site.btaAmnesty International's Annual Report Criticizes Bulgaria for Attitude Towards Refugees, Migrants and Roma
Amnesty International's Annual Report Criticizes Bulgaria for Attitude Towards Refugees, Migrants and Roma
 
 London, February 24 (BTA) - Allegations of push-backs of refugees and  migrants by border police persisted, the reception conditions of  asylum-seekers remained poor and there was no integration plan for  recognized refugees. Local and national authorities continued to  forcibly evict Roma, reads Amnesty International's Annual Report  2015/2016 in its part on Bulgaria. 
 
 "A fourfold increase in the number of refugees and migrants entering  through the border with Turkey was registered in 2015, following a  significant drop in 2014 after the introduction of border protection  measures," the report on human rights in Bulgaria reads further. 
 
 "The authorities announced a plan to extend the current 33-km fence on  the border by 60 km, to divert the migration flows to official border  crossings. However, NGOs reported that people in search of international  protection who were trying to enter Bulgaria through checkpoints were  rejected. An extensive surveillance system, including sensors and  thermal cameras, remained in place at the border with Turkey." 
 
 "In October, an Afghan asylum-seeker died after a warning shot fired by a  police officer at the Bulgarian-Turkish border ricocheted on a nearby  bridge and hit him. The Bulgarian Helsinki Committee (BHC) expressed  concerns over inconsistencies between the authorities' and witnesses'  versions. The investigation launched by the Prosecutor's Office was  ongoing at the end of the year."
 
 "There continued to be no integration plan for recognized refugees and  other beneficiaries of international protection. Although the government  adopted the National Strategy on Migration, Asylum and Integration for  2015-2020 in June, it failed to follow it up with an Action Plan that  would implement the Strategy."
 
 "Concerns persisted over the reception conditions of asylum-seekers, in  particular with regard to food, shelter and access to health care and  sanitary goods. In January, the monthly allowance of 65 leva (33 euro)  for asylum-seekers in reception centres was stopped. The BHC filed a  complaint, arguing that the removal of the allowance violated national  legislation."
 
 Amnesty International also criticizes Bulgaria for its attitude towards  the Roma. "Despite the constitutional right to housing, housing  legislation in Bulgaria does not explicitly prohibit forced evictions,  nor does it establish safeguards in line with international human rights  standards. Authorities continued to forcibly evict Romani communities  from informal settlements. Some were relocated to inadequate housing,  while others were rendered homeless," the report reads.
 
 "In June, the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights raised  concerns over the high levels of racism and intolerance against several  groups including refugees, asylum-seekers and migrants, who remained  particularly vulnerable to violence and harassment. Hate crimes against  Roma, Muslims, Jews and other ethnic and religious minorities continued  to be largely prosecuted as acts motivated by 'hooliganism', rather than  under the criminal law provisions specifically enacted for 'racist and  xenophobic hate crimes'." 
 
 "National and international organizations, including the European  Committee for the Prevention of Torture and the Council of Europe  Commissioner for Human Rights, criticized the juvenile justice system as  inadequate and called for a comprehensive reform," the report reads.
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