Wed, Feb 08 2012

Amnesty International calls on Slovakia to 'end segregation of Roma children'

Thu, Sep 02 2010 13:41 CET 3021 Views
Amnesty International calls on Slovakia to 'end segregation of Roma children'

Bulgarian Roma people shout slogans during an anti-discrimination rally in the Bulgarian capital Sofia, February 2005.

Photo: Reuters

Amnesty International (AI) says that it is urging the Slovak government to immediately end the segregation of Romani children in the country’s education system.

This practice leaves thousands of Romani pupils in substandard education in schools and classes for pupils with "mild mental disabilities" or ethnically segregated mainstream schools and classes, AI said in a statement on September 2 2010.
 
In a briefing to the Slovak government, Steps to end segregation in education, Amnesty International points to what it calls serious gaps in the enforcement and monitoring of the ban on discrimination and segregation in the Slovak educational system.
 
"Romani children across Slovakia remain trapped in a school system that keeps failing them as a result of widespread discrimination. It deprives Romani children of equal opportunities and sentences them to a life of poverty and marginalisation," David Diaz-Jogeix, Amnesty International Europe and Central Asia Deputy Director, said.
 
"The Slovak government has much to do to end the segregation that has an impact on a large part of the country’s population.

"Segregation in education means a life-long stigma for children whose future chances are brutally limited. It is a practice that does not belong to 21st century Europe and must be eliminated," he said.
 
Segregation of Romani children takes various forms, according to AI: special schools or special classes within mainstream schools designed for pupils with "mild mental disabilities" and mainstream Roma-only schools and classes.
 
While Roma are estimated to comprise less than 10 per cent of Slovakia’s total population, they make up 60 per cent of the pupils in special schools, according to a 2009 survey, quoted by AI.
 
In regions with high Romani populations three out of every four pupils in special schools are Roma. Eighty five per cent of the children in special classes in mainstream schools across the country are Roma.
 
AI said that the causes of segregation are complex and include entrenched anti-Roma attitudes as well as policy failures in the education system such as early and flawed child assessment and insufficient support for Romani children within mainstream education.
 
Widespread anti-Romani sentiment across the country expressed by non-Roma parents and educational professionals, has also led to segregation of Romani children even in mainstream schools and classes, AI said.
 
"This has led to a situation in which Romani children are sometimes literally locked into separate classrooms, corridors or buildings to prevent them from mixing with non-Roma pupils."
 
The coalition government´s programme adopted in August 2010, included the commitment to eliminate segregated schooling of Roma.

AI said that it was concerned that this has not been followed by a clear and unequivocal statement by the head of government that ethnic discrimination and segregation of Roma is unacceptable and will be combated as a matter of priority.  
 
"The idea that separate can be equal has been discredited. Slovakia cannot continue to deny its Romani children their right to education without discrimination," Diaz-Jogeix said.
 
"The choices that the government makes now will affect the lives of thousands of Romani children. The government holds the key to allow the Roma in Slovakia full participation in Slovak and European society."  
 
Amnesty International said that it was calling on the Slovak authorities to provide the State School Inspectorate with adequate resources, including robust, detailed guidelines and procedures on how to identify, monitor and combat segregation in practice; begin the systematic collection of data on education, disaggregated on the basis of gender and ethnicity; introduce a clear duty on all schools to desegregate education and provide them with effective support; and introduce adequate support measures for Roma and non-Roma children who need extra assistance, so that they may achieve their fullest potential within mainstream schools.
 

  • Print
  • Send via email
  • Translate to
  • Share:

To post comments, please, Login or Register.


Please read the The Sofia Echo forum comments policy.

MEPs slam France's action against Roma

In a debate on the situation of Roma people, EPP group MEPs emphasized the need for stronger EU action to foster the social integration of Roma, while S&D, ALDE, Greens/EFA and GUE/NGL speakers condemned the French government's expulsion of Roma people as discriminatory and in breach of EU law.

European Parliament members question legality of Roma returns

The overall position of Roma people in Europe will be debated at a plenary session of the European Parliament on September 7 in Strasbourg.

Roma should not be 'political football' EESC says

European Economic and Social Committee calls for co-ordinated action to help the Roma.

France's policy of expelling Bulgarian and Romanian Roma likened to WW2 treatment of Jews

The Washington Post: Former prime minister Dominique de Villepin, once Sarkozy's boss and now his adversary, said the president's actions have stained the French flag. The opposition Socialist leader, Martine Aubry, called Sarkozy's policies a 'shame' for the country.

Another wall separates Roma from non-Roma in eastern Slovakia

Wall that separates the mainly Roma inhabitants of a settlement next to the village of Ostrovany, near Šarišské Michaľany in eastern Slovakia, has evoked intense debate since it was built in 2009. But some are now suggesting that it could serve as a model for other parts of Slovakia

TV report shows Bulgarian Roma bride bazaar

Prices of up to 50 000 leva are demanded during negotiations.

UN committee urges France to stop collective deportation of Roma

Romania and Bulgaria are both members of the European Union. And, as such, their nationals, including the Roma, have a right to travel freely to other European countries. The committee says they also have the right not to be abused.

Roma: 'No country can succeed without including all its people' - Bulgaria's EU commissioner Georgieva

Kristalina Georgieva says that, as a Bulgarian, she is keen to see the social and economic inclusion of all her compatriots.

The Roma-go-round – 1

Sofia underlines that it is co-operating with Paris, and the Roma issue will not impair Bulgaria’s Schengen accession

More in this category

Cold spell should ease its grip on Europe next week, World Meteorological Organisation says

The current ‘negative Arctic Oscillation’ – a weather phenomenon which leads to cold conditions in Europe and relatively warmer conditions in the Arctic – should shift into a more neutral pattern within the next two to three weeks.

Cold snap hits Europe; thaw a threat

The extreme cold has been blamed for almost 400 deaths across Europe. In Ukraine, where temperatures have fallen below minus 30 degrees Celsius, the cold is blamed for at least 122 deaths. Many of the victims were homeless.

Bulgaria among EU’s lowest government debt-to-GDP ratios – Eurostat

At the end of Q3 2011, the highest government debt to GDP ratio was in Greece, at 159.1 per cent.

Bulgaria calls for rapid adoption of UN Security Council resolution on Syria

Foreign Minister Nikolai Mladenov says that Bulgaria supports the draft Security Council resolution presented by Morocco because it outlines a peaceful transition process that is the only way to stop the killings of civilians in Syria.

Opting in

Bulgaria ready to join new European fiscal pact, Finance Minister says.