Your browser's privacy settings appear to be blocking this content from being displayed. Please review your privacy and tracking protection settings to enable this service. For more information, visit:
Select a country.
Select your country to follow your local MEPs' news:
Selected language: English
What are you looking for?
09.10.2013 16:21
National strategies must better involve, target and protect Roma
Important notice
Views expressed here are the views of the national delegation and do not always reflect the views of the group as a whole
The European Parliament held a debate in Strasbourg on the situation of Roma. EPP Group MEP Lívia Járóka reminded that only a fraction of Roma inclusion assets had reached their target group and that the Western European countries have also failed to solve the social problems aroused by immigration. She therefore urged the implementation of the EU Framework Strategy, as an action plan embraced through the entire continent and across the political divide.
As the keynote speaker of the EPP Group, MEP Lívia Járóka reminded that the incoherent, weak and in many cases fake inclusion programmes of the past twenty years had proved completely inadequate for fostering social inclusion and that the obvious failures had also directed the responsibility at Roma communities themselves, despite several studies showing that in some cases less than 10% of all Roma inclusion assets had reached their target group. Járóka emphasized that also the long-established and wealthy democracies of Western Europe proved to be no better than those they had been criticising, because their responses for social problems were ranging from detentions to evictions and expulsions when a massive influx of migration has begun as a fairly predictable consequence of combining free movement with the enormous regional disparities between old and new Member States.
According to her, Roma inclusion had become a massive economic burden that the actors throughout Europe wished to get rid of by loading it on each other’s shoulders, or even worse: a political mace that parties would hit each other with, should their selfish and short-term interests demand so. Járóka reminded that in 2010, when the expulsions in France began, a massive campaign had started demanding EU action against the French government and thousands had protested on the streets for human rights. 'Why are they silent now, when the expulsions continue uninterrupted? Was it minority rights they cared about, or only ousting President Sarkozy?' - she asked in her speech.
Finally, she expressed her hope that current anti-Roma incidents would not pass without consequences and after two decades of stumbling from one crisis management to the next under successive governments, governments would for once and for all understand that success demanded a solution that was embraced through the entire continent and across the political divide. 'We need a strategy which tackles the hopeless marginalization of the most vulnerable communities, which is the root of social tensions and economic migration. And one that also contributes to a cultural shift among Roma, from a cluster of closed, defensive and disparate communities to an open, self-aware and integrated European minority' - Járóka concluded.
former EPP Group MEP
Miklos PANYI
former staff member
6 / 50