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BUCHAREST - The European Union representatives in Romania on July 25 announced a Euro 927,500 grant for certain programs referring to...
NEW EU FUNDS TO IMPROVE ROMA SITUATION
BUCHAREST - The European Union representatives in Romania on July 25 announced a Euro 927,500 grant for certain programs referring to country's Roma social and economic integration. There are financed 29 new projects in fields such as public administration, education, health, social services, communication and civic participation. Chief of the European Commission Delegation in Romania, Jonathan Scheele, stated that the improvement of Roma situation in Romania is a very important issue in fulfilling the political criteria for joining EU. Furthermore, the European Union will uphold the implementation of the National Strategy to enhance Roma condition in Romania and will increase the financial support granted, if the authorities prove capacity in absorbing more significant funds. "The projects adjudicated as successful in the bid organized for the Fund of the Improvement for the Situation of Roma proves there is high capacity of absorption both at the level of communities as well as at the civil society", stated Scheele. DIVERS
OSCE STATES URGED TO FULFILL OBLIGATIONS TO ROMA
United States Helsinki Commission leaders last week remembered the anniversary of the Romani Holocaust observed annually on August 2nd and 3rd.
During the night of August 2-3, 1944, the Romani camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau was liquidated. Nearly three thousand Romani men, women and children were killed in the gas chambers in a single night.
Roma around the globe have come to remember their Holocaust experiences on these days.
"The single most defining experience for Roma in the 20th century was the Holocaust, known in Romani as the Porrajmos, the Devouring," said Helsinki Commission Chairman Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell. "During World War II, Roma were targeted for death by the Nazis based on their ethnicity. At least 23,000 Roma were delivered to Auschwitz. Almost all of them perished in the gas chambers or from starvation, exhaustion or disease."
"The Helsinki Commission held our third hearing on Roma in April of this year," said Commission Co-Chairman Rep. Christopher H. Smith. "Testimony at these hearings reflected the magnitude of the discrimination and violence still confronting Roma in many countries. Violent attacks against Roma, including murders, often go unpunished, such as the arson murder of a family of five in Ukraine last October."
"At the 1999 Istanbul Summit, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe participating States agreed to adopt anti-discrimination legislation to protect Roma," said Commission Ranking Member Rep. Steny H. Hoyer. "The adoption in 2000 of the European Union's 'race directive,' which requires all EU member states and applicant countries to adopt comprehensive anti-discrimination legislation, should spur this effort." In certain countries, political leaders use Nazi-era rhetoric, describing Roma as "asocial," or defending repressive measures against Roma as "social hygiene measures," implying that they are inherently unfit for European society. More than half a century after Roma suffered forced sterilization at the hands of Joseph Mengele and others, some public officials openly speak of limiting Romani birth rates.
Roma were among those targeted for complete annihilation by the Nazis; however, their suffering before and during World War II is not well known. During the 1920s and 1930s, institutionalized racism against Roma took on an increasingly virulent form. Policies similar to those instituted against Germany's Jews were also implemented against Roma. In addition to their systematic destruction at Auschwitz, Roma were killed elsewhere in German-occupied territory by special SS squads, regular army units or police, often shot at the village's edge and dumped into mass graves.
It is difficult to estimate the size of the pre-war European Romani population and war-time losses. Some scholars, however, suggest the size of the Romani population in Germany and German-occupied territories was around 942,000 and that 500,000 Roma were killed during the Holocaust. Approximately 25,000 Roma from Romania were deported en masse to Transnistria in Romanian-occupied Ukraine in 1942; some 19,000 of them perished there.
After World War II, the post-Nazi German Government strongly resisted redressing past wrongs committed against Roma, seeking to limit its accountability. The first German trial decision to recognize that Roma as well as Jews were genocide victims during the Third Reich was not handed down until 1991.
Public awareness of the nature and extent of Romani losses continues to expand as new archival material becomes available and new generations of researchers examine the Holocaust experiences of Roma. DIVERS
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