Anti-Roma sentiment continues to spread throughout Bulgaria, just in time for the presidential elections on October 23. What has been deemed a human rights issues due to the Roma deaths and injuries sustained throughout a week of anti-Gypsy protests [Oct 1-8], must also be seen as a strategic attempt on the part of nationalist and ultra-nationalist parties to use ethnic hatred for political gains in the upcoming elections.
Yes, protests against Roma are dangerous and must be stopped before violence ensures, but this wave of anti-Gypsy sentiment is an important symptom of larger political and economic issues - of countrywide poverty, high-level government corruption and the misuse of European Union (EU) funds. Right now, most people want a Band-Aid, but what they need most is to look at what created this massive societal wound.
Right now, the kids are all home in Fakulteta, the largest Romani neighbourhood in Sofia, Bulgaria. An estimated 70,000 Roma (commonly known as Gypsy) live there, but in recent days they are afraid to leave their homes and send their kids to school outside of the neighbourhood. They are worried that the police won't protect them if the riots come too close to their houses, and afraid that Bulgarian children in kindergarten will share their parents' bigotry.
Many residents of Fakulteta are investing in guard dogs, keeping themselves awake all night, waiting to hear if the Bulgarian protesters are entering their neighbourhood to harass or attack inhabitants. Anti-Roma sentiment has long been a problem in Bulgaria, but violence has escalated since a 19-year-old Bulgarian boy was killed last weekend by a car allegedly driven by a relative of Kiril Rashkov, one of Bulgaria's rich criminals, who also happens to be Roma.
Although Rashkov calls himself “king,” he is a leader to no one, and Bulgarians as well as Roma publicly condemn his role in criminal practices. But what no one is admitting is just how his criminal activity got so far, who condoned (and benefited from) it since communist days and who during the tumultuous transition period of the 1990s turned a blind eye. Now, instead of asking these questions, many Bulgarians are being influenced by media and nationalist political parties that are using this tragic car accident to provoke ethnic tensions, pitting Bulgarians against Roma. And these tactics have worked: many Bulgarians in Sofia care more about the Roma origins of the driver than anything else in the case.
Night after night, young protesters, most between the ages of 16 and 19, chant in the streets of Sofia and around Bulgaria, “Death to Gypsies,” “Gypsies into soap” and “Turks under the knife.” High school students post on Facebook to organize mass marches throughout the country. In one group dedicated to anti-Roma marches in the town of Pleven, a student posts: “Gypsies raised Bulgarian flags in a sign of peace ... I am against the truce! Let everyone who agrees with me to click: I like.” Another writes, “Gypsies live like kings while we live in poverty, why is it so?”
Mrs. Yotova, asks the question most Roma in Bulgaria are asking now, wondering why people focus on Kiril Rashkov instead of the multitude of other Bulgarian politicians who have been found to be deeply involved in criminal activity. “Why don’t they turn their eyes towards how Bulgarians live, the ones in Parliament?” Yotova asks. “They [high-up Bulgarian officials] turned him into a criminal ... and now Kiril Rashkov doesn’t pay taxes, but is he the only one that doesn’t pay taxes? The most famous and the biggest don’t pay taxes, all over the world.”
Bulgarians are frustrated with its slowing economy and position as the poorest country in the EU, but rather than directly addressing the EU, national government officials or big business investors, they are turning to the Roma, focusing on long-standing ethnic tensions that have escalated since the 1990s and peaked since the country’s EU accession in 2007. As one staff member of a well-known international organization explained, “right now it looks like a civil war could just break out.”
Courtesy Truthout
http://www.truth-out.org/using-ethnic-tensions-political-games-and-gains-anti-roma-protests-bulgaria/1317845616
Back to Top