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Russian sufficiently well enough to interact socially with ethnic Russians. Contrary to the current
prevailing perception on the nomadic nature of the Roma community, forced settlement was
imposed by decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR in 1956.18
53. The NGO community referred to the situation of extreme vulnerability and discrimination
faced by the Roma community in Russia, especially affecting women and children, and
particularly visible in the housing, education, health and employment sectors - often linked to the
difficulties in obtaining Russian citizenship and residence registration. In addition, Roma are
increasingly suffering from racist violence, mostly by ultranationalist groups, from violence and
abuse from law enforcement officials, and from persistent negative stereotypes associating them
with criminality and drug dealing, often for electoral reasons.
54. NGOs working with Roma expressed concern at the lack of a comprehensive law, policy
or institution addressing the specific issues and concerns of the Roma community in the
Russian Federation. They unanimously referred to the need to create a federal plan for the Roma
community and the establishment of a federal institution in charge of Roma issues, in particular,
the issue of land, the promotion of education for the Roma community, and the sensitization of
the Russian society about Roma history, culture and traditions in order to eliminate the negative
stereotypes they are recurrently associated with.
55. During the mission, the Special Rapporteur visited the Kelderary Roma community in the
village of Peri, located in the district of Vsevolozshsky (Leningrad oblast), inhabited by
approximately 1,320 persons, including 500 to 600 children. Representatives of the community
expressed frustration and discontent at their poor living conditions, the degree of violence
affecting the community and the lack of assistance provided by the authorities. The Special
Rapporteur noted the precarity of the majority of the 130 houses in the settlement, exposing the
community to particularly severe living conditions in the winter; the lack of access to drinking
water; and the high rate of infectious diseases, particularly among children, due to lack of
appropriate sanitary conditions. Furthermore, the community denounced the discriminatory
treatment faced in their access to health services, including medical emergency treatment.
Concern was also expressed at the poor school attendance rate among children, as the cost of
transportation to the closest school was unaffordable to the majority of families, greatly affected
by unemployment. In addition, under the pretext of difficulties with the Russian language, it was
reported that Roma children attending school were placed in a separate school building, in a
worse condition than the regular building for Russian children, thus hampering their integration
with other non-Roma children. The Special Rapporteur also collected testimonies of several
victims of violence, including those of an elderly woman and a girl who had been beaten by
18
Decree 450 “On involving vagrant Roma in labour activities” instructed the Councils of
Ministers of the Soviet Republics to take measures “for settling the vagrant Gypsies in
permanent domicile” and established “those who would evade socially useful labour and live a
vagrant lifestyle should be punished under a sentence passed by a People’s Court to exile in
conjunction with corrective labour for a period of time not exceeding five years”.