End segregation of romani children in slovakia's schools

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024
  • Amnesty International points the Slovak governement to serious gaps in the enforcement and monitoring of the ban on discrimination and segregation in the Slovak educational system.
    The causes of segregation are complex and include entrenched anti-Roma attitudes as well as policy failures in the education system such as early and flawed child assessment and insufficient support for Romani children within mainstream education.
    Widespread anti-Romani sentiment across the country expressed by non-Roma parents and educational professionals, has also led to segregation of Romani children even in mainstream schools and classes.
    This has led to a situation in which Romani children are sometimes literally locked into separate classrooms, corridors or buildings to prevent them from mixing with non-Roma pupils.
    "Romani children across Slovakia remain trapped in a school system that keeps failing them as a result of widespread discrimination. It deprives Romani children of equal opportunities and sentences them to a life of poverty and marginalization," said David Diaz-Jogeix, Amnesty International Europe and Central Asia Deputy Director.
    "The Slovak government has much to do to end the segregation that has an impact on a large part of the country's population. Segregation in education means a life-long stigma for children whose future chances are brutally limited. It is a practice that does not belong to 21st century Europe and must be eliminated."

Комментарии • 25

  • @AmnestyInternationalVlaanderen
    @AmnestyInternationalVlaanderen  14 лет назад

    @xavierzutafun
    all Amnesty's reports are based on thourough, full and impartial research at location. You can find the Slovakia-report on Amnesty's website amnesty.org/en/library/info/EUR72/009/2010/en

    • @janmurarik1480
      @janmurarik1480 7 месяцев назад

      Stránka amnesty je prevažne polorasisticka,hlavne na čerpanie peňazí od štátu.

  • @Ignisan_66
    @Ignisan_66 4 года назад +4

    Tento odporný kanál amnesty international my zmazal moj slušne napísaný komentár pár minút od uverejnenia. To čo je toto? Sloboda slova a názoru asi žiadna.

  • @xavierzutafun
    @xavierzutafun 14 лет назад +2

    O really? You see, all the "wise" people from Amnesty International and similar funny organizations just keep criticizing the state of our society, from their own chairs somewhere in a nice-warm offices, but what about actually taking your asses to the Gypsy settlements and schools in the eastern part of Slovakia? Not with all the glory and Amnesty International stickers on display all around, but incog, just to find out, how it really is. I would really welcome that.

  • @palulpreddor2824
    @palulpreddor2824 11 лет назад +3

    Romani people who are born in Slovakia, they are not Slovaks? Slovak landscape is not for Roma people? Why? You are God?

  • @denisachovancova5433
    @denisachovancova5433 6 лет назад

    Why do British people separate their children in private schools?

    • @sweetness6048
      @sweetness6048 3 года назад

      Majority of British don't and they ain't segregated by force it's a choice that the parents make and pay extra for

  • @janmurarik1480
    @janmurarik1480 7 месяцев назад

    Rasizmus bol vnesený hlavne po roku 1989.Nie,že by nebol aj predtým,záležalo kde deti vyrastali.Nebolo to však také vypuklé.

  • @Holmishur
    @Holmishur 3 года назад

    How many children did Mr. Filippou teach ? How many of them were of different ethnicity then majority ? Which Schools teaches slavs, romani only in Slovakia. He does not provide any concrete evidence of anything hes just saying what he thinks is the case. Anyone can do this. He is just talking aobut something he has no clue about... Its his job. And one more thing.. what about the opinion of the majority ?

  • @SzCa77
    @SzCa77 11 лет назад +2

    First 4-5 days they drink and eat a lot... a lot of expesive food and alcohol - we see them buying all this stuff very often - mostly in that part of month, when their unemployment benefit comes. After that their kids are still naked, hungry and dirty and their parents "cry" how discriminanted they are. They always tell you they want to work and study - but in 98% it´s just not true. Most of them are double-faced.

  • @balangas3910
    @balangas3910 4 года назад

    The problem is that most Romani people do not have the same level of cognitive ability when compared to Slovaks, the social conditions make it even worse, for example in this video you can hear Romani people speaking broken Slovak. The only ones capable of escaping this cycle are the ones who are raised in Slovak culture and respect Slovak values, despite the lower average cognitive ability those raised well can still land in a normal job and stop living off taxpayer money. There is a very simple reason to why Slovaks dislike Romani people, their culture. That taxpayer money is almost exclusively from Slovaks and other Europeans living in Slovakia, these people earn their money, they don't have tons of it to throw out the window. If parents live of taxpayer money, then the kids will do the same, it never ends. One can also see how Romani children raised in orphanages or families of Slovak or Hungarian ethnicity are way more successful...

  • @Ignisan_66
    @Ignisan_66 4 года назад +2

    But I think this "segregation" is necessary and positive because romani children often bully white slovak children and white children are scared of them.

    • @darling.x7247
      @darling.x7247 4 года назад +6

      I’ve never in my life seen that happen but okay

    • @Crazysonicccc
      @Crazysonicccc Месяц назад +1

      It’s the other way around