3 April 2014 | 14:15 | FOCUS News Agency
Brussels.
Around 90% of Roma pupils leave school
before the completing their studies in Member States such as the Slovak
Republic, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and the Czech Republic.
In some of
these countries, around 50% of Roma children are in segregated schools, a
press release of the European Commission reports.
Tomorrow (4 April), Androulla Vassiliou, Commissioner for Education, Culture, Multilingualism and Youth, will discuss what the EU is doing to help address this problem and other issues which affect Roma integration when she takes part in the European Roma Summit in Brussels.
"Providing quality education for all is not only a question of human rights.
It is the only way out of poverty and exclusion for millions of
Roma.
I find it unacceptable that in some countries around half of all
Roma pupils are in special schools.
We have to join forces to fight
segregation and discrimination, including by looking at the way in which
schools are funded, set up and operated,"
said Commissioner Vassiliou
ahead of the event.
Since 2011, Roma education integration measures have been implemented across the EU with the support of the European Social Fund and the former Lifelong Learning Programme.
In addition, the ROMED programme, jointly funded by the European Commission and Council of Europe, has trained around 1 300 Roma mediators whose aims include encouraging Roma families to keep their children in education until the completion of their studies.
In 2013-2014, the European Commission is allocating ?1 million for 'ROMED II', with a special emphasis on promoting the role and influence of women, in contacts between Roma communities and local municipalities and as mediators for young girls.
The European Roma Summit will also take stock of how national Roma strategies are being implemented and if they are improving the life of Roma communities.
The event will be streamed live online.
Other speakers at the event will include
European Commission President
José Manuel Barroso,
the President of Romania Traian Băsescu,
Deputy
Prime Minister of Bulgaria Zinaida Zlatanova and
Ministers and State
secretaries from nine other EU Member States.
Non-government speakers
include George Soros, chairman of the Open Society Foundations and Zoni
Weisz, survivor from the Roma holocaust.
Last month, Commissioner Vassiliou visited a number of education projects in the Roma communities of Bucharest with Mr Soros and Remus Pricopie, the Romanian Minister of Education.
http://www.focus-fen.net/news/2014/04/03/331918/ec-education-is-the-only-way-out-of-poverty-and-exclusion-for-roma.html
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