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The Center for Social Affairs of Serbia fraudulently gave a Roma girl for adoption in Sweden

The citizens of Sweden who adopted a girl from Serbia were deceived by the Center for Social Work and the State of Serbia. In this, as in many adoption cases, children were taken from their parents and given to foster families. Despite the desire of the child's parents to contact and restore parental rights, the social service and its workers alienated the child from his parents, relatives, foster parents, as well as residents of this country who could be adoptive parents.

This type of protocol and alienation is contested exclusively for the marginalized groups of society. Mostly Roma. And those Roma parents, instead of being supported and helped by the social services, they are actually deceived, tricked, excluded...

The mother of this girl, adopted in Sweden, did not give up her parentage or abandon her child. Every child has the right to know that. Every child has the right to his parent!

 

Link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/270217493103991/user/100041536455484/

Romani people in the EU

The Roma are Europe's largest ethnic minority. Out of an estimated total of 10-12 million in Europe, some 6 million live in the EU, and most of them are citizens of an EU country.  The estimated share of the Roma in EU countries in 2012 ranged from 10.3% in Bulgaria, 9.1% in Slovakia, 8.3% in Romania, 7% in Hungary, 2.5% in Greece, 2% in Czechia, and 1.6% in Spain, to less than 1% in most of the other countries. Excessive force, police brutality, and misconduct against Romani people continue to be reported across the EU, in line with the 2020 findings of the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA).

The FRA report also revealed that Romani people are subject to widespread poverty, inadequate living conditions, poor health, exclusion from the labor market and harassment. 

 

Link: https://www.worldrroma.org/2022/12/romani-people-in-eu.html?fbclid=IwAR12ac5FndFKL-PTyx37dKfUImKuiKJxWY7CUYXtWzOrMQgF5FOQDa5_fok

There is no compensation for the horror of the twenty million forced laborers

On December 17, 1999 — German, American and Eastern European officials reached a historic agreement on compensation for forced labor during Nazi Germany, 54 years after World War II.

There were approximately 4.6 million prisoners of war who were forced to work in Germany. Soldiers and non-commissioned officers were in camps called "stalag" (Stalag, short for Stammlager, translated as "base camp"), and officers in "offlazes" (Offizierslager). Under international law, the "Treaty for the Treatment of Prisoners of War," which Germany also signed in 1929, expressly allowed them to be employed as laborers, and non-commissioned officers as supervisors of such work, without any compensation. , provided they do not, they can engage in work that would be related to "military activities" or in dangerous jobs. The captured officers were spared their jobs.

For decades after the war, prisoners who stayed in concentration camps for more than six months received some form of compensation from Germany. Twenty million forced laborers in Nazi Germany got nothing.

 

Link: https://www.vreme.com/vreme/odsteta-za-uzas/

Verdict of the European Court against North Macedonia for discrimination of Roma students

Roma parents whose children were discriminated against in two primary schools in North Macedonia received an important judgment before the European Court of Human Rights against North Macedonia. The court determined that two elementary schools, "Gjorgi Sugarev" in Bitola and "Goce Delchev" in Shtip, violated the children's right to non-discrimination (Article 14) in connection with their right to education (Article 2 of Protocol No. 1).

Each household (a total of 38 families) was awarded damages in the amount of 1,200 euros, or a total of 45,600 euros for both schools. The case was brought before the Court through two applications submitted by the European Center for Roma Rights (ECPR), which earlier this year secured decisions to end segregation in Bitola and Shtip from the Commission for Prevention and Protection from Discrimination in North Macedonia.

"Within three months, the state should pay compensation to 38 households," said ECPR legal director Senada Sali.

 

Link: http://www.errc.org/news/dismantling-school-segregation-in-bitola-macedonia

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Од 5 Ноември 2022 достапен документарниот филм на СП БТР „Небо, Точак, Земја„ на Max TV и Max TV GO со пребарување –Видеотека

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6-to Romano Čhavorikanoo muzikakoro festivali 
„Čhavorikano Suno 2022“ – SP BTR

6-ти Ромски Детски музички фестивал
„Детски Сон 2022„ – СП БТР

6th Romani Children's Music Festival
"Children's Dream 2022" - SP BTR

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