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Shoot to kill: Racist reply to Roma rights
Great Britain, 21. 11. 2005, 17:39, (USTIBEN)
Father of eleven children John Ward shot
at the door of a farmer's house, beaten with
a stick as he lay bleeding in a patch of nettles;
shot again in the back while staggering away
in desperate flight, and his body dumped over
a wall.
Horrific descriptions like this tend be expunged
from official reports of anti-Gypsy violence.
Complete statistics remain lacking, even in the latest
OSCE survey, and racist murders of Irish Travellers
such as that of John Ward last year in Ireland have yet
to impact on European records.
A new report by the Council of Europe's Human Rights
Commissioner contains only one figure for racist assaults:
109 attacks recorded in Slovakia in 2002.
Roma and pirutne or Travellers, including the
Pavees of Ireland, are dying in racially-motivated
attacks at the rate of 230 a year - that's more than
two a week - according to figures released by Rudko
Kawczynski, chair of the European Roma and Travellers
Forum, which is due to meet in Strasbourg next month.
Statistics compiled by the Roma National Congress
show that 1,756 Roma were killed and more than
3,500 injured in over 10,000 registered racial assaults
between l990 and l998 in the countries of eastern
and western Europe.
However, as no systematic monitoring or reporting
yet exists, says Kawczynski, the RNC study contains
only those cases revealed through media items and
NGO-generated data. Bad as the figures are, they
may be well below the true total.
Such words as ethnic-cleansing, even genocide,
have been used to describe militia-led operations against
Roma in former Yugoslavia, especially Kosovo and Bosnia.
Neo-nazi killings in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Serbia
and Bulgaria, pogroms in Romania and police-sweeps
in the Russian Federation, all colour the dismal
picture of increasing suppression and persecution,
painted on a background of mounting intolerance and
open racism.
Writing of the situation in the UK and Ireland,
where thousands have been evicted from their own land
and driven from traditional stopping places, I have been
chided for likening Travellers to the victims of terrorist
bombings. But as in Zimbabwe, the state and local
authorities show no compunction in pursuing enforcement
policies that include the bulldozing of homes and the
concomitant wrecking of our children's lives.
Lip service is paid at the highest level to the
right of Roma and Travellers to their own culture and
way of life. But the practices really pursued in Britain
can be judged from the fact that since the passing of the
anti-Gypsy Criminal Justice Act in l994, Travellers have
been merciless hounded and newly-arrived Roma
ruthlessly detained and deported.
In the past ten years, at a conservative estimate,
local authorities have spent a hundred million euro on
anti-Gypsy measures, including move-on operations and
blocking of potential stopping-places. The "clearance" of
the Romani-owned Woodside caravan park alone cost
1.6 million euro, while five million euro has been set aside
for the intended destruction of Dale Farm, the largest
settlement of its kind in Britain.
Prime Minister Tony Blair on Roma Nation Day this
year signed the book of condolence for Roma victims of Nazi
genocide and present-day racism. Yet the UK's anti-Gypsy
budget is running higher than that of the entire EU funding
for the Framework Programme for the equal integration
of Europe's Romani and Traveller communities.
Ignoring the recommendations of his own
planning inspector, Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott
has in recent weeks refused families in Bromley and
Sevenoaks permission to live, even temporarily, in
their own private yards. This means eviction and
the end of regular schooling for another twenty
children, and places an adult in need of dialysis
in peril of their life.
With the death of Charles Smith, chair of the
Gypsy Council, we have lost the first Romani commissioner
on the UK Commission for Racial Equality. But under the
legacy of Smith's influence, CRE chairman Trevor Phillips
has declared the decision by Basildon council leader
Malcolm Buckley racially motivated.
Phillips will apply in the High Court next week
to join Dale Farm residents in their bid to obtain a
judicial review of Basildon's blue-print for the demolition
of 85 homes and expulsion of 600 people, including l50
school-age children and a score of severely ill adults, from
land they purchased and developed, on government advice,
at a cost over a million euro.
Dale Farm has become a vital test case and
a symbol of resistance to the misuse of planning
regulations by anti-Gypsy politicians like Buckley.
It follows from the stance taken by CRE that
should Prescott again withhold permanent
planning consent for Dale Farm he would, for
his endorsement of Buckley's malevolent plan,
share the ignominy of a racist tag.
"Our hopes are pinned on the next
planning appeal." said Dale Farm yard-owner
John Sheridan. "It will be the height of betrayal
should Prescott turns us down this time."
Meanwhile, UK delegate Cliff Codona,
who was himself evicted from Woodside, and
primary delegate Kay Beard, of the UK Association
of Gypsy Women, intend to put a resolution forward
at the ERTF session in Strasbourg calling for a moratorium
on evictions and other forms of legalised ethnic-cleaning
currently common not only in Britain but in many parts of
Europe.
A second proposed resolution from the
UK representatives to the expected assembly of
elected delegates from some 40 countries urges
the ERTF to "encourage and promote" the
celebration of 8 April as Roma Nation Day by
hundreds of Romani and Traveller organisations
in Council of Europe member states.
This call to take the lead in the further mobilization
Europe's ten million Roma, on the occasion of the
35th anniversary of Roma Nation Day, is likely to find
wide support among those delegates who are already
bent on extending the role of the Forum beyond that
of a mere consultative body.
Ustiben report, By Grattan Puxon
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