This photo story was commissioned by Al Jazeera.
In September 2013, local authorities in Eforie
Sud, a beach town in the south-east of Romania, evicted 78 Roma from their
houses. Accommodations were built illegally on a city hall property and after
decades of living there the Roma lost their entire livelihood. 33 children and
45 adults were left literally standing in the rain. The Romanian Ombudsman
accused local authorities of completely ignoring human rights legislation. Although
the eviction itself was legal, city hall failed to provide decent accommodation
for the Roma families. Eventually, the Roma took refuge in an abandoned school
and an old dormitory (boarding school). Several families are still living in
cottages in the field. The mayor of Eforie Sud had called the eviction a “long
overdue cleanup operation, a problem that had been ignored for too long” and
promises were made that the cleared land would be used to build social housing
units.
Five months from the eviction, February 2014, the
78 Roma live in dire conditions that, at best, could be considered
“sub-standard”. March this year, they face eviction from these facilities as
well. Threats have been issued by authorities that they would be evacuated as
soon as spring temperatures set in. No mentions were made about any alternative
accommodation.
The story in Eforie Sud is not an exception, but
rather a symptom of a bigger problem in Romania and the entire European Union. Just
in June 2012, 1000 Roma from Baia Mare were forcefully evacuated from their homes
and moved into a former chemical plant. 13 children and one adult suffered
intoxications and needed medical care.
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