13 February 2014

France's unwanted Roma


Henri Astier has a BBC article about the Gypsies of France:
France has possibly the harshest policy in Europe towards Roma immigrants. Most live in camps that are regularly demolished by police and then rebuilt. Every year thousands are deported, but the overall number in the country remains the same.
Before dawn on a winter's morning police came to destroy Alex's home. "They said: 'Everybody out; we're going to smash this camp.' (photo, top). They gave us half an hour to collect our things," the eighteen-year-old recalls (photo, bottom).
The fifteen Roma families living in a wood outside Paris were no match for the hundred-odd riot police deployed to evict them. Diggers (photo, second from top) swung into action. Within an hour nothing remained of the encampment. Large holes had been dug across the site to stop anyone settling there again.
Asked how it feels to see the hut he had built razed to the ground, Alex shrugs: "Nothing. I've been through this many times."
Like most of the estimated twenty thousand ethnic Roma living in France, Alex comes from Romania. And, like most, he has been expelled from one squalid camp to the next for years. Hundreds of thousands of Roma, mostly from Romania and Bulgaria, have moved to Western Europe since the 1990s. Widely perceived as scroungers and thieves, they are rarely made welcome. But they come under a particular kind of pressure in France, and their illegal camps, such as the one Alex occupied in Champs-sur-Marne, east of Paris, are systematically destroyed by authorities.
According to the European Roma Rights Centre (ERRC), twenty thousand Roma were evicted across France last year, more than double the 2012 figure. "They don't know from one minute to the next if they're going to get evicted," says Gabriela Hrabanova, of the European Roma Grassroots Organisations Network. In their countries of origin, Roma people face widespread discrimination but are at least allowed to settle in one place. "Evictions are very rare in Eastern Europe," Hrabanova notes.
Many of the evicted Roma end up being deported; almost eleven thousand Romanian nationals were deported from France last year, more than any other immigrant group. Being a citizen of a European Union country offers little protection, as EU law allows a member country to expel people who are deemed a burden on its social system.
Now Alex and his friends are busy building another camp nearby
In September of 2013, Interior Minister Manuel Valls said that the Roma have "lifestyles that are very different from ours" and that "their destiny is to return to Romania or Bulgaria".
Philippe Goosens of the European Association for the Defence of Human Rights points out that France is the only EU country that has such a "policy of rejection".
Some French towns and cities are not content with the eviction routine. Aubervilliers moved twenty families into normal housing five years ago, but continues to destroy illegal camps Other Parisian suburbs— Bagnolet, Saint-Denis, and Saint-Ouen— have tried similar schemes for selected families. Montreuil-sous-Bois, east of Paris, set up a non-selective caravan camp for 350 Roma in 2008. But all these schemes are limited in scope.
Officials deny targeting an ethnic group, however. The government insists it is only enforcing the law, destroying illegal settlements on orders from judges. Champs-sur-Marne alone has seen more than twenty camp demolitions in the past eighteen months, says local activist Francois Loret. One aim of such operations is to remove unsightly, unsafe, and unsanitary sites that have no water or electricity. However, Loret and others point out that the exercise is self-defeating. As soon as police tear down one camp, another is built nearby. Alex and his neighbors are now busy building another hut a few hundred meters from the last. "They live in increasingly precarious living conditions that prevent them for integrating locally," says ethnologist Martin Olivera. "They are being maintained in a nomadic way of life they have not chosen."
Alex says he would love to have a permanent home, but for that he would need a proper job. At present, like most men in the camps, Alex and his friend Rabu make a living going through people's rubbish. Every morning they set off before bins are collected and search for scrap metal, which they then sell for ten cents a kilo.
In a good week they make fifty euros, more than they would earn in Romania.
Getting proper work is difficult for a number of reasons. Alex says he would do any job he could find, but has had no luck. Rabu says employers lose interest as soon as he says he is Romanian. 
Who are the Roma?
They are Europe's largest minority: ten to twelve million people across the continent. They left northern India around 1000 AD, reaching Europe in the fourteenth century.
Often referred to as Gypsies, Sinti, Zingari (in Italian), Gitanos (in Spanish), or Manouche (in French), Roma now adopted as a general term, but also often used to refer specifically to those from south-east Europe, mainly Romania and Bulgaria. They speak the Romani language, with local variations, and face marginalization wherever they have settled.
Like most Roma youths, they have not been to school in France, which is a drawback. Many teenagers would like to get an education, but face serious obstacles. Fifteen-year-old Ianut said he tried to enroll in school so that he would be able to "speak good French and find a job", but was turned down.
Often schools reject Roma because local authorities are reluctant to recognize them as residents, says Francois Loret. Without official residency, they are not entitled to any social benefits beyond basic health care, and many struggle to secure even that.
Officials argue that they are bearing the brunt of a problem that is beyond their limited capacities. It's a problem that should be dealt with at international not local level, says Marc Nectar, who is responsible for Roma policy in Val-de-Marne, the area where Champs-sur-Marne is located.
Camps typically spring up in deprived suburbs, where services are already stretched. Seine-Saint-Denis, just north of Paris, is France's poorest area. It is also the one with highest camp population. Claude Reznik, an official in Montreuil-sous-Bois, Seine-Saint-Denis, notes that Roma arrive in families, and that this makes them more difficult to "absorb" than previous waves of immigrants. South European or African men who came in the 1960s or 1970s, he notes, "were able to find a bed at friend's home, move elsewhere after getting a job, and then have their families join them". Montreuil has taken steps to rehouse former camp families, but there is only so much it can do, Reznik says. "Some people have been on the waiting list for social housing for years," he points out. "How can you allow Roma people to get it first?"
In Champs-sur-Marne, as in many other places, some residents are pressing for tough action. A number recently petitioned the mayor asking for evictions to be accelerated.
A rapid survey of local opinion reveals a mixture of views about the Roma presence. Ingrid, 21, who studies at an osteopathy school next to the destroyed site, says it used to emit foul-smelling smoke. Another osteopathy student says the road was a "tip". Others are more relaxed. Florian Goyon, a history student, says he hardly notices the Roma.
Mohammed, a 28-year-old Tunisian immigrant, suspects many make a living stealing phones, but he does not want to see them evicted. "It's not right to throw kids out in the cold," he says.
The Roma themselves do not report serious tensions with locals. "We do not have a problem with French people, only police," says a Romanian who calls himself Boy. "They accuse us of stealing, but we steal nothing."
Guillaume Lardanchet of Hors La Rue, a Montreuil-based group that helps troubled immigrant children, agrees that Roma youths are sometimes involved in crime. This is hardly surprising as they are more likely to be on the street than in schools. But, he adds, the problem is often exaggerated. Police figures suggest that two hundred to three hundred camp children are engaged in criminal activity across France, out of a total of six thousand. "The overwhelming majority of Roma kids stay out of trouble," Lardanchet says.
Some think the prospects for France's Roma immigrants could improve with the end of the "transition regime" that restricted access to jobs for Romanian and Bulgarian citizens.
As of 1 January 2014, they have no longer needed a residency permit to work in France.
But the policies that give rise to the cycle of evictions and deportations remain in place.
Rico says he's only known (to his knowledge) one Gypsy, or Rom, who lived next door to his father in a duplex in La Jolla, many years ago. He didn't steal...

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