The United Nations Human Rights Committee has criticised the Czech Republic
for continuing latent segregation of Romanies at elementary schools and for not
compensating unlawful sterilisation of women in its latest report available to
CTK today.
The U.N. report was released in Geneva on Thursday evening and handed to CTK
by the Czech Human Rights League.
DOCUMENT
Complete text of the report in english
The U.N. calls on the Czech Republic to establish an independent body that
would deal with complaints against steps taken by the police. People mainly
complained police dealt with them badly during their arrest and custody.
The U.N. highlighted the problem already before, but the government has not
established any such body.
As for sterilisations, the committee recommends that legal assistance to its
victims be provided.
The report indicates that special schools for slow pupils where Romanies were
often sent were cancelled only formally and that Romany pupils continue to be
segregated at Czech elementary schools.
The government should adopt measures to improve the unhappy situation, the
report writes.
It also criticises the use of caged beds in mental hospitals. Caged beds
should be banned by law, it says. Moreover, Czech doctors and social workers
should compulsorily undergo training on human rights of the patients.
The U.N. committee expressed concern about the fact that persons may be
hospitalised against their will in the country only because they "demonstrate
signs of a mental illness."
The committee repeatedly pointed to the cases of Czechs who had been forced
to leave the country and had acquired the citizenship of their new home country
and Czech courts rejected their restitution claims.
It says the Czech Republic discriminated against many of these people and
should return their property or compensate them.
The Czech Human Rights League and the Lawyers' centre for mentally disabled
will hold a press conference on the report and the situation in the country on
Monday, July 30.