A/HRC/29/24
B.
Anti-Gypsyism and discrimination against Roma: a global phenomenon
12.
While the Special Rapporteur is aware that the reasons for the marginalization of
Roma are complex, she insists that an overarching factor is the deeply embedded social and
structural discrimination Roma face worldwide, including anti-Gypsyism. Anti-Gypsyism
has been defined by the Council of Europe as “a specific form of racism, an ideology
founded on racial superiority, a form of dehumanisation and institutional racism nurtured by
historical discrimination, which is expressed, among others, by violence, hate speech,
exploitation, stigmatisation and the most blatant kind of discrimination”.8 Anti-Gypsyism
therefore includes strong anti-Roma prejudices and stereotypes, including those that lead to
labelling Roma communities as criminal, aggressive, or as “parasites” on welfare systems.
The Special Rapporteur welcomes recent European Union recognition that anti-Gypsyism
constitutes a major obstacle to overcoming Roma disadvantage and marginalization.
13.
Although anti-Gypsyism is originally a European term, the discrimination it
embodies manifests itself in a variety of ways across regions. In Latin America,
discrimination against Roma was imported with European migration, and negative
stereotypes remain present today, with reports that many Roma do not speak Romani in
public for fear of discrimination or reprisal. In their concluding observations, the Human
Rights Committee and the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination have
noted their concerns about the widespread occurrence of offences of discrimination against
Roma in Brazil, including racist crimes, and the lack of application of relevant domestic
legal provisions in cases involving Romani victims (CCPR/C/BRA/CO/2, para. 20;
CERD/C/64/CO/2, para. 17).
14.
The Dom of the Middle East are among the most marginalized people in the Arab
world and suffer from widespread negative perceptions and stigma. The Dom are often
labelled as nawar, an Arabic insult that evokes selfishness, stinginess, dirtiness and chaos. 9
15.
In its concluding observations on the fifth periodic report of the Russian Federation,
the Committee against Torture noted its concern about persistent reports of discrimination,
violent attacks and abuses against Roma on the basis of their identity (CAT/C/RUS/CO/5,
para. 15). United Nations human rights monitoring mechanisms have repeatedly noted the
marginalization of Roma in Belarus.10 In its concluding observations, the Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination has noted that Roma suffer from widespread social
stigma and discrimination Tajikistan and Uzbekistan (CERD/C/TJK/CO/6-8, para. 13;
CERD/C/UZB/CO/8-9, para. 11).
16.
Many Roma in North America also face stigma and prejudice that originated in and
are perpetuated by limited knowledge of Romani culture or history, or of the persecution
Roma faced during and after the Nazi regime. 11
8
9
10
11
the Ministry of Labour of Lebanon, Children living and working on the streets in Lebanon: profile
and magnitude (2015).
See www.coe.int/t/dghl/monitoring/ecri/activities/GPR/EN/Recommendation_N13/eRPG%2013%20-%20A4.pdf.
Terre des Hommes, A Child Protection Assessment p. 31.
See E/C.12/BLR/CO/4-6, para. 27; A/HRC/15/16, para. 98.14; CERD/C/65/CO/2, para. 10;
CERD/C/BLR/CO/18-19, para. 16; and A/HRC/4/16, para. 50.
Ian Hancock, “Roma: Explaining Today Through History”. Keynote address at the Uppsala
International Conference on the discrimination, marginalization and persecution of Roma, 2013.
Available from www.valentin.uu.se/aktuellt/meddelanden/Enskildanyheter/slutkonferens/.
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