Slovakia before UN body in hearing on racial discrimination



United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination 
Reviews Slovakia's Compliance with International Law Banning All Forms of 
Racial Discrimination

Geneva: August 9, 2004. On August 9 and 10, the United Nations Committee on 
the Elimination of Racial Discrimination hears the Slovak government 
discuss measures it has undertaken to end racial discrimination in 
Slovakia, as required under the International Convention on the Elimination 
of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD). The Committee -- referred to 
under the shorthand "the CERD" -- is reviewing Slovakia's compliance with 
the provisions of the ICERD, on the basis of a report submitted by the 
Slovak government describing measures undertaken to end all forms of racial 
discrimination in Slovakia, including measures undertaken to remedy the 
very serious human rights issues Roma face in Slovakia. The CERD has also 
received written comments from a number of non-governmental organisations, 
including a 38-page document from the European Roma Rights Center (ERRC), 
detailing concerns with respect to the treatment of Roma in Slovakia.

The ERRC submission includes the results of research undertaken 
independently, as well as collaborative work undertaken with various 
partner organisations in Slovakia, including the League of Human Rights 
Activists, the Milan Simecka Foundation and the Center for Roma Rights 
Slovakia. The submission also includes results of a project documenting 
housing rights issues Roma face in Slovakia, undertaken with local partners 
as well as the international organisation Centre on Housing Rights and 
Evictions, with funding from the UK government's Foreign and Commonwealth 
Office.

The ERRC written submission notes that the Slovak government has not fully 
complied with its obligations under Article 2 of the ICERD to "prohibit and 
bring to an end, by all appropriate means, including legislation [...] 
racial discrimination." Slovak parliament ratified on May 20, 2004, a 
comprehensive anti-discrimination law, and it entered into force on July 1, 
2004. It is too soon to know whether the recently adopted law will in 
practice ensure that all individuals have access to justice when suffering 
the serious harm of racial discrimination. In light of how recently the new 
law was adopted, this submission will not attempt to speculate as to 
whether the law will finally remedy the long-term void of effective legal 
protections available in Slovakia to victims of racial discrimination. It 
is however of concern that on July 2, 2004, one day after the law entered 
into effect, a judge of the Bratislava IVth District court dismissed a 
discrimination complaint in a housing eviction case. It is also worrying 
that the Slovak Minister of Justice has stated that he will file challenges 
to the legality of certain provisions of the adopted law. In practice, Roma 
in Slovakia are regularly subjected to discrimination in almost all aspects 
of their life, from interaction with law-enforcement authorities and the 
judiciary to the exercise of economic, social and cultural rights.

The ERRC submission also details concerns that the Slovak government has 
failed to prevent, prohibit and eradicate the racial segregation of Roma, 
banned under Article 3 of the Convention. This is especially evident in the 
field of education, where officials consistently deny equal access to 
Romani children, placing them in alarming numbers in segregated, 
substandard schools and classes. In addition to the inherent harms flowing 
from this practice, the racial segregation of Romani children in the Slovak 
school system virtually ensures that Roma will remain, for the foreseeable 
future, a systemically excluded underclass. Additionally, a large number of 
Roma live in a state of complete physical separation from mainstream 
society, in slum settlements segregated from the rest of the population and 
characterised by substandard conditions such as lack of basic 
infrastructure and facilities such as sanitation, drinking water, or 
electricity. Racial segregation of Roma in Slovakia has also been 
documented in recent years in the field of health care.

As to Article 4 of the ICERD, the submission notes that anti-Romani hate 
speech is a regular part of public discourse in Slovakia. Anti-Romani 
statements are a standard and often unquestioned part of public life in 
Slovakia, and officials as high-ranking as the Prime Minister have made 
anti-Romani statements. Provisions of the criminal code sanctioning hate 
speech have rarely if ever been applied in cases where Roma are at issue. A 
new draft criminal code, currently before Slovak parliament, would remove 
some legal protections against hate speech, if adopted in its present 
proposed form.

As to Article 5, Roma have, in recent years, suffered violence at the hands 
of both law enforcement and non-state actors, in violation of "the right to 
security of person and protection by the State against violence or bodily 
harm" protected under the Convention. In several recent cases, Roma have 
been killed by Slovak police officers while in police custody. Furthermore, 
authorities continue to fail to provide Roma with adequate protection 
against racially motivated violence perpetrated by members and sympathisers 
of nationalist-extremist movements and other vigilante groups. In addition, 
research by independent human rights groups including the ERRC has revealed 
that Romani women have in recent years been subjected to coercive 
sterilisation in Slovak hospitals.

The ERRC and partner organisations have also documented violations of the 
rights of Roma to be free from discrimination in the exercise of economic 
and social rights, as protected by Article 5. Roma in the Slovak Republic 
suffer discrimination in the fields of employment, housing, health care, 
and access to social assistance and social welfare benefits.

As the substance of the ERRC submission makes clear, the Convention's 
Article 6 guarantee that "States Parties shall assure to everyone within 
their jurisdiction effective protection and remedies, through the competent 
national tribunals and other State institutions, against any acts of racial 
discrimination which violate his human rights and fundamental freedoms 
contrary to this Convention, as well as the right to seek from such 
tribunals just and adequate reparation or satisfaction for any damage 
suffered as a result of such discrimination" currently rings hollow for 
Roma in Slovakia. In 2004, there is near total impunity for racial 
discrimination against Roma, as well as for those who would frustrate Roma 
in their efforts to realise the Convention's substantive provisions.

Furthermore, there are persistent threats to human rights defenders working 
on racism issues in Slovakia. Official threats of criminal charges against 
Roma rights activists in relation to their work raises serious concerns 
about the government's commitment to its obligations under Article 7 of the 
Convention to adopt immediate and effective measures to promote 
understanding, tolerance and friendship among various ethnic groups and to 
propagate the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations, 
the Universal Declaration on Human Rights and the Convention itself. A new 
draft criminal code, currently before Slovak parliament, includes proposals 
for provisions on "defaming a public official" which, if adopted into law, 
would potentially make possible criminal prosecution of individuals for 
public criticism of authorities, and would perpetuate the current "chill" 
prevalent in Slovak public life due to the existence of similar provisions 
in the current Slovak criminal code.

The ERRC submission does not aim to address all issues Roma face in 
Slovakia of relevance to the Convention. The sole ambition of the 
submission is to present the results of ERRC research in several areas of 
relevance to the Convention, with the aim of complementing the information 
provided in the Slovak government's report to the Committee. Following a 
general introduction, the submission presents concerns in the following areas:
* Anti-Romani Expression in Slovakia
* Anti-Discrimination Law and Policy
* Violence
* Coercive Sterilisation of Romani Women
* Medical Care, Social Security and Social Services
* Education
* Housing
* Issues Related to the Provision of/Possession of Residence Permits
* Discrimination in Access to Public Accommodation
* Ethnic Statistical Data
* Human Rights Defenders
The submission concludes with some rudimentary recommendations for the 
Slovak government, intended to assist the Committee in bringing concluding 
observations with respect to Slovakia's compliance with the ICERD.

The full text of the written submission is available on the Internet at: 
http://www.errc.org/Advocacysubmission_index.php

In addition, on August 9, ERRC staff appeared before members of the CERD at 
an oral briefing in the UN's Palais Wilson in Geneva to discuss human 
rights issues facing Roma in Slovakia. Also, on August 10, the ERRC and 
partner organisations will hold a press conference in Bratislava's House of 
Journalists, to present concerns about the situation of Roma in Slovakia, 
as well as to discuss issues raised by the Committee during public hearing 
with members of the Slovak government.

Further information on the situation of Roma in Slovakia, on the UN CERD 
hearing on Slovakia's compliance with the Convention, as well as on other 
issues related to ERRC international advocacy is available by contacting 
the offices of the ERRC.

_____________________________________________

The European Roma Rights Center is an international public interest law 
organisation which monitors the rights of Roma and provides legal defence 
in cases of human rights abuse. For more information about the European 
Roma Rights Center, visit the ERRC on the web at http://www.errc.org.

European Roma Rights Center
1386 Budapest 62
P.O. Box 906/93
Hungary
Phone: +36 1 4132200
Fax:   +36 1 4132201

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