Dr. Iulius Rostas, Visiting Professor at the National School of Political Science and
Administration enumerated three factors that make Roma more vulnerable to hate crime: first,
they are politically under-represented; and there are no mainstream parties taking up issues
faced by Roma and representing the general interest of the Roma; second, weak state
institutions fail to protect the rights of their citizens, including the Roma; and third, and may be
most importantly, the persistent and wide-spread racism against Roma, anti-gypsism.
Dr. Rostas stressed that while hate speech against Roma is an everyday occurrence,
since COVID-19 lock-down, the public discourse against Roma has reached unacceptable levels
of racism. The ethnicisitation of the pandemic is a feature of the situation of Roma. In the main
narratives of the pandemic, Roma became the main responsible for spreading the disease.
Politicians, law enforcement agencies and media framed the Roma as the main source of
spreading the disease.
Dr. Rostas explained that the pandemic exacerbates social inequalities, there is a lack of
access to basic services and public goods and in order to have access to minimal subsistence,
members of marginalized groups, such as Roma, are indirectly forced to break these
restrictions. They are then portrayed by law enforcement agencies as a social danger and those
that spread the disease.
Dr. Rostas also emphasised that while law enforcement agents had been sporadically
policing Roma communities, during the pandemic they showed up in significant numbers to
isolate these communities using force and sending a message that the Roma represent a
significant danger. He expressed concern about the excessive use of force during the
interventions, including about the impunity, even more visible during the pandemic.
Dr. Rostas indicated that the European anti-discrimination legal framework is very weak in
protecting minorities against hate speech. He stated that the protection under the penal law is
stronger, although some states do not properly define hate speech and hate crime. In any case,
the number of cases under the penal law is very low and in some countries, the number of
penal cases based on hate speech are in single digits, if at all.
The recommendations formulated by Dr. Rostas included the following: states should
monitor hate speech and racism against Roma and other minorities regularly, presenting
disaggregated data on hate speech; and programmes and initiatives to combat hate speech
(such as code of conducts for politicians and journalists, and prizes for inclusive discourses and
practices, for political actors and media) should be developed
Ms. Beena J Pallical, General Secretary of the Economic Educational rights wing within the
National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights (NCDHR) highlighted the caste-based discrimination
endured by over 260 million Dalits, which has led to their exclusion and discrimination and
being victims of violence, including atrocities and massacres.
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