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Original sender: Mediafax
No. 25 / September 30, 2002
REINTEGRATION MEASURES FOR ILLEGALLY MIGRATED ROMA PEOPLE
PARTHENRSHIP BETWEEN ROMA REPRESENTATIVES-ROMANIAN GENDARMERIE
GYPSY ASYLUM-SEEKERS FLOOD INTO SWITZERLAND FROM ROMANIA
Original sender: Mediafax
No. 25 / September 30, 2002
REINTEGRATION MEASURES FOR ILLEGALLY MIGRATED ROMA PEOPLE
BUCHAREST - The Romanian Government last week announced the first measures to help Romanian citizens of Roma ethnicity who illegally migrated or been expelled from different European countries. The reintegrated persons will benefit from the State a ROL 800,000 grant monthly - adults and ROL 300,000 grant monthly - the underage, for six months time; throughout this period they will be accommodated in territorial resource centers of social reintegration (unless they own property or rent house), will do professional training courses, will have support to be work-integrated, also their children will be integrated into the national education system. Government initiated the measures as a result of the effects triggered by illegal migrated Roma ethnics' deeds in West, mainly in France and Switzerland. DIVERS
PARTHENRSHIP BETWEEN ROMA REPRESENTATIVES-ROMANIAN GENDARMERIE
BUCHAREST - The commander of Romanian Gendarmerie and the president of Social-Democrat Roma Party on Monday, September 23, signed a new partnership protocol, the agreement implying new ways for the accommodation and prevention of interethnic and community conflicts. Romanian Gendarmerie and Roma representatives signed the first protocol in March 2000, while its renewal was reasoned by the necessity to align the partnership's document with the Strategy of the Romanian Government as regards the improvement of Roma people's condition, as well as the relations trend between the singing parties. DIVERS
GYPSY ASYLUM-SEEKERS FLOOD INTO SWITZERLAND FROM ROMANIA
GENEVA - Some 150 Romanian asylum-seekers were found wandering in western Switzerland last week, bringing to more than 400 the number who have arrived in the country in the past two weeks, Associated Press reports.
The group of Gypsies, which included 69 children was discovered early morning close to the railway station in Vallorbe, several kilometers (miles) from the French border. Authorities said they believed the group had reached Switzerland by crossing fields. The group has been temporarily lodged in a nearby refugee reception center.
Earlier groups of asylum-seekers said they had come to Switzerland in trucks or buses from France or Austria and had paid up to US$500 each for the journey.
Swiss authorities have mobilized around 30 translators from around the country to take the details of the Romanians' asylum demands. A decision is expected next week on the first group of Gypsies, or Roma, who arrived in Switzerland on September 13, said Dominique Boillat, spokesman for the Federal Refugee Office. It is unlikely that any will qualify for asylum as Romania is considered to be a safe country. Romanian citizens do not need visas to enter France as tourists, but they do need visas for Switzerland. In a statement, Romania's Foreign Minister, Mircea Geoana, said he is closely following the situation. The Foreign Ministry will send experts to the Swiss capital, Bern to find "rapid ways to resolve the crisis by repatriating Romanian citizens," the statement said. Jean-Philippe Chauzy, spokesman for the International Organization for Migration, said the influx may be linked to a visit to Romania at the end of August by French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy. French police in recent months have arrested Romanian citizens on suspicions they sent children and disabled people to France to beg, according to French media reports. Sarkozy told reporters that he and Romanian Prime Minister Adrian Nastase had agreed "that Romanian delinquents in France will be arrested and will have their goods (in Romania) confiscated." Romania hopes to join the European Union in 2007 and has been told to tighten border controls. The government has been criticized because groups of Gypsies have traveled to France for begging. Chauzy said there was a similar influx of Romanian Gypsies seeking asylum in Finland several years ago. The Finnish authorities stemmed the flow by announcing that appeals by people who had their requests for asylum refused would be held in Romania. The Gypsy community is very well-informed about asylum policies in European countries, Chauzy said. "Some countries are probably targeted at some time and others not," he said. The Roma are one of Europe's most impoverished minorities. In Romania and elsewhere, they are often unemployed because of prejudice and discrimination, human rights groups say. Romania, with a population of nearly 24 million people, officially is home to 540,000 Roma. But that is commonly considered underreported with the true figure estimated at more than 1 million.
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DIVERS is a weekly news bulletin edited by the Mediafax News Agency with financial support from Ethnocultural Diversity Resource Center (EDRC) in Cluj.
For now, the full version of the bulletin is only available in Romanian and can be found at www.divers.ro E-mail: divers@mediafax.ro
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