sâmbătă, 17 decembrie 2011

Tolerance.ro: Russian elections: the members of the European Parliament call for new free and fair elections

re After the US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton voiced "serious concerns" about the parliamentary elections which took place in Russia, this week, the MEPs called for new free and fair elections and an immediate and full investigation of all reports of fraud and intimidation in the Russian elections held on 4 December, while welcoming demonstrations in Russia as an expression of the will of the people in a resolution passed on Wednesday.

"MEPs stress that the running of the election showed that Russia does not meet election standards as defined by the OSCE, and express deep concern about reports of fraud and the preliminary findings of the OSCE/ODIHR report on procedural violations, lack of media impartiality, harassment of independent monitors and lack of separation between party and state".

Details: http://tolerance.ro/news/russian-elections-the-members-of-the-european-parliament-call-for-new-free-and-fair-elections/

vineri, 7 octombrie 2011

Youthvoice.ro/English: The legislative proposal for volutary sterilization (Slovakia) is criticized for being aimed against roma (gipsy) comunity

The Slovak Labour Ministry recently released its draft law on socially-excluded communities that aims to create MAPS of socially-excluded communities living in poverty and suffering from other maladies linked to exclusion from mainstream society which the minister say will be used as a tool to combat marginalisation.

The Labour Ministry stated in releasing its draft law on socially-excluded communities. The draft, generally viewed by many observers as a positive.

The draft attempts, they say, to ameliorate some of the problems faced by marginalised citizens, also includes some specific proposals that several MPs from the coalition government have already objected to, such as cost-free voluntary sterilisations and contraceptives.

miercuri, 8 iunie 2011

YouthVoice.ro/English: Summer School | Understanding International Criminal Law, Sibiu, Romania

The experience of the past century bitterly reminds us of the atrocities that took place in different parts of the world in a state of impunity from national authorities and international community. The brutal legacy of the last 100 years called for the need to establish a new field of law that would allow international bodies to exercise jurisdiction over individuals for a series of very grave crimes that “deeply shocked the conscience of humanity”.

We warmly invite you to this summer school in order to study a field about which little is known, but represents an unprecedented milestone in the development of international law. In the course of the event, you will be guided through the essential notions of international criminal law.

The interactive and practice-oriented approach provides the best conditions to acquire knowledge and insight on the subject matter, while the inter-cultural dimension allows you to improve your appreciation of other peoples. Therefore, this summer seminar will greatly contribute to your development, by broadening your horizons and your understanding of the international legal system and also by opening the way to a possible career in the field.

The event is scheduled to take place 23-31 July 2011 in Sibiu, Romania. It will consist of a series of daily lectures and seminars, followed by a simulation of the International Criminal Court.


sâmbătă, 23 aprilie 2011

TimocPress.info/en: STATEMENT of the Committee for Human Rights, Negotin, Serbia

Negotin, Serbia/TimocPress - The Week Against Racism on March 14th to 21st in Negotin have started talks and preparations for marking of the International Day for the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination.

In memory of the 69 people who protested against the racist policy of apartheid and therefore killed March 21st 1960 in the South African city Sharpville, the General Assembly of the Council of Europe (1966) has decided that March 21st each year is designated as International Day for the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination.

In the small hall of the Municipal Assembly on Monday March 21st 2011 in Negotin, from 11 to 12h, at a press conference will speak the representatives of:
- Municipalities Negotin
- Working body for gender equality of Negotin
- Member of the Municipal Council of Negotin
- Human Rights Negotin

Network Committee for Human Rights in Serbia CHRIS through the existence of local offices (in Novi Sad, Valjevo, Nis, Novi Pazar and Negotin), mark the International Day for the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination with the slogan RESPECT DIVERSITY ERADICATE DISCRIMINATION!

At Djordje Stanojevic Square on Monday March 21st 2011, from 12 to 14h, in the realisation of the Committee for Human Rights Negotin, will be distributed printed educational and promotional materials (Calendar with 12 winners of the fight against discrimination and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Law on Prohibition …), and in direct contact with citizens to remind us of the fact that we all have to fight for human rights and the principle of equality.

Action is being implemented under the project entitled “Human rights for all”, supported by the Fund for Open Society in Belgrade.

Source: www.TimocPress.info/en

Please see below the FOTO galery of the project “Play it right”

For the FOTO galery of the project “Play it right” click here!

vineri, 11 februarie 2011

Please see attached the brochure of the “Play it right” project

For the brochure of the “Play it right” project click here !

Gypsy or Rroma minority in Europe want to change their name again and they want to call themselves as “INDIROMA” minority

Gypsy or Rroma minority in Europe want to change their name again and they want to call themselves as “INDIROMA” minority

The Rroma minority that lives in many European countries are called like Cigano, Gitan, Gitanos, Gypsies, Zingaro, Zigeuner, Tsigan, Cigan, Ţigan or Rroma with one or two “r”.

After the change of name from “Gypsy” to “Rroma” at the beginning of the 90’, now, more and more people propose other changes. For instance, the representative of the Rroma (Gypsy) population into the Parliamnet of Romania, Nicolae Paun proposed that the names “Gypsy” or “Rroma” should be abandoned and “Gypsy” population should adopt the name “Indiroma”.

That rationale is based on the fact that the Gypsy population is originated from India and this term “Indirom/Indiroma” would be more appropriate for a correct understanding of their culture and origin.

Romanian Senate rejects ‘Roma’ word change and the return to ‘Gypsy’ in official documents

Romanian Senate rejects ‘Roma’ word change and the return to ‘Gypsy’ in official documents

Although the Senate committees approved replacing the term ‘Roma’ with ‘Gipsy’, the senators rejected a draft bill proposed by the Democrat-Liberal Deputy Silviu Prigoana, under which the word “Roma” would be changed and return to the word “Gypsy” in official documents.

The majority of the senators who took the floor, both from among the ruling coalition and the opposition, stood against the document of Prigoana.

Law Commission Chairman Toni Grebla considered that the ethnic denomination in question cannot be decreed as such, given its members bear their historically inherited name anyway. Grebla said that the matter at stake is rooted in the 1990s law under which the word “gypsy” was changed into “Roma”.

joi, 10 februarie 2011

Proud to be Roma: Roma-Hungarian MEP Lívia Járóka on the need for a European strategy


reDue to the fact that as many as 12 million European Roma continue to face segregation and intergenerational poverty throughout the EU, the Union is searching for European-wide solutions. With a European Roma Strategy being a priority for the Hungarian EU Presidency, we talked to Lívia Járóka (EPP), the only Roma member of European Parliament. The 36-year old Hungarian MEP has prepared a report on the strategy that would allow Europe to use the untapped potential of the Roma people.

Details: http://www.europarl.europa.eu

duminică, 6 februarie 2011

Encouraged by Moscow, Rusins Step Up Drive for Autonomy and Threaten Kyiv with Armed Revolt

UA-REPORTER

Encouraged by Moscow, Rusins Step Up Drive for Autonomy and Threaten Kyiv with Armed Revolt

Dmitry Sidor
Dmitry Sidor

Only weeks after Russia’s consul general in Lviv called him the “Moses” of his people, Dmitry Sidor, an Uzhgorod priest loyal to Moscow who heads the Rusin movement in Transcarpathia, declared this week that “after many years” of using only political tactics, the Rusins are now prepared to “defend their freedom with arms in their hands.”


How seriously this threat should be taken is an open question. On the one hand, the Rusins have made similar threats before, most notably at the end of 2008. And on the other, an actual revolt as opposed to the threat of one would complicate Russian-Ukrainian relations and threaten Moscow’s oil and gas exports to Europe, much of which flows via Transcarpathia.


But however that may be, Sidor’s remark, especially coming in the wake of the comment of the Russian diplomat, seems intended both to remind the Ukrainian authorities that the Rusins have not gone away and to send a message to Kyiv that Moscow is paying attention to that community and is prepared to exploit that group if Ukraine does not bend to Russia’s will.


Yesterday, Sidorov said that the Rusins “are accusing Kyiv of ethnocide and discrimination with obvious elements of genocide” because of Ukraine’s “barbaric” failure to recognize the Rusins and “its ban on Rusin schools and the study of the Rusin language” (vvnews.info/analytics/region/65736-rusiny-zakarpatya-gotovy-k-voyne-s-ukrainoy.html).

If Ukraine and the new authorities will be able to recognize the rights of Rusins,” he continued, “then we Rusins are ready to remain a Ukrainian enclave, a Ukrainian Kaliningrad.” But if Ukraine won’t recognize “our lawfrul status of autonomy,” then “we will peacefully divorce. Like the Czech Republic from Slovakia.”


That can take place peacefully, the priest said. But “international law” allows for a solution brought about by force. “A people after many years of seeking its rights,” he said, “has the right with arms in its hands to defend its freedom,” just as the international community recognized in the case of the Croatians.


Sidor says that “we do not intend to fight and seek a diplomatic path because we believe in the reality of the achievement of our rights.” “At a minimum,” 70 percent of the residents of Transcarpathia are Rusins, making them “’a titular nation’” numbering today “approximately 800,000.”


Two years ago, when he and the Rusins made similar declarations and asked that Moscow recognize their independence, the Ukrainian authorities opened a case against Sidorov for threatening the territorial independence of the country. But since that time, two things have changed.


There is now a pro-Moscow government in Kyiv, and last fall Russia’s consul general in Lviv met with Sidorov and compared him to Moses because, he said, the Rusin priest is leading his people out of the wilderness (ru.tsn.ua/ukrayina/genkonsul-rf-nazval-lidera-podkarpatskih-rusinov-novym-moiseem.html).


Almost exactly two years ago, the Rusins asked Moscow to recognize them as an independent country because Kyiv was ignoring their demands for autonomy within Ukraine. That followed the Second European Congress of Rusins in Mukhachevo, which declared that the Rusins would seek independence on December 1st if they didn’t get autonomy.


December 1 came and went, but on December 19, an international scientific practical conference on “Genocide and Cultural Ethnocide of the Rusins of Carpathian Rus (the end of the 19th Century to the Beginning of the 21st Century)” assembled in Rostov-na-Donu and adopted a resolution on their cause.


Among the resolution’s key points was an insistence that alongside the Armenians, the Rusins – or Ruthenians, as they are also known -- were the victims of the first genocide of the 20th century, one carried out by the Austro-Hungarians. Today, the resolution continued, Kyiv is extending this through “a policy of cultural ethnocide.”


In addition, that document declared that the Ruthenians are recognized as a unique people in all countries of the region except Ukraine and that they enjoy the support of international organizations like the UN whose committee on the liquidation of racial discrimination in August 2006 criticized Kyiv for not supporting them.


And it pointed out that the status of the Transcarpathian Rusins has not yet been defined – Kyiv has not yet recognized the 1946 treaty which incorporated them into the Soviet Union – and that the Ukrainian government continues to ignore the December 1991 referendum in which the Rusins voted for autonomy as well as for Ukrainian independence.


But perhaps most important, Rusin leaders then and now noted that “the lion’s share” of Russian gas on its way to European markets flows through Subcarpathian Rus, “twice more than through the Baltic states [in 2008] and twice more than through other neighboring countries” as well.

UA-REPORTER

European Parliament: Human Rights Subcommittee discusses Russian Khodorkovsky case

Human Rights Subcommittee discusses Russian Khodorkovsky case

The key points

  • Kremlin critic Michail Khodorkovsky convicted of more charges prior to Christmas
  • Sentences condemned by MEPs
Former Yukos oil company CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky is seen in the defendants' cage just after a verdict during a court session in Moscow on December 30, 2010. ©BELGA

Former Yukos oil company CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky is seen in the defendants' cage just after a verdict during a court session in Moscow on December 30, 2010. ©BELGA

A "missed opportunity" and a "severe setback" were just two of the opinions voiced when MEPs on the Human Rights Sub Committee discussed the case of Russian former oligarch turned Kremlin critic Michail Khodorkovsky. He and his business partner were recently found guilty of theft and tax fraud thus extending their sentences which many see as politically motivated. Maria Logan of the Khodorkovsky legal team was also present on 10 January to discuss the case.

Speaking to those assembled Maria Logan noted: "The Khodorkovsky case clearly shows that you cannot count on the Courts to protect you against the government of Russia." She noted that after the trial, many leading politicians from the EU and the USA criticised the political motives behind the case and showed support to the Khodorkovsky family.

Michail Khodorkovsky born 1963

  • Formerly richest man in Russia (26th worldwide in 2003)
  • Bought 78% of shares of Russian oil company Yukos in 2002
  • Used his fame to criticise then President Putin publicly
  • Arrested in 2003 for tax fraud
  • Sentenced to 8 years in prison

Parliament's President Jerzy Buzek said in a statement following the verdict: "I am very disappointed. The trials of Mikhail Khodorkovsky were the litmus test of how the rule of law and human rights are treated in today's Russia. In effect it has become the emblematic symbol of all the systemic problems within the judiciary."

British Liberal Graham Watson told the meeting that "this latest conviction is a severe setback. It became clear that the real reason was the financing of opposition parties".

German Green Member Werner Schulz noted that "there is no strategic partnership with Russia. The time for quiet diplomacy is over. Russia had an opportunity and missed it".

On New Year´s Eve Moscow saw clashes between the authorities and protesters angry over the Khodorkovsky verdict and restrictions on the freedom of assembly.

The police detained some 130 people, with three prominent opposition leaders arrested and jailed for "disobedience towards the police".

Source: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/public/story_page/015-111414-010-01-03-902-20110110STO11394-2011-10-01-2011/default_en.htm

Prima bibliotecă de carte bisericească şi laică în Timoc

În Timoc a fost deschisă prima bibliotecă de carte bisericească şi laică care va funcţiona în cadrul Protopopiatului Bisericii Ortodoxe Române al Daciei Ripensis cu sediul în oraşul Nigotin.

Preotul-martir Boian Alexandrovici a declarat joi, că a luat această iniţiativă în scopul iniţierii credincioşilor tineri şi bătrâni în cititul în limba română şi în educarea tinerei generaţii în cultul creştin al românilor ortodocşi din ţinuturile istorice Timoc, Morava şi sudul Dunării.

,,De aproape 180 de ani populaţia românească din Serbia de nord-est nu a mai avut posibilitatea să mai înveţe a citi în limba maternă a strămoşilor. Întrucât în zonă nu există şcoli în limba română credem că trebuie să osârdim şi să naştem în sufletele oamenilor dragostea faţă de trecutul şi istoria străbunilor”, a precizat Alexandrovici.

Detalii: http://www.timocpress.info/?p=3690

www.cdcs.org.rs: Religious discrimination in Vojvodna continues

The Provincial Secretariat for Regulations, Administration and National Communities has again invited only the so-called traditional churches and religious communities to apply for grants allocated to churches and religious communities.

Such behavior of the Provincial Secretariat for Regulations, Administration and National Communities regarding financing of churches and religious communities is yet another case of religious discrimination, direct discredit of recommendations of the Provincial Ombudsman, violation of provisions from articles 11, 21 and 44 of the Constitution of the Republic of Serbia, provisions of paragraphs 2 and 3 of the Law on Churches and Religious Communities and provisions of articles 4, 5, 6 and 8 of the Law on the Prohibition of Discrimination.

Details: http://cdcs.org.rs/index.php

www.chris-negotin.org: TEN YEARS OF NETWORK COMMITTIEE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS IN SERBIA CHRIS

Since the democratic changes 2000th the Serbia is making efforts to strengthen its democratic potential and create a social system based on the rule of law and respect for human rights and freedoms. The fact is that Serbia in the past 10 years has made progress in the realization of human rights which is evident in the normative part of the law-making and practical part of their application.

However, Serbia has not yet reached a level of respect for human rights and freedoms befitting a country that is a member of the Council of Europe. Despite the European Convention on Human Rights and other documents binding the state of Serbia, the authorities, courts and prosecutors offices to some extent their acts or omissions are leading to a breach of the provisions of these international documents. The judiciary, which has a key role in achieving the rule of law and achieving justice is faced with reforms that are being implemented for many years without satisfactory results and, as such, remains unstable link of a state.