Címlap English Basescu asked to resign on discriminatory Roma remarks

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Basescu asked to resign on discriminatory Roma remarks PDF Nyomtatás E-mail
Írta: Administrator   
2014. február 11. kedd, 13:21

Romanian President Traian Basescu has been reportedly found guilty of discriminatory remarks about Roma (Gypsy) population by country’s official National Council for Combating Discrimination and now Hindus want him to resign.

Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada (USA) today, said that Basescu had no moral standing to continue in the government after making such disparaging remarks about a major group of the population.

The Council reportedly fined Basescu for saying "very few of them (Roma) want to work'' and "traditionally many of them live off stealing", in a news conference in Slovenia in 2010.

Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, although applauded the

Council for declaring Basescu guilty but criticized it for letting him go with just about $185 fine.  How a President could represent a country when he had such a prejudiced opinion about a large ethnic group of its population, he asked.

Rajan Zed sought European Union intervention if Basescu did not resign. It seemed like an attempt by Romania’s President to demonize the already most prejudiced against community in Europe and eternalizing negative stereotyping of them, instead of showing strong political will to integrate them, Zed noted.

"Human Rights Practices for 2012" report about Romania by US Department of State said: There was systematic societal discrimination against Roma…Anti-Roma banners, chants, and songs, particularly at large televised sporting events, were prevalent and widespread.

Europe’s most persecuted and discriminated community, Roma were reportedly encountering apartheid conditions in Europe. Roma reportedly regularly faced social exclusion, racism, substandard education, hostility, joblessness, rampant

illness, inadequate housing, lower life expectancy, unrest, living on desperate margins, stereotypes, mistrust, rights violations, discrimination, Zed pointed out.

 

Romania's Roma community is said to be the biggest in Europe and according to reports, between 1.8 and 2.5 million Roma live in Romania and about 75 per cent live in poverty.

 

In Berlin in January, Basescu again reportedly made derogatory remarks against Roma, besides calling a journalist “dirty Gypsy” in 2007 and blaming Roma of stealing in buses in 2011.

 

 
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