PRESS
RELEASE
Roma
are the most endangered
On 10
December, the International Day of Human Rights, the Helsinki
Committee for Human Rights in Bosnia and Herzegovina wishes to
draw attention of all levels of government and of the public to
the unacceptably poor status of the Roma minority in our
country.
Around
100,000 Roma, which is the estimated number of Roma living in
Bosnia and Herzegovina, do not have their representatives in any
of the levels of government, and their fundamental civic and
political rights are thus endangered. Ethnic discrimination has
affected this category of our fellow citizens the most, which is
illustrated by the fact that only 1.5 per cent of active Roma
population is employed. Roma have thus been condemned to poverty
and ruthlessly put to the margins of society. Only every eighth
Roma child has had full primary school education, while Roma
girls have tended to interrupt their primary schooling in the
fifth grade on average. Many Roma have not yet returned their
pre-war apartments and houses, while their current living
conditions are extremely bad and do not satisfy even the minimal
standards. They most frequently live in damp houses, without
sanitary equipment, running water and electricity.
Classes in
Roma language have not yet been introduced in schools, while the
judicial and administrative authorities and the police have not
yet created conditions for Roma to use their language in
communication with them.
The Helsinki
Committee for Human Rights in Bosnia and Herzegovina urges the
authorities to take all necessary measures, including measures
of positive discrimination, in order to improve the status of
Roma and to respect their human rights and dignity. The attitude
towards minorities, especially the Roma minority, is a mirror of
one country and of the level of respect for human rights and
freedoms in that country.
Srđan
Dizdarević
President of Helsinki Committee
in Bosnia and Herzegovina
No.:
02-12/2005
Sarajevo, 9 December 2005
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