A/HRC/23/34/Add.1
92.
In Tatarstan, children with disabilities who cannot attend regular schools are catered
for through rehabilitation centres. The Special Rapporteur was impressed by the city
rehabilitation centre for children with disabilities in Kazan, Gorki district, which will
probably become a model for the whole region. In rehabilitation centres, two months of
attendance per year are mandatory; two additional months remain at the discretion of the
centre. Parents request that centres welcome children for longer periods each year.
93.
For the rest of the year, parents try to provide educational and leisure activities to
their children on a self-help basis with very limited means. The Special Rapporteur visited
the “Light in the Window” centre in Kazan, which provides educational and cultural
activities. These structures need more State support, including affordable accommodation.
94.
Teachers in private centres and parents described their experience as “accidental”,
and would like to receive formal training to benefit from available expertise. They hope that
exchanges between pedagogical centres of Kazan and Moscow can be promoted and that a
well-resourced centre of pedagogy is established to train teachers and specialists.
95.
In all interactions, the attitudes towards persons with disabilities were described as
the biggest obstacle to the participation of persons with disabilities in cultural life.
96.
Regrettably, discrepancies between the programmes adopted by the authorities and
the reality experienced by persons with disabilities still exist. For example, in Kazan, when
children with disabilities were invited to a special concert inaugurating the new puppet
theatre, the theatre staff refused them entry, as they only had one ticket for both the child
and the accompanying parent, who would seat the child on her/his lap. Finally, when
allowed entry, they found that the elevators specially installed to facilitate access were not
working. After climbing up four floors, they were informed that two people could not
occupy one chair.
2.
Roma
97.
The situation of the Roma, in particular those living in Roma-only settlements,
should be addressed more proactively. Roma children reportedly have great difficulty in
their access to quality education; they often do not speak Russian fluently, and these
difficulties are encountered by Roma who are Russian nationals as well as non-nationals,
including those who were born Russian nationals and have difficulties proving their
nationality owing to a lack of documents. 33
98.
According to interlocutors, access to education is difficult because schools are not
suited to the needs of Roma children and are often insensitive to their cultural background.
Roma children are usually not welcome in general schools. When special classes or schools
are created for Roma children, a practice that seems to amount to segregation, education is
of low quality, with no ethno-cultural component. Teachers working with Roma children do
not receive special training. The Special Rapporteur encourages the authorities to create
materials and textbooks for Roma children that take into account their language and cultural
background and to support the publication of bilingual books (Russian / Romani).
99.
Roma artistic groups are popular and perform successfully throughout the country.
The reality for less renowned Roma may, however, be different. In some cases, Roma
children feel unwelcome as participants in cultural events.
33
18
See Memorial, “Discrimination and violation of Roma children‟s rights in schools of the Russian
Federation”, update to the 2009 report, submission to the Committee on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights, March 2011.