The refugee crisis Europe forgot
Written by: Save the Children
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Widow Mehira sits outside her tin and wood hut
By Phoebe Greenwood Just outside Montenegro's capital Podgorica, next to the city's rubbish dump, is Konik refugee camp. A sprawl of tin-roofed huts and U.N. tents enclosed by wire-fencing, it is home to more than 2,000 Roma refugees who have lived here for ten years since fleeing violence in Kosovo. It is the largest refugee camp in the Balkans. Hundreds of children live here in inhuman conditions without enough food or water and yet almost no one outside of Montenegro has heard of it. Conditions in Konik are dire. Fires are a regular threat and often fatal. Three weeks ago, a blaze caused by faulty wiring destroyed 18 wooden huts and left 124 people without shelter. These families now live in U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) tents or have moved in with relatives in their already over-crowded shacks. This time, luckily, no lives were lost. The camp has irregular electricity and water supplies. In the summer when temperatures regularly exceed 40 degrees Celsius, there is simply not enough water to go round. At the nearby rubbish dump, Podgorica's waste is burnt off every day. As a result of the putrid air, lung complaints are common. Refugees in Montenegro are not allowed to work as they have no documents so most in the camp survive by picking food out of garbage bins in Podgorica. "My husband died here eight years ago, I believe out of fear and sadness," says 56-year-old Mehria. "You see the house I live in here - it is falling apart. Every time it rains, water comes in through the roof and soaks everything. I feed my children and myself by searching rubbish bins for food. This is a crisis because no one is helping us." Few children go to school. At Konik primary school, 270 of the 1,300 students are Roma. Save the Children, which has been working on education projects to integrate Roma children since 2002, says keeping them in school remains a major problem. Few will complete primary education. "Roma children are among the most marginalised in this part of the world," says Jasminka Milovanovic, Save the Children's communications and advocacy manager. "A high drop-out rate is one of the biggest problems for various reasons - lack of material resources, lack of motivation and a need to make some money. These children are living in bad conditions and are not accepted at school by pupils or teachers because of the bad hygiene." The Roma are an ethnic minority scattered across Central and Eastern Europe, with a large community in the Balkan states. An estimated 3.7 million Roma live in South Eastern Europe. Across the region, they suffer high unemployment rates, lack of education, poverty and discrimination. The Roma community in Konik are refugees from Kosovo. Most left their homes and land during the conflict in the 1990s when Kosovan Albanians pushed them out, perceiving them as allies of their Serb persecutors. Student Sebajdih Krasnici, 15, says Roma children endure daily name-calling and bullying at school. "They don't respect us in school. They call us 'dark skins' and 'gypsies'. They are just rude. "Recently, a girl at school asked to borrow my pencil. I said she couldn't as it was the only one I had. She just went mad and started calling me gypsy and all sorts of bad words. It makes me feel horrible. They should respect me, my brothers and my family." For many parents in the camp, their children's health rather than their education is the most pressing concern. "The children are hungry most of the time, they don't have clothes or shoes to wear. How are they meant to concentrate on learning?" says Vesib Berisa, 37, a father of five who has lived in Konik for ten years. "We are in a critical state. It's too much. No one helps us anymore, not the government, the U.N., the UK or the United States. No one comes to see how we are or how we live. Why do we have to live like this? We want to live as other people live."
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2 responses to “The refugee crisis Europe forgot”
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20 Jun 2009 16:03:47 GMT
We very much appreciate Save the Children drawing the attention to the ongoing refugee crisis in the region of the former Yugoslavia where thousands of Kosovo Roma continue to live in miserable conditions such as in the Konik camps in Podgorica. However, their situation has nothing unavoidable. They are the victims of the policy of regional confinment of the refugees which was established by the EU in the aftermath of the Kosovo conflict. Instead of enabling the Roma, Serbs and other populations, which were driven out of Kosovo after the withdrawal of the Yugoslav army a safe passage to Western Europe, they were kept in the region, in countries which did not have a functionning asylum system at that time, and where help was only available as long as it was provided by foreign donors.
Many of these people have still be able to leave thanks to the help of traffickers, but the most poor ones, who did not have the money to pay the fare are still in the region, where there rights are not guaranteed. In Serbia and Montenegro, Kosovo Roma and Serbs are considered as IDPs, not refugees, since they did not cross a state border. The situation has not changed much since Montenegro's independendence and the introduction of an asylum law. In Macedonia, most of the Kosovo Roma have been rejected as asylum seekers in procedures which have been criticised as flawed by international organisations including the EU Commission. In both cases, they have been prevented from integrating and starting a new life. The solution of their case is said to lie in the evolution of the situation in Kosovo, even if only a small number of them are willing to return. This means that these people are kept hostages of the political situation. They are first hostages of the changes in the European asylum system where the EU attempts to shift the burden of responsibility for the protection of the refugees on non-EU countries regardless whether they fullfil the conditions in terms of a proper management of asylum application procedures and, generally, the protection of human rights. They are secondly victims of the nationalist conflicts between the countries of the former Yugoslavia and within those countries. In this conflict, the Roma are particularly disadvantaged because they have no kin state to support them and are despised everywhere. This is why we have launched an urgent call to the EU to resolve this forgotten refugee crisis as a European problem, which cannot be left to countries whose political system is unstable and who are torn by nationalist conflicts, the same conflicts which led to this refugee crisis. For more information, please visit our website: http://romarights.wordpress.20 Jun 2009 16:06:55 GMT
We have been begging "Save the Children" to visit two other camps for Roma - Osterode and Cesmin Lug in Kosovo. In April 2009, they promised to send a delegation, but failed to do so. These camps hold some of the poorest Roma families, those who could not afford to flee the ethnic cleansing that took place in Kosovo after the war ended. Instead, they were housed by the UN on the Balkan's most toxic waste site. They then abandoned them there till the present day, after the Secretary General's Special Representative - Bernard Kouchner promised to move them in 45 days. The 82nd victim, a 2 day old child, died only a few days ago, on June 18th 2009. The examining doctor said he had a small brain and damaged kidneys. Please call Save The Children and ask them to fulfill their promise, send their delegation, and "Save these 200+ children under 10 years old, some of which have lead levels higher than the Blood Lead Analyser could measure"! . www.toxicwastekills.com