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In Ukraine - "The Roma live where the asphalt ends"

The situation of Roma in Ukraine - not despite, but because of the war. What he sees reveals an urgent need for action.

"The Roma live where the asphalt ends," they say, as the road in Uzhhorod, a city in Ukraine, abruptly turns into a dusty dirt road: Radvanka, a district of 3,000 inhabitants. Because the Roma, as an unrecognized and structurally disadvantaged minority, suffer the most from the situation.

It is estimated that up to 400,000 members of the Roma-speaking minority live in Ukraine, mainly Roma from various ethnic groups. They are disadvantaged at all levels: in education, in health, in the job and housing market, in the authorities. The Roma, who were undocumented even in Soviet times, have to overcome enormous obstacles to obtain identity cards, and their situation is particularly precarious. According to NGOs, 30 percent of these Ukrainians live integrated in the cities, but most deny their identity for fear of discrimination. 70 percent live in built-up areas - in middle-class conditions, adequately cared for or in severe poverty.

 

Link: https://www.migazin.de/2022/11/14/ukraine-reise-dort-wo-der-asphalt-endet-leben-die-roma/?fbclid=IwAR3UEQeoSCSjalML3EhTJSuWaef7xbFrSYe4-nqeDiPo9XGIhiYubzuVfkc#lajvn9rgxv0w2su378k

"The Long Way of Sinti and Roma" is awarded the German Human Rights Film Award 2022.

"The Long Way of Sinti and Roma" is awarded the German Human Rights Film Award 2022. We congratulate Adrian Oeser. Bibi Zilli Schmidt tells her story of persecution in the documentary. In addition, Rudko Kawczynski, chairman of the RCU, talks about the beginnings of civil law work of the Roma and Sinti in Germany. Extract from the jury's testimony: "The strength of this film is that it gives the word to different generations of Sinti and Roma in order to strongly depict the despicable practices of justice and majority society before and especially after 1945. (... ) The film - according to the opinion of the jury - receives an emotional power that touches through the open space it gives the protagonists. It's a truthful and authentic movie, not about Sinti and Roma, but about them. He addresses a still open wound in German society, about which there is far too little talk. "

Czech Govt Human Rights Commissioner: Unfortunate decision not to compensate Romani woman for sterilization contradicts the very point of the law

Czech Government Human Rights Commissioner Klára Laurenčíková has told news server Romea.cz she considers the recent decision by the Czech Health Ministry to not compensate a woman who was forced to undergo sterilization under threat of her children being taken away from her - a woman whose Romani origin is also listed in the medical records as the reason for her to be sterilized - to be a decision that contradicts the very point and purpose of the compensation law, which is unfortunate. The Human Rights League reported on the case this week.

In the medical records for this applicant, her Romani origin is explicitly listed as the only reason for her sterilization. She had been threatened with having her children taken away from her and placed in an orphanage if she did not comply and was sterilized in 1989.

 

Link: https://romea.cz/en/czech-republic/czech-govt-human-rights-commissioner-unfortunate-decision-not-to-compensate-romani-woman-for-sterilization-contradicts-the-very-point-of-the-law

The results of the census in Bulgaria show that 84 percent are Bulgarians, 8.4 percent are Turks, and 4.4 percent are Roma.

Bulgaria's National Statistical Institute reported that 5,118,494 people belong to the Bulgarian ethnic group, which is 84.6 percent of those who answered the ethnicity question in the September 2021 census. Compared to 2011, it is a decrease of 0.2%.

508,378, or 8.4%, declared themselves as belonging to the Turkish ethnic group in Bulgaria – a decrease of 0.4% in the last ten years when the previous census was conducted. The third largest ethnic group in Bulgaria are the Roma.

 266,720 declared themselves as such, or 4.4% – a decrease of 0.5%. 79,006 people (1.3%) declared that they belonged to other ethnic groups.

15,746 (0.3%) people cannot self-determine. 77.5% of the Bulgarian, 38.4% of the Turkish and 51.0% of the Roma ethnic group live in the cities of Bulgaria.

Population aging in Bulgaria mostly affects people from the Bulgarian ethnic community 25.0%, the Turkish ethnic group is 19.8%, and the Roma 7.3%.

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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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