Source: Human Rights Watch
More Effort on Disability, Asylum and Minority Rights Needed by EU’s Newest State
(Brussels) – Croatia’s
European Union (EU) accession on July 1 is an opportunity for the
government to show its commitment to safeguard human rights and to
properly address outstanding abuses in the country, Human Rights Watch
said today in an open letter to the Croatian prime minister, Zoran Milanović.
During a visit to Croatia in June, Human Rights Watch documented a
number of issues that require the government’s immediate attention,
including the institutionalization of people with mental or intellectual
disabilities, overcrowding in reception centers for asylum seekers and
refugees, lack of special protection for unaccompanied migrant children,
and discrimination against ethnic Serbs and Roma.
“It’s clear Croatia still has much more work to do to bring its human rights protection up to par with EU standards,” said Hugh Williamson,
Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Zagreb should
see the accession as an incentive to further improve rights protection,
rather than a signal to slow down.”
The 28th EU member state, Croatia became an official EU
candidate in 2004, finished accession negotiations on June 30, 2011, and
signed the EU Treaty on December 9, 2011. As part of this process,
Croatia had to bring its laws and practices in line with EU standards
across 35 different areas (known as “chapters”), including judiciary and
fundamental rights (chapter 23), and justice, freedom, and security
(chapter 24).
But being formally admitted to the Union does not mean Croatia is
meeting all its human rights obligations under EU law, Human Rights
Watch said.
A 2010 Human Rights Watch report, “Once You Enter, You Never Leave.“
documented the plight of more than 9,000 people with intellectual or
mental disabilities still living in institutions in Croatia, and the
lack of community based programs for housing and support. Despite recent
action to deinstitutionalize two centers benefitting some 400 people,
no comprehensive efforts have been made to address the precarious
situation of thousands of others still inside institutions.
Overcrowding in reception centers for asylum seekers remains a problem,
and, with an anticipated rise in asylum seekers once Croatia becomes an
external border of the EU, the government should increase the number of
centers accordingly. Hundreds of unaccompanied migrant children lack
the specialized protection required by international law, and are
consequently at risk of becoming victims of crimes such as trafficking
and forced labor.
Considerable efforts are also needed to protect the rights of ethnic
Serbs and Roma. People who were stripped of tenancy rights during the
war, a majority of whom are Serbs, continue to face difficulties in
benefitting from a program that permits the purchase of property at
below market rates, due to the onerous costs of applications and
cumbersome administrative procedures. Moreover, due to a lack of
personal documents, hundreds of Roma find it difficult if not impossible
to access basic state services, such as health care, social assistance,
and education.
The government needs to address these issues urgently, Human Rights
Watch said. This includes creating community based living solutions for
people with mental or intellectual disabilities, increasing the number
of reception centers for asylum seekers and refugees, and establishing a
specialized protection system for unaccompanied migrant children. The
government should also facilitate access to the purchase of property for
Serbs who formerly held tenancy rights, facilitate acquiring
citizenship for stateless Roma, and ensure access to state services to
everyone in Croatia, irrespective of status.
For its part, the EU also has a responsibility to ensure that all 28
member states keep their domestic laws and practices in line with the EU
standards, including the Charter of Fundamental Rights, and it should
take robust action against any member states who fail to do so.
“The EU should closely monitor human rights abuses inside the borders
of the Union and react vigorously if member states fail to respect the
fundamental principles of human rights, democracy, and the rule of law
which govern the EU,” Williamson said. “The European Parliament, the
European Commission, and the Council of the European Union also have a
role to play, and jointly share a responsibility to properly respond to
failures by member states to meet those obligations.”