Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ROMANIA: When A President Discriminates

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ROMANIA: When A President Discriminates

    ROMANIA: WHEN A PRESIDENT DISCRIMINATES
    By Claudia Ciobanu

    IPS
    http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnew s=39752
    Oct 22 2007
    Italy

    BUCHAREST, Oct 22 (IPS) - Twice this year, the Romanian National
    Anti-Discrimination Council has had to issue judgments about
    problematic statements made by President Traian Basescu. In one
    of the instances, the Council declared the head of state guilty of
    discrimination against the Roma.

    But the Council cleared Basescu Oct. 15 of accusations of
    discrimination against the Armenian community. The ruling came in
    response to a complaint Sep. 12 by the Union of Armenians in Romania.

    Basescu underwent surgery for a thyroid problem early September. He
    was operated on by a team of eight medics led by Mircea Ghemigian,
    a Romanian citizen of Armenian origin. When leaving hospital, Basescu
    said he had found in the doctor "finally, a good Armenian."

    Varujan Vosganian, leader of the Union of Armenians in Romania,
    immediately retorted: "The statement of President Traian Basescu is
    a very serious insult to the Armenian community in Romania and to
    Armenians everywhere."

    Vosganian said Basescu is "obsessed with personal conflicts" and that
    his attitude could become a threat to democracy in Romania. Some
    commentators have suggested that, more than an example of a
    discriminatory attitude against Armenians, the President's comment
    was an attempt to provoke Vosganian, one of Basescu's political rivals.

    The Armenian community in Romania numbers around 2,000, in a population
    of 22 million. Partly because of this tiny size, discrimination
    against Armenians in rarely considered an issue.

    On the other hand, it is hard to deny that the almost two million
    Roma living in the country are being discriminated against. Another
    controversial comment, made by Basescu in the spring of this year,
    validates this view.

    Romanians voted in a referendum May 19 to confirm Basescu as
    president. The majority of political parties in Romania, both from
    the government and the opposition, had called for suspension of the
    President, but more than 80 percent of voting Romanians backed Basescu.

    That day, while waiting for the results of the referendum, Basescu,
    a fan of direct contact with "the people", decided to go shopping
    in one of the capital's largest supermarkets. The media was informed
    about this outing.

    Annoyed by several insistent questions from a reporter, Basescu took
    away the mobile phone of a reporter with which she had taken pictures
    of him. When the phone was returned to her the next day, the device had
    on it the recording of a private conversation between the President
    and his wife. In this recording Basescu was heard describing the
    journalist as "a stinky gypsy".

    The Roma rights association Romani Criss immediately filed a complaint
    against the President with the National Anti-Discrimination Council,
    arguing that the phrase Basescu used to describe the journalist was
    offensive to the Roma. The Council agreed that the statement was
    discriminatory, and issued a warning to the President.

    Sociologist Andreea Vantu has been studying how this incident was
    perceived by Roma people in Romania. According to her, interviewees
    said that the words of the President represent merely the "tip of
    the iceberg" in a larger structure of discrimination that affects
    them in all aspects of life.

    "Roma people are more bothered by offences coming from their
    colleagues and other people they interact with on a daily basis,"
    Vantu told IPS. "A stereotypical portrait of the Roma has already
    been formed in the minds of the people, and now it is reproducing
    itself to become stronger and stronger." Numerous common phrases or
    spontaneous expressions containing negative references to the Roma
    (such as the one Basescu used) are frequent in daily conversations.

    The Roma people interviewed by Vantu also say that the language of
    the President contributes to the legitimisation and perpetuation of
    discriminatory views, as it encourages people to behave offensively
    towards the Roma.

    "Through his attitude, President Traian Basescu is seriously damaging
    the efforts made lately by the Romanian society towards the promotion
    of tolerance and implementation of policies of social inclusion," says
    Renate Weber, president of the Romanian branch of Soros Foundation,
    one of the more active organisations in the country in the field of
    Roma inclusion.

    At the same time, Vantu says, Roma people feel "disengaged with the
    views of the President", and they no longer expect him to represent
    them. "They do not any more perceive themselves as belonging to the
    audience the President of Romania addresses. They are less and less
    interested in voting, in political activity."

    The Roma already represent one of the most socio-economically
    disadvantaged segments of Romanian society. If they withdraw from
    the political process, their chances of improving this condition
    significantly decrease.

    As a result of strong prejudice against them and their marginalisation
    in the political sphere, Roma people in Romania could become
    increasingly isolated. "And the more isolated the group, the stronger
    the discriminative stereotype becomes," warns Vantu, indicating that
    such a vicious circle might become too difficult to break. (END/2007)
Working...
X