Showing posts with label Romania. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romania. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 July 2011

Report: Migrants left without protection at Europe's Eastern borders

Source: Jesuit Refugee Service Europe

The plight of refugees stuck on the outskirts of the EU is not just an issue confined to the southern Mediterranean. A new JRS report shows that asylum seekers in Ukraine are left to their own devices in a country that cannot provide the protection they need.

The current crisis in the southern Mediterranean, which has witnessed tens of thousands of refugees fleeing to the EU from war-torn Libya, has revealed how important it is for the EU to help it's neighbouring countries to provide humanitarian protection. Ukraine is at the doorstep of Europe, sharing large borders with Poland and Romania. An existing readmission agreement allows these and other EU countries to return any migrant to Ukraine.

According to JRS Europe assistant director Luigi Romano, the potential for human rights abuse is real:
“Readmission at the EU-Ukraine border is cloaked in a veil of mystery. It is unknown whether people are truly able to apply for asylum in Europe, or if they are just sent back without any assessment.”
The report shows that the EU is also complicit. Policymaking toward Ukraine stresses border security and repelling irregular migration at the expense of protection. The EU has provided Ukraine with funding without really determining its ability to provide protection – throwing money at the country instead of addressing the problem in full. “The EU cannot use Ukraine as a shield against migration,” says Luigi Romano, “If the EU wants to help Ukraine improve its asylum systems, then they have to provide economic and technical support, as well proper monitoring and evaluation.”

Refugees are left in Ukraine despite not even wanting to be there. Many are unable to return to their country for fear of persecution, blocked from seeking asylum in the EU by means of detention. JRS interviewed a detained woman in her sixth month of pregnancy. “There was little respect for women in the centre,” she said. Her husband, detained in a separate cell, added, “The director demanded that she stop crying all the time. When she didn’t, she was punished by spending three days in solitary confinement.”

In Ukraine, only 5.459 people have been granted refugee status since 1993. Until recently, three separate ministries oversaw asylum and migration policy, making it a very complex system for anyone to navigate. Ukrainian NGOs revealed that they are making decisions that the ministries should make, since there is not a coherent government policy.

Ukraine is a country still early in its democratic development. Living standards are very low and corruption is rife in the political sphere. “One of the main problems for refugees is that the country lacks clear asylum laws and is barely able to look after its own people, let alone foreigners'', says David Nazar, director of JRS Ukraine.

The report, No Other Option: Testimonies from Asylum Seekers Living in Ukraine, is based on face-to-face interviews with asylum seekers, Ukrainian authorities and civil society organisations in Lviv.
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Saturday, 12 March 2011

Video: new documentary takes the viewer to the heart of the struggle for LGBT rights in Belarus

The Eastern Bloc - after the annexations and i...Image via Wikipedia
By Logan Mucha

Often called the last dictatorship in Europe, Belarus is a country where being openly gay leads to beatings and arrests.

East Bloc Love is Australian filmmaker Logan Mucha’s debut feature documentary following the journey of the young Belarusian activist, Sergey Yenin, as he and other activists prepare for a defiant march on the streets of the capital Minsk.
“As a gay male from a Australia, I was inspired by the strength and courage of these activists in the face of their government’s ban on the pride march and the looming violence from homophobic skinheads” says Logan Mucha.
The young director was able to document the personal stories of individuals from countries in Latvia, Romania, Poland, Estonia, Russia and Belarus.  These characters range from activists, a drag queen, a pre-op transsexual and a rock musician, giving the viewer a broad view on the state of LGBT rights in the former Soviet bloc.

East Bloc Love is a co-production with the human rights project, GayRussia and its founder Nikolai Alekseev. The International Day Against Homophobia has also contributed financial support to the film.

The film is currently in consideration for a number of international film festivals and is available for review upon request.

Trailer

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Monday, 24 January 2011

In US, gay Romani Romanian seeks asylum

Flag of the Romani people, made using these di...Image via Wikipedia   
Source: CAIR Coalition

LK is a 23 year old Romanian citizen.  He entered the United States with his family either as a refugee on December 1, 2008 and adjusted to Legal Permanent Residence on July 13, 2009.  He fears returning to Romania because he fears persecution as a Gypsy and a homosexual.

LK claims that his family has been persecuted as Gypsies and that he was physically assaulted numerous times for being one.  He was forced out of school because people threw rocks at him when he tried to attend class.  He claims his grandfather was murdered for money and because he was a Gypsy.  He describes multiple incidents of persecution against his family because of their ethnicity.   He claims his mother also had difficulty finding work because she was a Gypsy.  LK claims that in 2007 there was an attempted kidnapping and attempted rape against his sister.  He also has stated that his sister’s son was kidnapped and sold.  LK’s sister has since disappeared and he fears she is dead.

LK is openly gay and enjoys wearing women’s clothing.  As a child his mother kept him inside often so that he would not be accosted for being gay. When he was approximately twelve years old, he says that he was pushed from a 3rd or 4th floor apartment window for being a homosexual.  He suffered a severe head injury which has caused permanent short term memory loss, as well as chronic headaches.  The police never pursued the matter.  LK claims to have been physically assaulted numerous times for being a homosexual.

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