Nos amis de l'association Konexe, basée en République tchèque, envoient cette lettre ouverte aux institutions et aux citoyens européens:
Dear
Members of the European Parliament, the European Commission, citizens
of Europe,
We
are writing to you about a matter of great seriousness.
The
situation of Romani people in the Czech Republic is critical.
According to the results of all public opinion polls on this issue,
the majority of our country is so saddled with strongly anti-Romani
prejudices and sharply anti-Romani attitudes that antigypsyism has
become a mainstream opinion here. Romani people are discriminated
against in housing, on the labor market, and in other areas of their
lives. The Czech school system is segregated.
Romani
people in the Czech Republic are facing racially-motivated attacks
and violence. During the past few years, Romani communities have been
targeted by hateful anti-Romani demonstrations and marches which
often become violent and have grown into attempted pogroms on more
than one occasion. Not only do the followers of neo-Nazi, ultra-right
movements join these demonstrations, but so-called ordinary citizens
get involved in them as well. Antigypsyists espousng anti-Romani
hatred can be found in every single Czech political party, from the
left to the right, and politicians strive to win the electoral
support of the majority of voters who are antigypsyist.
Social
integration policy and its tools have completely failed. Enormous
sums of money designated for solving the problems of Romani poverty
and anti-Romani racism and for achieving Romani integration, often
coming from European Union funds, have been spent unsuitably and have
had no real effect. The situation of Romani communities here is
constantly deteriorating day by day, month by month, year by year.
Manifestation antiraciste à Usti nad Labem
One
component of this critical state is the denial – or at a minimum,
the depreciation – of the genocide of the Romani people that took
place here during the Second World War. Romani people were rounded up
by the Czech Police and placed in concentration camps where they were
murdered and tortured. The guards of these death camps were not
German Nazis, but Czech gendarmes. The headquarters of the Czech
Criminal Police administered these camps. The toughest prisoners who
managed to survive the hell of the Czech death camps were handed over
to the German SS, transported to the extermination camp of Auschwitz
II – Birkenau, and gassed to death.
One
of the Czech concentration camps for Romani people was located near
the village of Lety by Písek in South Bohemia. In
1973, the Communist government of Czechoslovakia built a
large-capacity, industrial pig farm precisely on the site of the
former camp, i.e., at the site of the genocide of the Roma. That farm
stands to this day at this place of Romani genocide and is still in
operation. Pigs wallow in their own feces on the spot where Romani
people were murdered and tortured.
L'ancien camp de Lety, aujourd'hui ferme de cochons
This
happened despite the fact that Czechoslovakia signed the Helsinki
Accords after the end of the Second World War, pledging to turn
genocide sites into places of commemoration and reverence.
After
the fall of communism, when the conditions would have been ideal, the
state-owned pig farm was not torn down, but was sold by the state to
a commercial company. During the following years various Czech
governments have regularly faced pressure from various international
institutions to buy the pig farm, tear it down, clean away the pig
feces and erect a dignified memorial to the victims of genocide at
this site. Many Czech governments have promised through their
ministers – and even their Prime Ministers - to remove the pig
farm. That has not yet happened and there never has been the
slightest real political will to do so. Such promises, in our
opinion, have served only to quiet international human rights
institutions. In the end it has always been said that the Czech state
does not have the money to buy the pig farm now running on this
genocide site. Can something like this be measured in money?
According to statements by the owner of the farm, he has never been
asked what price he would sell it for. We can’t know how much it
would cost to buy it, but apparently what we do know for certain is
that we don’t have the money... .
It
would, however, be very easy to address this current scandalous state
of affairs. We have learned that the pig farm at this site of Romani
genocide is a recipient of EU agricultural subsidies. Without those
subsidies, the farm will lose money and will go out of business in
short order.
We
are therefore asking you to halt the EU agricultural supports for the
industrial pig farm at Lety by Písek.
Stop paying for and supporting the raising of pigs at this Romani
genocide site. This farm is only still standing at this site of
genocide because of your financial support. If you stop supporting it
financially, it will go out of business soon.
The
existence of this industrial pig farm on this site of the genocide of
the Romani people is a disgrace to us all and a symbol of the
position of the Roma not just in the Czech Republic, but in Europe as
a whole.
We
believe you will do the right thing,
Konexe
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