|
Per contatti:
Piero
Colacicchi (3408142949)
Cittadinanze
Imperfette. Rapporto sulla discriminazione
razziale di rom e sinti in Italia, a cura di Nando
Sigona e Lorenzo Monasta, Spartaco,
2006

|
ERRC,
OsservAzione e Open Society Institute chiedono
alla Commissione Europea di aprire un fascicolo
contro l'Italia per la violazione dei diritti
umani fondamentali di rom e sinti
Brussels,
Budapest, Florence, New York, 5 May 2009: Under
the guise of conducting a census for humanitarian
reasons, Italy is consistently violating the fundamental
rights of Roma and Sinti enshrined in EU law,
according to letters submitted to the European
Commission by rights groups yesterday. In the
letters, directed to European Commissioners Spidla
and Barrot, the European Roma Rights Centre, osservAzione
and the Open Society Institute requested that
the Commission launch infringement proceedings
addressing Italy’s non-compliance with the
EU Race Equality Directive and the EU Data Protection
Directive.
Eleven
months after the Italian government enacted its
“Declaration of the state of emergency with
regard to settlements of nomad communities in
the territories of Campania, Lazio and Lombardia
regions” and supporting regulations, the
Government has focused its “emergency response”
on the coercive documentation of Roma and Sinti
in numerous camps, taking their photographs and
their fingerprints, engaging in house searches
without a court order, and in some cases using
the information gathered to deport those who cannot
demonstrate a right to live in Italy.
The
Italian Government has consistently held that
no database has been created and that the census
was carried out in accordance with national and
international laws and regulations concerning
the protection of privacy. The submitting organisations
supported their requests with a jointly prepared
memorandum outlining in detail the process of
census implementation and its violation of protection
regulations set out in EU law including threats,
intimidation and other forms of coercion, significant
shortcomings concerning adequate information provision
and informed consent, and widespread photographing
of Roma and Sinti.
Commenting
on the real intention of the census, the submitting
organisations noted increased law enforcement
and immigration controls, as well as the growing
threat of forced eviction for many Roma and Sinti.
|