuine commitment by the OSCE participating States to take the existing Action Plan seriously, and use it as a concrete road map for tangible action to end the discrimination of Roma and Sinti," said Andrzej Mirga, the head of ODIHR's Contact Point on Roma and Sinti Issues.

Finnish State Secretary, Teija Tiilikainen, who represented the 2008 Finnish OSCE Chairmanship, called on states to implement the Action Plan. "We are very much urging participating States to study the recommendations of this status report and consider, but preferably also carry out intensified measures. For example, one concrete issue requiring our serious investment is the provision of early education for Roma children," she said.

 

ODIHR's report on the implementation of the OSCE Action Plan for Roma and Sinti, launched at the OSCE Human Dimension Implementation Meeting in Warsaw on 2 October 2008. (OSCE/Jens Eschenbaecher)

ODIHR's report on the implementation of the OSCE Action Plan for Roma and Sinti, launched at the OSCE Human Dimension Implementation Meeting in Warsaw on 2 October 2008. (OSCE/Jens Eschenbaecher)

Status Report accessible here: http://www.osce.org/odihr/item_11_33130.html

 

#8603 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Fri Oct 3, 2008 3:03 pm
Subject: Lil dzi ko comiteto vashi organizacija katar VII Kongreso katar IRU
valery_novos...
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Lil dzi ko comiteto vashi organizacija katar VII Kongreso katar IRU 
 
Draga Kolegoja
 
Si man bari dosh sebepi financialna problemuri na ka shaj lav than ko Congreso so ka avel ko Zagreb.
 
No kamav te vakerav tumenge kaj kodo naj te ovel interupcija vashi amari kooperacija majdur thaj naj te ovel problemo palo moro status sar memebro katar IRU, statuso kova thavdela katar Juli 2000 bersh.
 
Kadale lilesa kamav te puchav tumen te paruvav mo status katar IRU memebro katari delegacija akhardi Roma so dzivdinena ko Israel, te avav sar membro katar IRU , depatmeno so kerel bukji pali media.
 
Me sem sigurno kaj ko tumaro perspektivno kidipen ki Kroacija tumen ka ovel tumen vrama te keren diskusii palo importantna romane puchimata katr o sasto sumnal. Ka vazden racionalna gindimata thaj ka keren inicijativa katar lache akcii. Me pakjav kaj moro puchipen ka avel mishto avilo thaj ashundo katar tumari rig .
 
Kamav sa e delegatura ko Zagreb te nakhen lachi vrama thaj hacharimos mashkar peste ko vahti kataro Kongreso vi palo agor katar Kongreso.
 
Pakjasa
 
Raj Valery Novoselsky
Redaktoro, Romani Drakhin
 

#8604 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Fri Oct 3, 2008 5:52 pm
Subject: The VII World Congres of International Romani Union - 23-25 October 2008 - Zagreb, Croatia
valery_novos...
Send Email Send Email
 

Dear Rroma of the World,

 

Here is the information for all perspective participants,delegates and guests:

 

The VII World Congres of International Romani Union will be held on 23-25.10.2008 year in the city Zagreb, Republic of Croatia.

 

Adress for accomodation: Hotel "I" Remetinečka 106, Zagreb. Croatia.

Phone: +385 1 6140 100

www.hotel-i.hr

 

The day for your arrival is 23.10.2008 registration in the hotel "I".

Congress will start on 24.10.2008 in the building of Ministry of Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship (Ministarstvo poduzetnitva i gospodarstva).

Address: Str. Grada Vukovarska 78, city Zagreb.

Phone: +385 1 6106 111

http://www.mingorp.hr

 

We shall start the event on 9.00 am. The Congress will finish on 25.10.2008.

 

If you have special questions, please, write to my e-mail on romacana@...  

or call my GSM: +385 91 253 7154.

 

 

WELCOME! DOBRO DOLI! MISHTO / SHUKAR AVEN!

 

 
Paqivale Rroma ani sasti Lumia,
 
Informacia sarenenge so aven pe kongreso,delegato thaj gosturja / musafirja.
O VII.Lumiaqo kongreso katar o International Romani Union
kerelpe ovela 23 - 25 .10.2008 bersh, iano foro Zagreb, Republika e Kroaciaki
adresa  e soibaski si: Hotel "I" Remetinečka 106, Zagreb
Tel. +385 1 6140 100
 
O dive tumaro avibasko ( kana tumen aven) si: : 23.10.2008. in hotel "I" thaj registracia.
O kongreso astarel buqi: 24.10.2008. ani sala e Ministarstvo poduzetnitva i gospodarstva.ulica:
Vukovarska br.78, foro  Zagreb thaj buqaras kotar o 9.00 chaso.
O kongreso si gata dives: 25.10.2008. dzi ko 10.00 chaso.
 
 
Te tumen si specialno puchipe, ramosaren mange pe moro e-mail: romacana@...
oli akharen man pe GSM: +385 91 253 7154.
 
WELCOME! DOBRO DOLI! MISHTO / SHUKAR AVEN!
 
Kasum Cana - sherutno pe organizacia thaj grupo e buqako.

#8605 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Sat Oct 4, 2008 9:58 am
Subject: GYPSIES THE MOST OPPRESSED MINORITY IN RUSSIA, SAYS EU COMMISSION
valery_novos...
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GYPSIES THE MOST OPPRESSED MINORITY IN RUSSIA, SAYS EU COMMISSION
 
The Council of Europe's anti-racism commission found that the Roma (also known as Gypsies) are the most oppressed minority in Russia, the national daily "Vremya Novostey" dated September 24 reported. "Gypsies, like people from the Caucasus, are stopped 20 times often more by police than people of Slavic appearance," said the commission's deputy chief Michael Head, a conclusion seconded by Russia's human rights ombudsman Vladimir Lukin.

But Galina Kozhevnikova of the Sova Center observed that people from Central Asia are more likely to fall victim to neo-Nazi violence.

The commission also found that the Russian government has not taken the necessary steps against neo-Nazis and that migration laws contribute to discrimination against migrants. Both the European commission and Kozhevnikova found that Russian police have increased the number of neo-Nazi arrests, though hate crimes laws are still rarely applied.
 
UCSJ

#8606 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Sat Oct 4, 2008 12:49 pm
Subject: JUDGE STOPS SCHOOL DEMOLITION
valery_novos...
Send Email Send Email
 
Ustiben Report
 
JUDGE STOPS COUNCIL DESTROYING DALE FARM COMMUNITY SCHOOL
 
Professor cites Saint Christopher's as unique educational opportunity
 
By Grattan Puxon
 
     Residents at Dale Farm will on Monday morning stand by ready to hand bailiffs a copy of the injuction granted last night (4 Oct) which restrains Basildon council from demolishing their community centre.
 
    The interim injunction was granted by an out of hours High Court Judge pending the hearing of an application for a judicial review of the council's decision to use direct action to remove the Saint Christopher Centre.
 
   The log cabin was erected at Dale Farm, Crays Hill, Essex, with funding from the Essex County Council through the Racial Equality Council, to serve as a centre for youth activities. The suppliers told Dale Farm Housing Association it did not require planning permission.
 
   Lord Avebury, who five months ago carried out the opening ceremony, pleaded that Saint Christopher's should - like the 132 chalets, mobile-homes and trailer
caravans - be left alone at least until a hearing in the Court of Appeal on 5 December. This hearing is to decide whether Basildon should be allowed to carry out its five million euro bulldozing of Dale Farm, the largest Travellers' village in the UK.
 
   Despite this plea and a protest outside the town hall by members of the Dale Farm Chaveys Youth Club, councellors voted to require removal of the structure by midnight on 5 October on the basis that it contravened greenbelt restrictions.
 
   Meanwhile, the application for a judicial review will be processed this week.The case for such a review is based partly on the refusal by Basildon to allow any members of the public to attend or speak at the vital committee meeting on 16 September.
 
    Among those who had been ready to argue in favour of leaving Saint Christopher's intact was Father John Glynn, of Our Lady of Good Counsel Church,
Wickford, who earlier had blessed the building as a place of prayer.
 
    During its short existence Saint Christopher's has been utilized for many community and youth activities. They include meetings of the Gypsy Council and drop-in sessions by the Children's Legal Centre, as well as youth club competitions.
 
       EDUCATIONAL CENTRE
 
    As to its potential as a centre for youth and adult education, this has been outlined by Prof. Stephen Heppell, of Anglia Ruskin University. Described by
Microsoft as Europe's leading online education expert, Prof.Heppell plans to develop a unique learning project for and by the residents of Dale Farm, based in the Saint Christopher Centre.
 
    It will include courses for the fifty children of secondary-school age who at present are not attending local schools due to bullying, racism and parentel fears of the drug and knife culture.
 
    "Dale Farm offers an opportunity to build and evidence the effectiveness of a community quite literally picking itself up by its bootstraps," comments Prof.
Heppell. "The Saint Christopher Centre provides, with the technology I will source for it, a perfect setting for communal learning."
 
    He says his project could teach the nation much about inclusion, lifelong learning and the way learning progress can help evolve but not erase culturally diverse communities such as Dale Farm.

#8607 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Sat Oct 4, 2008 12:54 pm
Subject: The VII World Congres of International Romani Union - 23-25 October 2008 - Zagreb, Croatia
valery_novos...
Send Email Send Email
 
Dear Rroma of the World,

 

Here is the information for all perspective participants,delegates and guests:

 

The VII World Congres of International Romani Union will be held on 23-25.10.2008 year in the city Zagreb, Republic of Croatia.

 

Adress for accomodation: Hotel "I" Remetinečka 106, Zagreb. Croatia.

Phone: +385 1 6140 100

www.hotel-i.hr

 

The day for your arrival is 23.10.2008 registration in the hotel "I".

Congress will start on 24.10.2008 in the building of Ministry of Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship (Ministarstvo poduzetnitva i gospodarstva).

Address: Str. Grada Vukovarska 78, city Zagreb.

Phone: +385 1 6106 111

http://www.mingorp.hr

 

We shall start the event on 9.00 am. The Congress will finish on 25.10.2008.

 

If you have special questions, please, write to my e-mail on romacana@...  

or call my GSM: +385 91 253 7154.

 

The VII World Congres of International Romani Union - 23-25 October 2008 - Zagreb, Croatia

 
Paqivale Rroma ani sasti Lumia,
 
Informacia sarenenge so aven pe kongreso,delegato thaj gosturja / musafirja.
O VII.Lumiaqo kongreso katar o International Romani Union
kerelpe ovela 23 - 25 .10.2008 bersh, iano foro Zagreb, Republika e Kroaciaki
adresa  e soibaski si: Hotel "I" Remetinečka 106, Zagreb
Tel. +385 1 6140 100
 
O dive tumaro avibasko ( kana tumen aven) si: : 23.10.2008. in hotel "I" thaj registracia.
O kongreso astarel buqi: 24.10.2008. ani sala e Ministarstvo poduzetnitva i gospodarstva.ulica:
Vukovarska br.78, foro  Zagreb thaj buqaras kotar o 9.00 chaso.
O kongreso si gata dives: 25.10.2008. dzi ko 10.00 chaso.
 
 
Te tumen si specialno puchipe, ramosaren mange pe moro e-mail: romacana@...
oli akharen man pe GSM: +385 91 253 7154.
 
WELCOME! DOBRO DOLI! MISHTO / SHUKAR AVEN!
 
Kasum Cana - sherutno pe organizacia thaj grupo e buqako.
 

#8608 From: "romarights50" <romarights50@...>
Date: Sat Oct 4, 2008 10:01 pm
Subject: Web site offers comprehensive information and extensive resources on Roma Rights
romarights50
Send Email Send Email
 

News Release

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Saturday, October 04, 2008

 

New web site offers comprehensive information and extensive resources on Roma Rights

A new web site was introduced today providing an international "one-stop-shop" portal of resources pertaining to the Roma (pejoratively known as Gypsies). The web site is called the "Roma Rights Network" and can be found at http://www.romarights.net.

The Roma are Europe's largest minority, with a population of 10 million in Europe and totaling 15 million worldwide.  They are also Europe's most disenfranchised minority; suffering from discrimination, extreme violence, and a lack of governmental recognition and support.

The bold, freshly designed site has a variety of resources for both the general public and Roma rights activists.  It has an extensive library of Roma related information; current events, common myths, important issues, as well as a large collection of links to other `Roma rights' web sites.

It also features the first social network dedicated to Roma issues; providing Bulletin boards; fostering discussion of important Roma issues, Groups; for discussion of common Roma interests, Blogs; encouraging users to write about Roma issues, and Friends lists; so users can network with other like-minded individuals.

For further information, visit the web site at http://www.romarights.net.

 

# # #

 

About the Roma Rights Network

The mission of the Roma Rights Network is to raise awareness of the Roma and the issues affecting them through the dissemination of timely and useful information, targeting regions and peoples not normally targeted, and using tools and strategies not yet extensively implemented in the Roma rights community.

 


#8609 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Sun Oct 5, 2008 11:56 am
Subject: Ambassador donates USD 25,000 for death camp documentary
valery_novos...
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      Ambassador donates USD 25,000 for death camp documentary

      4 October 2008 | 09:27 | Source: B92

      BELGRADE -- U.S. Ambassador to Serbia Cameron Munter has donated USD 25,000 to B92 for completion of the documentary on the Old Fairground death camp.
 

            Cameron Munter (FoNet, archive)


      Around 40,000 Jews, Serbs and Roma were murdered in the Nazi concentration camp during World War II.

      This documentary and the revitalization project to build a Museum of Tolerance is being organized and sponsored by B92.

      The project should enable the reconstruction of a memorial complex dedicated to civilians who lost their lives in the Nazi concentration camp.

      The U.S. ambassador said that the goal of the entire world must be not to let that crime be forgetten.

      "I believe that it is vitally important that we understand the present through the past. America wants to help people in Serbia to understand the origins of the country and the course that it's taking. If we can facilitate understanding of the past, we will be very proud," Munter said.

#8610 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Sun Oct 5, 2008 3:31 pm
Subject: New York Times: Mario Maya, Interpreter of Flamenco Style, Is Dead at 71
valery_novos...
Send Email Send Email
 

New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/04/arts/dance/04maya.html?_r=1&ei=5070&emc=eta1&oref=slogin

Mario Maya, Interpreter of Flamenco Style, Is Dead at 71

By ANNA KISSELGOFF

Published: October 3, 2008

Mario Maya, who fused his Gypsy heritage and training in experimental American dance to become one of Spain's most influential flamenco dancers and choreographers, died on Monday at his home in Seville. He was 71.

Mario Maya and Merche Esmeralda leading the finale of the Flamenco Festival New York gala at City Center in February.

The cause was cancer, according to the World Music Institute in New York. In February Mr. Maya served as artistic director of a gala program during Flamenco Festival New York, produced annually by the institute and Miguel Marin.

In her review in The New York Times Jennifer Dunning wrote that the program "offered stunning proof that the old art lives on vitally in committed new interpreters."

A rebel in the 1960s, Mr. Maya consistently passed on to the young dancers in his companies an unwavering belief that flamenco could be radically renewed and yet remain true to its essence. Among his disciples are the most brilliant experimental flamenco dancers of today, including his daughter Beln Maya and Israel Galvan.

Born in Cordoba into a Gypsy family that moved to Granada when he was 2, Mr. Maya took the conventional route of dancing as a child before the Gypsy caves of the Sacromonte quarter in Granada before turning professional. His "maestra," as he called her, was the distinguished dancer Pilar Lpez, in whose company he performed from 1956 to 1958 after studying in Madrid.

In the early '60s, however, he suddenly moved to New York and studied modern dance at the Alwin Nikolais and Alvin Ailey schools. In the opinion of one Spanish critic Mr. Maya's involvement with "new wave theater" in New York led him to adopt "ideas and concepts that he later applied to flamenco dance."

The fruit of those efforts was already clear in his New York concerts of 1967 and 1968. By 1993, after more than 25 years of touring, the performances of the Mario Maya Flamenco Dance Company in New York confirmed that his was not the standard approach to traditional forms.

Looking amazingly like Merce Cuningham and dancing with similar surprises, Mr. Maya offered an impressive foray into abstraction in "Three Flamenco Movements." Emotions seemed to come out of the choreography's patterns rather than literal passion. The structure of the dance was spare, but the dancers moved at great speed; Mr. Maya's own solos were colored by skimming filigreed footwork.

Although Mr. Maya had started out independently with Carmen Mora and Eduardo Serrano in the Trio Madrid, he later directed large troupes, including the Andalusian Dance Company. In the '70s he included text in his productions, often inspired by the poet Federico Garca Lorca. In 1983 he founded a school in Seville that taught flamenco, ballet and jazz dance.

In addition to his daughter Beln, Mr. Maya is survived by his wife, Mariana Ovalle Ibarra; another daughter, Maria Ostalinda Maya; and a son, Mario Adonay Maya.


#8611 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Sun Oct 5, 2008 8:58 pm
Subject: Thousands take to the streets to say no to prejudice & intimidation
valery_novos...
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Thousands take to the streets to say no to prejudice & intimidation

Written by Robert Hodgson

Sunday, 05 October 2008

A colourful crowd gathered under a grey sky Saturday on a square in the windswept and eerily deserted centre of Budapest. A non-political alliance of civil organisations had called for thousands to assemble on Erzsbet tr and march down Andrssy t in a show of solidarity against the encroachment of an increasingly vocal extreme right wing into Hungarian public discourse and the streets. Tarka Magyar (Multicoloured Magyar) was the name chosen for a movement that includes Amnesty International and many homosexual and Roma organisations.

http://www.budapesttimes.hu/content/view/9377/219/

Shops closed, cars towed

Apart from those taking part in the protest, a normally bustling area in the centre of Pest was almost deserted because, against the wishes of the organisers, the police had cordoned off the square and the entire four-kilometre length of Andrssy t. Many shops and restaurants were closed. Hundreds of armoured police moved in well-drilled platoons around the gathering and more officers manned cordons on every sidestreet leading into the broad avenue running from the centre to Hosk tere (Heroes' Square).

The number of men wearing small earpieces, standing alone on corners and muttering discretely to themselves suggested the presence of plainclothes officers. A helicopter hovered overhead. While setting up their cordons in the morning, the police even removed over 400 cars from Andrassy t. Surprised owners were told they could find their vehicles on the Nagykrut boulevard or on a square near the City Park.

 

Uneventful start

At the appointed assembly time of 3.30pm a few tourists on Erzsbet tr and the adjacent Dak tr looked on in bafflement as the square around Gdr club and the glass-bottomed pond filled with people, music by Manu Chao and the Mexican protest rappers Molotov came through a PA, interrupted occasionally instructions from the organisers. There was, as announced, no speechmaking or political rhetoric. When told the gathering was a protest for peace and tolerance, one young British woman said it doesnt look very peaceful to me, as she eyed a nearby platoon of riot police carrying night sticks and gas masks.

 

Police lack ID again

Off to the side of the square four officers in riot gear tried to hush a fifty-something man wearing a sash of Hungarian red white and green as he shouted at them demanding to know what they were doing. As the young policemen walked away from him, he yelled where are your ID numbers you bastards! As well as accusations of police over reaction and brutality in the suppression of recent demonstrations, there have been several reports of police officers removing or obscuring the identification numbers they are obliged to wear.

 

Old hat

Police have had plenty of practice at crowd control since an illequipped force was left battered and bruised when violent demonstrations broke out in September 2006. Riots broke out after a recording of Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsny acknowledging that his party had deliberately lied about the state of the economy to secure re-election that year. Since then, periodic violent demonstrations and the smell of tear gas have become a

common sideshow to Budapest life.

 

The demos point

Saturdays peaceful demonstration was a reaction to increasingly vocal and violent extreme nationalist and rightwing groups that have usurped antigovernment protests. At recent rightwing demonstrations, often organised by the nationalist Jobbik party, speeches denigrating Hungarys large Roma minority or gays and lesbians are heard at least as often as calls for the prime minister to resign. During a recent Gay Pride march, participants were pelted with eggs and beer cans while petrol bombs and glass bottles were hurled at the police as they tried to protect them from rowdy demonstrators from a nearby extreme rightwing rally.

The police were taking no chances on Saturday. The only nationalist demonstrators were a dozen or so middle aged men who had planted a few red and white striped rpd flats on a patch of grass at the edge of the peace protest. They were prevented by the police from joining the march as 3-4,000 protesters set off at 4pm towards Hősk tere. There was no sign of nationalist troublemakers that can often be seen lurking on street corners, a harbinger of trouble when left-wing or liberal demonstrations are in progress.

 

PM ignores call to stay away

In fact the only gatecrashing of any significance was the arrival of Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsny, who joined the marchers at Hosk tere after their leisurely stroll up Andrssy t. He and his wife were unapproachable, surrounded by at least a dozen bodyguards. The PM had ignored imprecations by the Tarka Magyar organisation and Amnesty International to stay away as his presence would only serve to politicise what was meant to be a nonpartisan call for peace and tolerance. Gyurcsny ignored their request, insisting that he was participating as a private citizen, not as a politician. Besides the PM, the liberal SZDSZ politician Mtys Ersi and a handful of Hungarian academics and musicians were spotted in the crowd.

President Lszl Slyom, perhaps the only Hungarian politician who can credibly claim no party allegiance, did not attend, but issued a statement voicing his support for the aims and beliefs of the Tarka Magyar movement.

 

Declaration

All participants were asked to sign a paper declaring allegiance to a clause in the Hungarian Constitution which guarantees the human and legal rights of all citizens, regardless of creed, colour, sex, language, political affiliation or opinions held. These papers were collected in boxes at the start and finish of the march.

 

Low turnout

When these statements are counted, a more accurate estimate of the size of the crowd might be possible, but what is certain is even their own figure of 5,000 participants is far fewer than the 100,000 that the Tarka Magyar organisers had hoped for. One of the main organisers of the peaceful protest, Kroly Gerendai, told the news web site Index.hu that the grim weather and attempts to politicise the demonstration might have kept people away. He said it was good sign, however, that there were more people than are usually round at any rally by the extreme right.

At the end of the rally at 6pm, the crowd waved multicoloured scarves and other items in the air. The PMwaved a red tie above his head. At the end of the demonstration he was seen carefully knotting it back around his neck as the crowd started to make its way home.


#8612 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Sun Oct 5, 2008 9:56 pm
Subject: UNIRSI - International and National Union of Roma and Sinti In Italy
valery_novos...
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UNIRSI

International and National Union of Roma and Sinti In Italy

Federation of the Associations and the Autonomous Groups of Roma and Sinti in Italy

European and Roma Travellers Forum from Strasbourg

 

 

U.N.I.R.S.I.                                                                                       European Roma Travel Forum

18 Antonio Meucci Square                                                                 Council of Europe

00146 Rome                                                                                      Batiment G 1 quai Jacoutot

RM Italy                                                                                            F-67075 Strasbourg

 

                                                                                                                            

 

 

The UNIRSI Association (International and National Union of Roma and Sinti In Italy ), based in Rome, registered in the Associations and legal entities that act in the field of discrimination, official Italian component of the ERTF, European Roma Travellers Forum, in partnership with the Roma Union, an international organisation recognised by ONU since 1979,

 

given the worsening of the cohabitation conditions in Italy during the last years, recognised by the International and European Agencies and recently discussed in the European Parliament

 

PROPOSES AND REQUIRES

to the Italian Government and to all the Regional, Provincial and Communal governments

 

1.     More respect and better knowledge regarding the Roma and Sinti community in Italy

a. Better knowledge of the different origins and stories of the Communities existent in Italy, through a real national participatory population census and an official recognition of their Holocaust.

 

b.Separation between the individual responsabilities and the collective ones of a Community for the individual delinquent acts.

 

c. Direct involvement of the Communities representatives both at the national level and also the local level in order to confront the problems and find solutions with full coresponsability.

 

2.     Aplication of the Directives and the European and Italian Laws for the Communities

a. Respect and effective application of the European Directives for the Roma populations

b. Use of European Funds in order to support and encourage the national cohabitation in Italy

c. Recognition of the Linguistic Minorancy Romans (like in Spain, France)

d. Recognition of the Italian Citizenship to those who are entitled

e. Regularization of the Staying Permits and of the  Statelessness

 

3.     Improvement of the Living and Cohabitation Conditions in the Italian cities

 

a. Dwelling

replacement of the nomad camps with:

-         equipped stop areas for the families that are still nomad

-         equipped areas for no more than 250 persons ( about 35-40 families ) for the groups that were displaced from the ilegal camps and also from the legal camps that were too big

-         rented social housing facilitated for the families with Italian citizenship (current and to be obtained as a right)

 

b. Work

- facilitate the insertion in the work field of men and women in any domain

- facilitate the professional formation and the literacy of the persons of age

- facilitate the valorisation of the traditional handicraft and of the professional competences

 

c. Education

- facilitate the insertion of the children and teenagers in the neighbourhoods schools in a true real collaboration with the Roma families and the families of the other pupils

 

d. Social Assistance and Health

- improvement of the sanitary conditions in the current camps and areas

- improvement of the social assistance for the elder people, for the disabled and for the chronic sick people.

 

e. Culture and Communication

- improvement of the national and local information for all the Italian citizens regarding the Roma Communities, against the racism and the xenofobia

-creating initiatives of communication in the Romans language (radio and television) in order to facilitate the knowledge, the cohabitation and the mutual respect

-facilitate the reevaluation of old Roma cultural and artistic traditions of various origins through events and national and local public activities.

 

 

 

 

 

Delegate (ERTF) Mr. Kasim Cizmic : +39 339-5645050 e-mail: unirsi@...

Secretary: Expert  Balo Cizmic : +39 328-5722009 e-mail:­ unirsi@...


#8613 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Mon Oct 6, 2008 1:02 pm
Subject: BBC World Service on Romany issues
valery_novos...
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On October 8 the BBC World Service's daily global discussion programme World Have Your Say will be broadcasting a special programme focussing on the Roma.  We'll be live from the home of a British gypsy, and connecting with gypsies all over Europe.  We'll also be speaking to a member of the Italian governmet about their treatment of the Roma, and people from all over Europe who are critical of Roma and the Romany way of life. 

If you would like to listen, or to take part, got to the programme's blog  www.worldhaveyoursay.com.  Or you can listen live from 5pm GMT (6pm BST) on October 8 on the BBC World Service, broadcasting on the internet, on various FM stations and on shortwave all over Europe.


#8614 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Mon Oct 6, 2008 1:52 pm
Subject: Serbia Must Tackle Roma, Romanian Rights
valery_novos...
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Serbia Must Tackle Roma, Romanian Rights

06/10/2008 - Serbia must do more to fight discrimination against its Roma, Vlach (?!) and Romanian minorities, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe says in a new resolution.

The resolution states that Serbia must promote diversity and fight against intolerance and discrimination directed toward its Roma, Vlach and Romanian minorities.

The council wants Serbia to develop national councils and enact a law against discrimination.

The situation in the ethnically-diverse northern province of Vojvodina was deemed satisfactory by the report. The resolution highlights and questions the dominance of the Serbian Orthodox Church in deciding which religions and churches are officially recognised by the state. The resolution also highlights as negative the fact that the Romanian Orthodox Church is not officially recognised.

The issue regarding the Romanian minority in Serbia entered the report because it was requested by a delegation from Bucharest.

However, the chief of the Serbian delegation, Milos Aligrudic, said that there was no reason to enter this issue into the report because there have been no incidents that would make the addition necessary.

The thing that was not so good about the whole discussion is that some texts find their way into discussion and in the end find their way in front of the entire assembly, which is funny to me, but okay, everything can be done, said Aligrudic.

Out of 318 members, only 38 participated in the discussion and vote.

The council was supposed to have discussed another report concerning the responsibilities Serbia has taken by becoming a member.

However, that discussion was postponed and will be undertaken during the next session of the council, which will take place next January.

DIVERS www.divers.ro


#8615 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Mon Oct 6, 2008 1:48 pm
Subject: OSCE Magazine, including Roma and Sinti issues
valery_novos...
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Dear all,

 

Just to let you know that the Oct.-Nov. issue of the OSCE Magazine is now online and accessible from the home page of the OSCE website.

 

Here is the exact link: http://www.osce.org/publications/sg/2008/09/33333_1188_en.pdf

 

Kindly forward the link to your colleagues, contacts and friends.

 

Regards

Dan Doghi

 

 

#8616 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Mon Oct 6, 2008 1:50 pm
Subject: Romanian Government Urged to Respect European Court Judgments
valery_novos...
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ERRC Action in Support of Romanian Activists Protest against Government Inaction

Budapest, Bucharest, 6 October 2008: Today, the European Roma Rights Centre (ERRC) sent a letter of concern to Romanian authorities, drawing attention to the hunger strike of human rights activist Istvan Haller and calling on the government to take measures to monitor and safeguard Mr Hallers health.

On 2 October 2008, Mr Haller declared a hunger strike over the persistent failure of the Romanian Government to address the serious rights violations caused by three anti-Romani pogroms in the early 1990s in Hadareni, Plaiesi de Jos and Casinul Nou, Romania. Following European Court of Human Rights judgments in these cases, the Romanian government undertook to implement community development projects that included the setting up of infrastructure, as well as anti-discrimination, educational and other social measures. To this day however, the Government has failed to fulfil its legal obligations.

In its letter, sent to Romanian President Mr Traian Basescu, Minister of Foreign Affairs Mr Lazr Comnescu and Mr Gruia Bumbu, Head of the National Agency for Roma, the ERRC called for the implementation of community development programmes in the noted Romanian Romani communities, and announced its intention to file a brief on the implementation of the judgments with the Council of Europes Committee of Ministers in view of its forthcoming Human Rights Meeting on 2-4 December 2008.

The full text of the ERRCs letter is available on the Internet at: ERRC Letter Hadareni-Haller.

For further information, contact Theodoros Alexandridis, ERRC Staff Attorney, theodoros.alexandridis@....


The European Roma Rights Centre is an international public interest law organisation which monitors the human rights situation of Roma and provides legal defence in cases of human rights abuse. For more information about the European Roma Rights Centre, visit the ERRC on the web at http://www.errc.org

To support the ERRC, please visit this link: http://www.errc.org/cikk.php?cikk=2735

European Roma Rights Centre
1386 Budapest 62
P.O. Box 906/93
Hungary
Tel: +36.1.413.2200
Fax: +36.1.413.2201

#8617 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Mon Oct 6, 2008 1:53 pm
Subject: The government announces 300 social homes for the Roma
valery_novos...
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The government announces 300 social homes for the Roma

06/10/2008 - With state budget money, 300 social homes shall be built and leased to families with low income from the Roma communities, according to the decision of the Government from the 1st of October.

Upon the initiative of the SGS and the Ministry of Development, Public Works and Housing, the executive body approved the Pilot-Program Social Housing for Roma Communities, intended to build 300 social homes.

These dwellings can be leased to families, as well as households from Roma communities with a average net monthly income per person, over the past 12 months, lower that the average net monthly salary per economy, as communicated by NIS in the most recent Statistics Bulletin prior to the months when the application is processed, as well as prior to the month when the dwelling is distributed.

Families where at least one of the members owns a property, alienated a dwelling after the 1st of January 1990, benefited from state aid for loans and for building a home or has rented another dwelling from the state cannot benefit from social homes built through this program.

The dwellings shall be built by ANL (the National Housing Agency), with funding from the state budget, earmarked for this purpose through the budget of the Ministry for Development, and the materials needed for building or expanding the utilities network (for energy, public lighting), as well as the tariffs for connection to the electricity grid shall be financed from the local budgets and other legally established sources.

The dwellings shall be built in the 8 development regions of Romania, in locations determined by the Ministry of Development, Public Works and Housing, after proposals received from the National Agency for Roma and from the authorities of the local public administration.

After completion of the buildings, they shall be in public ownership in the administrative structures where they are located and shall be managed based on the agreement concluded with ANL, by the local councils of the localities where they belong.

The distribution shall be made upon request, and the authorities of the local public administration shall set the necessary measures for request registration and processing.

In case families or households from the Roma community file no eligible requests, the vacant social dwellings can be distributed and leased under similar conditions to families not belonging to this community. Dwellings built under this program approved by the government cannot be sold.

DIVERS www.divers.ro


#8618 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Mon Oct 6, 2008 4:11 pm
Subject: One Of The Lingering Crafts of Turkish Roma: Broommaking
valery_novos...
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Lingering Crafts of Turkish Roms: Broommaking

There is a village in Samsun in Vezirkpr. The 250 digited village called Incesu.  Villagers are Gypsies and their mainstay is broommaking. Gypsies of Incesu make and sell brooms. Day by day their mainstay has been getting lost because of the tecnological progress. Vacuum claeners have already taken the place of brooms so gypsies are suffering from falling demand to broom. This stiuation makes their income low.

One of the gypsies of the village Dursun Doruk told that broommaking had been commemorative from their ancestors. He added he had been making brooms since he had been 10 years old. Also, he adds, Although, broommaking is so difficult, comeback is very miscarriage. Villagers also explain that unity of villagers is so important to support themselves from negative influences of rising technology.


#8619 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Mon Oct 6, 2008 4:10 pm
Subject: Promena elektronske adrese - Change of e-mail adress
valery_novos...
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Potovani,

 

Obavetavamo vas da su neke od elektronske adrese Sekretarijata za romsku nacionalnu strategiju zbog promene internet provajdera Ministarstva za ljudska i manjinska prava promenjene:

 

roma@...

 

slavica.v@...

 

anne.maria@...

 

dok su adrese na UNDP nalozima ostale iste:

 

ljuan.koko@...

 

slavica.vasic@...

 

anne-maria.cukovic@...

 

S potovanjem

 

Sekretarijat za romsku nacionalnu strategiju

 

 

 

Dear All,

 

We would like to inform you that some of the e-mails of the Roma National Strategy Secretariat changed due to the change of the internet provider of the Ministry of Human and Minority Rights:

 

 roma@...

 

slavica.v@...

 

anne.maria@...

 

while our e-mails on UNDP accounts staid same:

 

ljuan.koko@...

 

slavica.vasic@...

 

anne-maria.cukovic@...

 

Best regards

Roma National Strategy Secretariat


#8620 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Mon Oct 6, 2008 5:28 pm
Subject: Roma stand up to far-right group in Litvnov
valery_novos...
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Roma stand up to far-right group in Litvnov

Dnes

Litvnov - Armed with sticks, golf clubs and axe handles, some 70 members of
the local Roma community on Saturday 4 October faced the so-called
self-defence corps of the non-parliamentary far-right Workers' Party (DS) in
the northern Bohemian town of Litvnov, the CeskNoviny.cz news site has
reported.

The Roma were reported spitting and pouring cold water on twelve DS members,
and the incident was accompanied by abusive language. Police prevented a
violent clash between the two groups.

Inadaptable neighbours
The DS deputy chairman Jir Stepnek said his party sent its guards to
Litvnov's prefab neighbourhood Janov after receiving a request from the
locals, who allegedly complained about being harassed by inadaptable
neighbours. Stepnek added that most complains were about Romani residents,
excessive noise at nights, damage to private property, and attacks by Roma
against other people.

The DS guards left the area after less than an hour, and were banned from
re-entering the neighbourhood until 8am today by the police, said Litvnov
Mayor Milan Stovcka. "The reason is to maintain public order and protect
the citizens," he told the news site.

Stepnek from the DS argues that the police fails to solve Janov's frequent
tensions. The mayor refuses the allegations, saying that the party is merely
trying to make itself more visible before the regional elections.

Rallies organised by the DS are often attended by neo-Nazis.

Since the town sold off its council flats, an increasing number of socially
excluded and less adaptable families have been moving into Janov, a
neighbourhood of 6,200 inhabitants.

A local committee established by the worried residents closely cooperates
with the municipal authorities of Litvnov. In addition, a new police
station was opened in the neighbourhood.

#8621 From: Roma Virtual Network <romale@...>
Date: Mon Oct 6, 2008 5:16 pm
Subject: Italy: Roma-Gypsy camp dismantled again in capital
valery_novos...
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Italy: Roma-Gypsy camp dismantled again in capital

Rome, 6 Oct. (AKI) - A group of 45 Roma-Gypsy families were expelled for the
third time from their camp on Monday by Italian police.

The 'Via Salamanca' camp located in the Tor Vergata area on the southeastern
outskirts of Rome, was set-up in June after its inhabitants were kicked out
of the central Campo Boario and northern Saxa Rubra camps. The camp housed
120 people, approximately 40 of them children.

"Once again we were moved. This time from a parking area in the Tor Vergata
University, to another parking lot a couple of kilometres away," said Aldo
Hudorovic, spokesperson for the Kalderash Roma-Gypsy clan n an interview
with Adnkronos International (AKI).

"We are 45 families, all Italian citizens. The authorities tell us they
cannot find a place for us," Hudorovic said.

Authorities say 45 caravans were removed and the area given back to students
and staff of the Tor Vergata University.

After being expelled by the authorities from the Campo Boario and Saxa Rubra
camps, the Kalderash families were offered a place in what is described by
many as the 'squalid' Castel Romano camp, located 30 kilometres outside the
city, which houses 800 people living in prefabricated housing.

The Kalderash families, who are traditionally metal workers, refused to
settle there because they do not identify with the other Roma-Gypsies in the
camp.

Many of the Castel Romano camp's inhabitants are Roma-Gypsies from Bosnia
who left after the ethnic cleansing campaigns of the early 1990's during the
Balkan wars.

There are 70,000 Roma-Gypsies in the country who are Italian citizens. Many
others come from European Union countries such as Romania and Slovakia while
others came from the Balkans.

Up to 40,000 Roma-Gypsies migrated to Italy after the 1990s Balkan wars.
These people are no longer recognised as citizens of the countries that make
up the former Yugoslavia.

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