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Le Socialiste
16th September 2011, 09:28
This is what I was worried about. With their economies worsening, people are looking for a release for their anger, a scapegoat. And it seems (in the Czech Republic anyway) that the Roma fit that category. It's a classic move on the financial and political elites part - when in times of trouble, turn the people on themselves:



Agitation by right-wing forces in the Czech Republic against the country’s Roma minority reached a high point last weekend. Violent clashes between neo-Nazis and police took place at a number of demonstrations organized by the neo-fascist “Workers Party for Social Justice” (DSSS). The protests took place in Rumburk and Varnsdorf in north Bohemia, a region plagued by unemployment and poverty.

After the rally in Varnsdorf, DSSS supporters fought street battles with police, who prevented them from beginning a planned march to a Roma settlement. Six people were injured, and police arrested a total of 41 people. About 600 police officers and three helicopters were deployed in the biggest police operation in the Czech Republic since the International Monetary Fund meeting in Prague in 2000.

Prior to the demonstrations, police had seized a number of weapons while searching cars in several villages, and on the German-Czech border. One right-wing extremist was arrested for carrying a gas pistol.

The recent riots had been sparked by an incident in Rumburk three weeks ago, when Czech youth were beaten by Roma after visiting a disco. In early August Roma were also involved in violent scuffles with visitors to a gambling hall.

The region is marked by unemployment, poverty and poor education. The district of Decin, in which Rumburk is located, has the third highest level of unemployment (13.7 percent) in the Czech Republic. Unemployment and poverty among Roma is particularly pronounced, standing at over 50 percent. Recent cuts in social assistance by the right-wing government of Prime Minister PetrNecas have exacerbated the situation.

The DSSS, which called the demonstrations, is the successor organization to the Workers Party, which was notorious for its rallies against Roma settlements and attacks on minorities. The party was banned in 2010. At a recent demonstration, a DSSS representative advocated violence against Roma, saying: “The politicians at City Hall are idle so we have to take the law into our own hands.”

Groups such as the DSSS can conduct their activities brazenly because of the support they receive from the media and established political circles. After the incident two weeks ago, the Czech media mounted an hostile campaign against the Roma, accusing them of racist violence. In such reports little or no mention is made of the systematic social exclusion of Roma, who confront violence and hostility on a regular basis.
Several mayors of Bohemian towns had actually joined calls for the latest demonstrations.

In May the mayors of Rumburk and Jiřetín pod Jedlovou, sent an open letter to the right-wing prime minister Petr Necas. In their letter they complained about the increasing influx of Roma from other parts of the country and Slovakia. Municipal agencies like social services and schools were overburdened and crime was increasing, they complained.

Following a rally in Rumburk two weeks ago attended by local politicians, about a thousand residents surrounded houses occupied by Roma in order to provoke them.
Together with the country’s conservative parties, the Czech Social Democratic Party has long pursued a policy aimed at the social exclusion of the Roma.

Many Czech communities benefit from EU funding officially aimed at improving the situation for Roma. The weekly Tyden reported recently, however, that these funds are being used for other purposes. According to the magazine, it is being used to improve urban centers and neighborhoods inhabited by high earners.

Most of the 250,000 Roma in the Czech Republic live in slums or are driven into selected, highly impoverished areas.
Real estate companies offer the Roma severance payments or relief on debts if they leave lucrative downtown locations and move to small communities. In these communities the Roma are expected to move into empty houses, where landlords demand exorbitant rents. Czech municipalities encourage this operation in order to receive official EU funding.

Šimáek Martin, director of the State Agency for Social Integration, called this behavior “exploitation.” The behavior of the real estate managers was leading to social unrest and caused frictions, Šimáek said in Czech radio.

The relationship between growing right-wing violence and the politics of the Necas government is obvious. Necas’ Civic Democratic Party (ODS) is trying to suppress any opposition to the austerity program which the government is currently enacting in response to the economic crisis. In this process it is relying on far-right forces.

The ODS has appointed Ladislav Batrora, an avowed anti-Semite and nationalist, to the post of personnel director of the Ministry of Education. Batora is in close contact with President Vaclav Klaus, who broadly shares his reactionary views.


http://www.wsws.org/articles/2011/sep2011/czec-s16.shtml

Edit - And you just know that somebody without the slightest understanding of revolutionary leftism is going to read this and mistake the “Workers Party for Social Justice” (DSSS) for communists/socialists. :rolleyes:

ComradeOmar
20th September 2011, 22:19
Really sad that the whole of eastern europe has turned right-wing now:thumbdown:

Smyg
21st September 2011, 07:55
Oh for fuck's sake, scapegoating an ethnic group? Really? Again?

[/Facepalm]

ComradeOmar
25th September 2011, 05:14
Oh for fuck's sake, scapegoating an ethnic group? Really? Again?

[/Facepalm]
WTF? who's scapegoating an ethnic group? If u ever been 2 eastern europe particularly bulgaria u would realize that a lot of people are now on the right-wing.

Smyg
25th September 2011, 12:17
... I never said anything about Eastern Europeans.

"The greedy Jews are behind our problems!"
"The filthy Middle-Easterns are behind our problems!"
"The thieving gypsies are behind our problems!"

That's my point. You'd think we'd have gotten over it by now.

Le Socialiste
25th September 2011, 23:57
You'd think we'd have gotten over it by now.

Don't count on it.

The Jay
26th September 2011, 00:06
Wow, I'm pretty floored by this: theft from the IMF, institutionalized racism, right-wing political marches. All that's left is an angry public speaker and people will be walking around in tan uniforms with arm bands.

Smyg
26th September 2011, 07:19
Don't count on it.

Being hopeful about humanity is a foolish move.

tir1944
28th September 2011, 12:49
The Czechosl. government actually forcibly sterilized Roma people until the 70s or so.

Smyg
28th September 2011, 19:11
Sweden, of all places,didn't stop forcibly sterilising people until the 70's as well - '76, as a matter of fact. A large number of these - primarily women - were Roma.

MattShizzle
28th September 2011, 19:53
The last forcible sterilization in the US was in 1981. The targets were mostly disabled rather than ethnics groups though - primarily the mentally retarded and mentally ill, but also those with physical disabilities. Eugenics.

C0MM1E
30th September 2011, 15:02
This isn't surprising. The Roma have been used as the scapegoat for years. Along with the Jews and the Muslims, Europeans have been trying to get rid of the gypsies in one form or another for almost a thousand years. When will people learn that the poor are not the cause of the problems?

Lacrimi de Chiciură
25th October 2011, 09:16
Keep in mind it's not just happening in the Czech Republic; there is scarcely a European country which has not seen right-wing anti-Roma pogroms, along with institutionalized attacks by the state, in the last month(s):

French police round up Roma ahead of vote (http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/2/9/22686/World/International/French-police-round-up-Roma-ahead-of-vote-.aspx) (Sept 2011)

Anti-Roma Demonstrations Spread across Bulgaria (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/28/world/europe/anti-roma-demonstrations-spread-across-bulgaria.html?_r=4&partner=rss&emc=rss) (Sept 2011)

Hungary's Roma flee in fear of vigilante attacks (http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=430069&version=1&template_id=39&parent_id=21) (April 2011)

Poland: Anti-Roma Mob Attack Legitimized (http://www.irr.org.uk/2010/september/ha000007.html) (Sept 2010)

German-born Roma forcibly resettled to Kosovo (http://www.thelocal.de/society/20100819-29267.html) (Aug 2010)

Smyg
25th October 2011, 10:00
The state here in Sweden is very anti-Roma in it's policies, for example.

Os Cangaceiros
31st October 2011, 02:38
The Economist had an interesting piece about the Bulgarian demonstrations:


Two weeks ago, Angel Petrov, a 19-year-old, was killed in an apparent hit-and-run incident in the village of Katunitsa. The driver of the car was an associate of Kiril Rashkov, a local Roma (gypsy) bigwig. Tsar Kiro, as he likes to be known, is a wealthy man with no obvious source of income. (He has been accused of running a moonshine operation, but was last charged with a crime back in the communist era.) Enraged villagers began protesting outside Mr Rashkov’s palatial residence. Things turned particularly nasty when they were joined by far-right football supporters from nearby Plovdiv, Bulgaria’s second city. The demonstrators torched the building, forcing local police to escort Mr Rashkov and his family to safety.

The protests spread to other cities, bringing young people on to the streets chanting slogans against Bulgaria’s Roma and Turkish minorities. They died down after Mr Rashkov was arrested (on suspicion of making death threats), but not before over 350 other arrests were made in Bulgaria’s worst disturbances for years.

Mr Borisov insists the riots were about criminality, not race. The inhabitants of Katunitsa say that their problem is with Mr Rashkov rather than the Roma in general. “We are powerless and the institutions are not helping us”, says one villager who travelled to the capital, Sofia, to join the demonstration. Other protesters seemed more angered by the culture of impunity around powerful figures like Mr Rashkov than motivated by ethnic hatred.

But Ataka (“Attack”), a far-right party that holds 21 seats in Bulgaria’s 240-seat parliament, spied an opportunity. Party members in black T-shirts bearing the slogan “I do not want to live in a gypsy country” distributed anti-Roma pamphlets at demonstrations held under the banner “Gypsy crime—a danger for the country”. Dimitar Bechev, of the Sofia office of the European Council on Foreign Relations, a think-tank, says that “if the boss in question hadn’t been Roma it would have caused local outrage, but not become a national issue.”

from here: http://www.economist.com/node/21531502