in  order  to  measure,  monitor,  and  remedy  ethnic  discrimination  as  proposed  by  the   independent  expert  on  minority  issues  (Russian  Federation).       Almost  all  other  recommendations  referred  to  the  specific  situation  of  Roma,  including   to  place  special  emphasis  on  addressing  the  socio-­‐economic  disadvantages  of  the  Roma,   to  strengthen  measures  directed  towards  their  protection  from  discrimination  and   further  integration  to  take  concrete  and  stern  action  to  ensure  equal  treatment  for  all  in   the  society,  to  achieve  their  full  social  integration  and  enjoyment  of  human  rights  (from   Argentina,  Belarus,  Pakistan,  Uruguay,  Chile,  Morocco,  Thailand,  Sweden,  United  States).     On  hate  crimes,  Hungary  accepted:  to  intensify  measures  to  prevent  and  tackle  racial   hatred,  extremism,  hate  crimes  and  violence  against  discrimination  against  religious  and   ethnic  minority  groups,  including  the  Roma  people  (from  Australia,  Bangladesh,   Republic  of  Korea,  Uruguay,  Indonesia,  Sweden,  Thailand);  to  make  efforts  to  actively   combat  anti-­‐Semitic  and  anti-­‐Roma  rhetoric,  including  by  ensuring  law  enforcement  and   judicial  authorities  are  made  aware  of  guidelines  on  identifying  and  investigating  racially   motivated  crime  (United  Kingdom);  and  to  implement  measures  to  encourage  Roma  and   other  victims  to  report  hate  crimes  and,  when  they  do,  to  protect  them  from  reprisals   (Indonesia).  Some  recommendations  addressed  education  in  particular:  to  introduce   national  measures  to  reduce  school  segregation  and  actively  promote  participation  in   society  through  education  among  the  Roma  community  (from  Norway);  to  fill  the  gaps   in  Roma  women's  formal  education  (from  Iran);  to  take  all  necessary  measures  to   promote  equality  in  education  in  favour  of  all  members  of  minority  groups,  especially   Roma  children  (from  Greece);  to  take  measures  to  guarantee  the  right  to  equal   education  for  Roma  children  (from  Finland);  and  to  commit  to  improving  school  results   of  Roma  pupils  by  2015  (from  Canada).  Roma  women  were  addressed  in  4   recommendations:  to  intensify  efforts  to  combat  all  forms  of  discrimination  to  make   effective  the  equality  of  opportunities  and  treatment  among  all  inhabitants  in  its   territory,  with  particular  care  and  attention  to  women  and  children  who  are  in  the   situation  of  more  vulnerability,  such  as  those  who  belong  to  the  Roma  people   (Argentina);  to  prevent  violence  against  Roma  women  and  girls,  including  their   harassment  at  school  (from  Iran);  to  investigate,  and  in  the  future  prevent,  cases   mentioned  by  CESCR  of  the  denied  access  of  Roma  to  health  services  and  their   segregation  in  hospitals,  including  the  existence  of  separate  maternity  wards  for  Roma   women  in  some  hospitals  (from  the  Russian  Federation);  and  to  put  emphasis  on   combating  violence  against  Roma  women  (from  Spain).       There  were  3  recommendations  on  the  Slovenian  minority:  to  implement  fully  the   Agreement  on  Guaranteeing  Special  Rights  of  the  Slovenian  Minority  in  the  Republic  of   Hungary  and  the  Hungarian  National  Community  in  the  Republic  of  Slovenia  and  the   recommendations  of  the  mixed  Slovenian-­‐Hungarian  Commission  tasked  with  the   monitoring  of  the  implementation  of  the  Agreement;  to  ensure  stable  and  systematic   funding  for  the  media  of  the  Slovenian  minority  in  Hungary,  namely  for  Radio   Monoster/Szentgotthárd,  the  Porabje  weekly  and  the  Slovenian  TV  programme;  and  to   ensure  urgently,  through  stable  and  systematic  funding,  continued  functioning  of  the   46  

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