August 28, 2017

Culture of Shameful Silence of NGOs in Romania

‘Culture of Silence’ Abetted Abuse of at Least 100s victims in Romania

   
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For many years, detainees such as rejected Asylum Seekers/Dublin-Returns/Detained Migrants who are detained in either Arad Immigration Detention and/or Otopeni Immigration Detention in Romania, were insulted, beaten and abused on a regular basis at the hands of Romanian Immigration Detention’s staff also Jandarmeria.

The ‘Culture of Shameful Silence’ of NGOs in Romania such as the Jesuit Refugee Service(JRS), the Romanian National Council for Refugees(CNNR) and the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR abetted abuse of at least 100s victims such as rejected Asylum Seekers/Dublin-Returns/Detained Migrants in Romania. Along with the physical and abuse, many victims suffered psychological abuse.

Detainees and Victims of ill-treatment and torture described the conditions as "hell, prison for dangerous criminals or even worse". 

Many detainees described this time as the “darkest period of their lives, dominated by violence, fear and helplessness.”

Despite that the Jesuit Refugee Service(JRS) was informed about ill-treatment, beating and inhuman conditions during their meeting with detainees whether or not rejected asylum seekers/Dublin Returns/Detained Migrants inside the Romania Immigration Detentions but in line with the culture of Silence keeping the abuse behind closed doors, the Jesuit Refugee Service did not advice or offer legal assistance for victims to complain against perpetrators, detention’s staff and Jandarmeria.

The Jesuit Refugee Service(JRS), The Romanian National Council for Refugees(CNNR), The UN Refugee Agency UNHCR and other NGOs in Romania did not publish any report, news or statement about this matter to raise awareness about the inhuman situation of detainees and they did not take any action to prevent ill-treatment, beating and torture at both Romania Immigration Detentions despite being informed by victims and former detainees.

Also Culture of Silence is about the inhuman living and substandard conditions of refugees and asylum seekers whether they are at Regional Centres for Accommodation and Procedures for Asylum Seekers such as Stolnicu Reception Centre in Bucharest and other cities in Romania or are homeless.


Refugees and asylum seekers were dissatisfied with UN Refugee Agency UNHCR, CNRR, JRS and other NGOs in Romania for the censorship and the insufficiency of reports about their Deplorable Condition (Refugees/Asylum-Seekers Life) in Romania.


June 08, 2017

End destitution of refugees in Romania

    Refugees in Romania ‘Consigned To Homeless and Hunger’ By Romanian Government an EU member
        

    Updated 19 June 2017

    Note: It is possible to continuously update the text with further information.

    Shorted Link goo.gl/8kyY4L


    Refugees are being left homeless and destitute because of Romanian Government policy fails to support them.
    Refugees spent years hunger, homeless and jobless.

    “We are forced to live in deplorable conditions by the European Union’s Dublin Regulation Member States.” Refugees and asylum Seekers said in Romania.
      
    Poor health, no wealth, no home: a case study of destitution
    Fleeing your home and arriving in a new country is a traumatic experience. But once here in Romania, many people who escaped one crisis now face another: destitution.

     Self-worth gone
    Having to live hand-to-mouth, desperate and penniless, can happen at any point in the asylum process, even those taking refugee status in Romania.
    It can affect the young man waiting to submit an application, or the mother who is granted protection and now has to decipher the paperwork.
    As one man said to us during the research: “You lose your whole self-worth.”


     Key findings
    Our latest report on destitution uses the experiences of refugees and asylum seekers across Romania as a case study.
    • Many refugees and asylum seekers report regular hunger – and hungry every day.
    • Many refugees said that they are homeless and do not have any accommodation for sleep
    • Many refugees said their health had worsened.
    • Many refugees have no fixed address. In our experience, this adds to the risk of serious – including sexual – exploitation.
    • Many refugees said that they are unemployment and do not have any allowance support. 



      What are we calling for?
    • We want to see a fair, effective and humane asylum system that treats people with respect and dignity.
    • We want that system to uphold the Romania's responsibilities to provide safety for refugees.
    • We believe that no refugee and asylum seeker in Romania should be without a home and financial support.
    • We think that a better system would include the early and sustained delivery of quality legal advice. 


       Main recommendations
    • Give financial support to people who fall destitute, up until they have refugee status or can return to their home country.
    • Give free healthcare to all refugees and asylum seekers, no matter what their status – as is the case in Western and Northern Europe.


    Share your stories with us, our E-mail
     protect-refugees-network@protonmail.com



    ________________________________________________________
     

    Appalling living conditions for refugees and asylum-seekers in Romania:




    This report documents the extremely difficult living conditions of refugees and asylum seekers and persons with protection status in Romania. This documentation focuses on the situation in Bucharest, however, similar problems are known to exist in other Romanian cities. This description of the circumstances under which people live aims to contribute to an improvement of the situation. Those who are politically responsible in Romania are obliged to create a sufficient number of humane accommodation facilities and adequate integration measures. This report, however, may not be used as an excuse to evict refugees from the provisional accommodation mentioned as these are the only places for those who would otherwise be homeless.

    Until Romania complies with its obligations, we hope this report will help to
    persuade other EU countries to refrain, for the time being, from deporting refugees to Romania. We are not alone in finding that the conditions
    for refugees in Romania are degrading. Other refugee and human rights
    organizations have come to the same conclusions.

    Romania is a member of the European Union Since 2007 also the Europe's Dublin Regulation. A country situated in southeastern Europe, whose national capital is Bucharest. The official language is Romanian. Romania has 22 million inhabitants.An emigrant nation that saw millions of citizens leave in search of work after the demise of the Soviet Union, Romania has recently begun to contend with immigration.

    Romania is one of the EU countries with the lowest percentage of refugees and asylum seekers. The country has just a few small migrant communities, an underdeveloped asylum system and is one of the poorest countries in Europe.

    Being a member of the EU but not of the Schengen area, Romania is just a transit county for asylum seekers and refugees. All asylum applicants in Romania are poor and somewhat confused and the country is rarely their end goal.


    Despite the low number of refugees in the country, anti-refugee sentiment increased dramatically during the year. Public perception toward the regional refugee and migrant crisis switched from initial empathy and a lukewarm reception to growing hostility due to increasing anti-migrant rhetoric within the public sphere. According to a national poll by INSCOP Research, almost 90 percent of the public would not agree to hosting refugees in their community and opposition to them is growing . An NGO attempted to build a small refugee shelter in Ardud, a town in the north of the country but gave up after residents protested and signed a petition against it. In April residents of Vama Veche, a popular seaside resort, protested the building of a government transit center there. The extreme-right party Noua Dreapta (New Right) was very active and vocal in protesting the establishment of such centers.

    It is estimated that on average 1000 to 2000 people apply for asylum each year, from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Iraq, Iran, Ukraine, Russia, Turkey also other countries and most recently, from Africa and Syria.
    Romania was hit hard by the economic crisis in 2010 with cuts in social benefits, wages and jobs. Asylum-seekers also felt the financial squeeze when hot water in reception centres was restricted to only certain hours a day in the wake of budget cuts.
    Asylum seekers in Romania face a number of difficulties, especially outside of the capital where shortcomings are even graver than in Bucharest.

    According to the Dublin regulation, you can only apply for refugee status in one
    member state. Usually, this is the member state which you first reach. In practice
    this normally means that the country where you apply will return you to the
    appropriate state.

    The deal’s flawed assumption that Romania is a safe and protective country for asylum seekers and refugees would allow the members state to transfer them back to Romania without considering the merits of their asylum claims.

    The Dublin Regulation applies in the following countries(31 states) Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Norway, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and United Kingdom.


    The competent authorities to receive your asylum application are the branches of:
    - Romanian Immigration Office (RIO)
    - Romanian Border Police
    - Romanian Police
    - National Administration of Prisons within Ministry of Justice

    RIO – Regional Centre for Accommodation and Procedures for Asylum Seekers in Romania:
    • Stolnicu Reception Centre in Bucharest
    • Radauti Reception Centre (North-East of Romania)
    • Somcuta Mare Reception Centre (North–West of Romania)
    • Galati Reception Centre (East of Romania)
    • Timisoara Reception Centre (West of Romania)

      Being a Refugee in Romania;
    Some problems in Stolnicu Reception Centre (Asylum/Refugee Camp) in Bucharest in summary;
    RIO – Regional Centre for Accommodation and Procedures for Asylum Seekers, the Block with the ground floor, 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th floors without Lift and No archway entrance for Disabled Patient . Address: Str. Vasile Stolnicu, nr.15, bl.13, sector 2, Bucurest, Romania
    Most people in the buildings are men but there
    are also couples and ‘vulnerable persons’ like single parents with very
    small children, pregnant women and unaccompanied minors
    . There are also the sick, persons with disabilities, elderly persons, victims of torture.



    • Prison or a cage for refugees/asylum seekers:
    The Stolnicu Reception Centre(Regional Centre for Accommodation)is not designed to host asylum-seekers or refugees. It is like an old, damaged prison or a cage with not enough equipment. The residents group (Refugees/Asylum Seekers) complained about general living conditions.

    According to Stolnicu Reception Centre rules, residents are allowed to stay out only from morning until 9 or 10 p.m.. they are not allowed
    to live outside even if they have the financial means to afford it. If they overstay the permitted time outside, they claim that they were punished and prohibited to enter the Block even in winter and finally they were not allowed to stay in Stolnicu Reception Centre, and then they became homeless in the streets of Bucharest.


    In their view, the Stolnicu Reception Centre rules negatively affected their
    free movement. Even if a child was hungry in middle of the night the centre would not allow the residents to leave the centre between 10pm and 8am.



    • No respect to privacy's right by Stolnicu Reception’s staff:
    Another cause of dissatisfaction among asylum seekers/refugees is the unwillingness of some staff members to communicate with them and provide information. Some refugees/asylum seekers sent letters to the management complaining about excessive checks and the behaviour of the guards but have not received a reply.
    Practically all groups complained that the guards excessively check their bags and perform body searches, mobile phone also taking photo from their personal papers or their stuff in the bed room. Also, they have the impression that certain groups of asylum seekers are scrutinised more rigorously than others, which is perceived as highly discriminatory behaviour.
    They also pointed out the difficulties in communication with UNHCR and CNRR’s staff at the time of visit of Stolnicu Reception Centre.  

    Refugees and asylum seekers were dissatisfied with UNHCR and CNRR for the censorship and the insufficiency of reports about their Deplorable Condition (Refugees/asylum seekers Life) in Romania.

    Some refugees/asylum seekers sent requests to the Asylum Section,
    Romanian Immigration Office (RIO) complaining about deplorable conditions in Stolnicu Receptions Accommodation also about some staff members but they did not receive an answer. 
     
    These issues were raised by many refugees and asylum seekers particularly ‘vulnerable persons’ who pointed out the mental stress caused to them by the atmosphere at Stolnicu Accommodation.

    Non standard accommodation and sometimes unsafely: some refugees and asylum seekers(adults and children) suffered from an electric shock either once or several times occasionally (frequent electric shocks as a result of damp walls from broken pipes).

    Image: "Frequent electric shock" at Stolnicu Reception Centre


    There is no Fire Exit, no Fire Alarm (not even carbon monoxide alarm) inside the Block(Stolnicu Reception Centre) in case of an emergency situation where many people will be at the high risk such as injury or even death.


    Lack of clean drinking water: safe and sustainable supply of water for drinking and sometimes for washing, cleaning and bath.
    There is also sometimes a lack of heating in winter also heating water for the bath.
    water dripped through the electrics – we were electrocuted often. Children and families screamed. We lived in fear of the wild dogs who circled the camp, attacking and biting us. We were given no food; we had to go through bins in the town nearby for scraps.” Refugees and asylum seekers said.

    Watch Video on YouTube:  Filthy water causes illness at Stolnicu Centre in Bucharest Romania, https://youtu.be/jEP6DZfc7Fg
     
    Many asylum-seekers are dissatisfied with the quality of hygienic
    items provided
    to them. Soaps that are irritating and itchy.
    The beds are shabby, noisy and old. When I finally fall
    asleep, after 12 o’clock the
    terrible barks of stray dogs wake me up at midnight.”

    Refugees and asylum seekers said that Romanian Members Staff at Reception Centres do not provide Cleaning Equipment like Bleach (Anti-bacterial), Liquid, Bin and Mop to clean the kitchen, toilet, sleeping room etc.

    Watch Video on YouTube: Unhygienic kitchen of Stolnicu Centre in Bucharest, kitchen
    Watch other Videos on YouTube:
    Unhygienic Conditions Life at Stolnicu Centre in Bucharest, Extremely dirty kitchen and sleeping room


    Unsafe Location and Fear of the Stray Dogs: the stray dogs who circled the camp, attacking and biting some refugees and asylum seekers(adults and children) at the campsite(yard), around the camp and on the streets. Also waking up the residents from sleep by terrible barks of stray dogs at midnight.

    Since 2009, Refugee residents had warned the Stolnicu Reception’s Manager also the staff, the Asylum Section of Immigration Office (RIO), UNHCR and CNRR’s staff at the time of visit of Stolnicu Reception Centre over being attacked by stray dogs particularly for children that are in Bucharest or wherever they are in Romania also about unsafe block and the location but no one paid any attention. Refugee Families residents told them that "We do not want the stray dogs maul our children in Romania and we are deeply worry about their safety, our children are not dog food. Several times we saved our children and Romanian children from stray dogs attacks. The stray dogs must pick up from the streets in Romania immediately. We are feeling too scared due to the problem of stray dogs. We have to flee from Romania to Western and Northern Europe."

    As a direct result of the failed resettlement and appalling refugee situation in Romania, the Kachin refugees from Myanmar have no choice but to flee to Denmark. Mrs. Maran Seng Ra a refugee mother of two children has died due to depression and serious illness on 30th September 2012 living in Vigso Feriencenter in Denmark Asylum Centre. According to her friends, she and her family were afraid to return to Romania. She was frequently mentioned how worried about the future of her two children if she was forced to return to Romania by the Danish immigration authorities under the European Union-Europe’s "Dublin Regulation".

    [‘Protest in Bucharest over killing of four-year-old by stray dogs’

    Hundreds of people gathered in the Romanian capital Bucharest on Sunday, to campaign for the euthanasia of the city’s stray dogs. The killing of a four-year-old by strays in a park has thrown a serious spotlight on the issue and led to calls for a cull on some sixty thousand dogs which roam the streets. Many held up placards saying, “We don’t want to be next.”
    Aurica Anghe, the boy’s grandmother was among the demonstrators. She told euronews, “I hope for a change for the better. I don’t want to see dogs on the street anymore.”
    In all, around 6,700 people were bitten over the first six months of 2013 alone in Bucharest.
    by Euronews, last updated: 08/09/2013]

    ['Dogs Have Conquered Romania's Cities', ‘Government Neglected Issue for Years’

    "A deadly dog attack on a four-year-old boy in Bucharest has brought new attention to an old problem: Romania's hundreds of thousands of stray dogs. ... Police later found the four-year-old boy in the bushes, half-eaten. Medical forensics experts later determined he had been bitten hundreds of times, and had bled to death from external injuries."
    In recent days, parents have protested angrily in Bucharest under the motto, "We're not dog food!" Ionut's death is the main story being covered by the Romanian media these days, and it is the subject of a lively debate on Internet forums. A recent poll shows that three-quarters of Bucharest residents support killing the feral dogs. ...
    The outrage is hardly surprising. The authorities estimate there are several hundred thousand street dogs roaming through Romanian cities and communities, including around 65,000 in Bucharest.

    The Anti-Rabies Center at the Institute for Infectious Diseases has reported 10,000 people in the capital have been given immunizations after dog bites this year alone. Two-thousand of those patients were children. Last year, 16,000 residents of Bucharest reported being bitten by wild dogs -- 3,000 more than the year before. This recently prompted Romanian journalist Iulian Leca to write, "The street dogs have long since conquered Romania's cities. At night, especially, it is they and not the police who control the streets."
     
    The deadly attack by feral dogs played out a week ago, and has drawn new public attention to a problem in Romania that has existed for years. Thousands of stray dogs have roamed the country's cities, and they are becoming increasingly dangerous.
     
    And Ionut's death wasn't the first case suggesting the city needed to take urgent action. In 2012, a retired woman died in the northern Romanian city of Sathmar after a dog attack. Two months later, stray dogs killed a six-year-old boy in an eastern Romanian village. In January 2011, street dogs in Bucharest attacked a female employee of a recycling firm, and she died three days later of complications related to her injuries. In January 2006, a Japanese businessman bled to death in Bucharest after a dog bit him in the leg.
    Reported by abcNews.]


    No interpreters: Many refugees and asylum seekers said that there are no interpreters
    for them. This negatively affects their access to social and medical assistance.
    Many people who were interviewed complained that their monthly allowances do not cover their
    material needs. They depend on a monthly allowance –
    equivalent to 70-80 cents of Euro per day- that does not cover even the most basic needs of a person living for only a few days in Romania.
    In such circumstances there is no way to fund any needs beyond the
    most basic ones. For example, parents reported that their children cannot participate in
    any extra-curricular activities because they cannot afford the expenses.
    Those living in these places cannot provide a suitable permanent address. A permanent address is a per-requisite for access to state health services.
    Many of the complaints were related to health services also many residents suffer illnesses: Doctors and administrative staff in health care institutions sometimes reject refugees, be it for ignorance about their status or for language barriers. There were also systemic issues such as the obligation to pay a minimum medical fee when seeing a doctor, but the amount was too high for some of the refugees/asylum seekers to pay and they will not be able to pay for them. 






     "Poor health, no wealth, no food, no home, no permanent address" refugees residents said in Romania.

    Our latest report on destitution uses the experiences of refugees and asylum seekers across Romania as a case study;
    • Many refugees and asylum seekers report regular hunger – and hungry every day,
    • Many refugees experiencing difficulties finding a home to live in,
    • Refugees face obstacles to registration, access to education, employment, health care and bank accounts despite having access to temporary protection status.


    Many refugees who had left Asylum Seekers Camp (Regional Centre for Accommodation and Procedures for Asylum Seekers in Romania) said that they are unemployed and at the same time they do not have any support allowance also they are homeless and do not have any accommodation for sleep (when asylum-seekers receive refugee status or some other form of protection, they have to leave the regional centres within a few months and find private accommodation) in addition they must pay rent monthly while they are staying at the refugee camp/s.

    Many refugees left after the maximum stay of six months with neither work nor accommodation, that is to say, straight into homelessness and destitution. As a result, the majority find themselves fighting for survival for many years.

     
    Those who do not have a permanent address will have great difficulty finding legal, socially insured employment. Most of the affected individuals who do employment work in insecure conditions with no employment contracts and often find themselves exploited. They are not insured in the case of unemployment or injury at work.

    The lack of housing and the lack of a regular income make it almost impossible for refugees to bring their family to Romania.

    There are refugees mother/father who couldn't bring their child/children and also wife/husband coudn't bring their partner for two, three, four, five, six, seven years or even more even though they recognized as a refugees statues(legal residence) in Romania. There are some refugees father couldn't see their new born baby ever.

    Interviews with recognized refugees in Romania revealed much the same
    problems as in the previous two, three, four, five, six, seven years or even more such as: No access to the Medical Health, No Job, No Home, No Permanent Address, No Food and No Hope.

    Refugees cannot open a bank account in Romania.

    They find it hard to get affordable accommodation because they are not entitled to social
    housing.

    However, refugees need a written contract to receive rental subsidies and to have an official permanent address which in turn is a prerequisite for obtaining a work permit.

    Some refugees said that they are unemployed and do not have any allowance support therefore becoming vulnerable to exploitation.

    Not surprisingly the interviews revealed that elderly persons with protection status face even more difficulties in finding a job and earning money. They are not able to accrue pension rights in Romania.

    “Health, Jobs and Housing are Preconditions for Refugee Life”, Refugees and asylum Seekers said in Romania

     "Romania Government made so much promises to us before we reached in Romania, that they will provide us food, house and medication until we will get self sufficient to survive. But they did not keep their promises when we reached in Romania. We were not provided anything their promises. So we faced without house, without medication, and no enough food, unavailable job though we hunted many time. We faced a lot of difficulties and hardship. Therefore we went to Denmark for asylum. but the Danish authority said according to the agreement(Dublin Regulation)in European countries they cannot accept us." a father Kachin refugee from Myanmar said.

    Listen to a father refugee in Romania on soundcloud.com/protectrefugees

    Access to Health Services is very Difficult or impossible for Refugees
    - In order to access free government healthcare in Romania, one must register with a family doctor and pay the health insurance fee monthly. Persons who have no income and can therefore not afford the health insurance fee cannot register with the family doctor. Consequently, they are unable to access adequate, free medical treatment when needed. Health insurance is also necessary when applying for long-term residence, which again is a pre-condition for Romanian citizenship.
    Many refugees and asylum seekers said that there are no interpreters
    for them. This negatively affects their access to social and medical assistance.
    Many refugees said their health had worsened as result not able to access to the Medical Care.

    We are forced to live in deplorable conditions.” Refugees said in Romania.

     
    Vulnerable cases face additional obstacles:

     


    • Definition of vulnerable applicants in Romanian law: The 2011 modifications to the Aliens law introduced a description of ‘vulnerable persons’ encompassing, ‘children, unaccompanied children, persons with disabilities, elderly persons, pregnant women, single parent families with children, victims of torture, rape and other serious forms of physical, emotional or sexual violence’.
    • Parents Concerned about Meals and Education of Children. Asylum Seekers Children cannot access to the school.
    • Separated Children Need More Care and Counselling.
    • Unaccompanied minors have often experienced complicated life situations accompanied by unpleasant and traumatizing events in their past.
    • The protection situation is very poor. The children understand neither their rights nor their
      status.
    • Children’s Fate Determined by Poverty. Also, poverty discrimination leads to increased aggressive behaviour’s children.
    • Victims of Torture do not have any support from the Government.
    • Lack of Identification of Vulnerable Groups by the UNHCR.

         
       
    • Refugees who flee Romania for safety and security but when one of the EU’s Countries refusing their asylum seeker application under the European Union’s Dublin Regulation, she/he experiencing deplorable conditions life again and then facing the Deportation to Romania.

      Refugees only can travel to the EU’s countries and they do not have any rights such as;

    • No permission for jobs,
    • No official documents, is not allowed to work or study, and finds herself/himself filled with uncertainty and frustration,
    • No access to the medical health care,
    • No housing, food, education,
    • Adult refugees also asylum seekers cannot reunited legally with their close relatives like mother, father, sister/s, brother/s or grand mother/s, grand father/s uncle/s, aunt/s.
    • Refugees and asylum seekers informed us that, if a refugee or asylum seekers apply for asylum application in one of the EU’s Countries, she/he going to face the detention and then deportation to Romania and they will be in One of Immigration Detention Centers(or both) where they will be treated as a criminal.

    Generally refugees suffer from unemployment, homelessness, hunger, pains of their mental/physical illnesses, even those have been torture victims in their home lands and/or in Romania.

    Refugees must back to Romania every 2 or 3 years to renew their temporary residents, they must provide a formal of prove address like a legal contract rent for at least one year. if not the Romanian authorities will not review their residence document.

    Not having a permanent address can also become problematic in a lot
    of communes where the stay permit will not be extended without it. As a
    result many persons with protection status run the risk of becoming “illegal”.

    Refugees cannot renew their temporary resident or travel document in Romanian Embassies in the EU’s countries.

    November 22, 2016

    Methods of Torture in Romania

    ‘Methods of Torture and ill-treatment in Romanian Immigration Detention Centres’

     



    This briefing provides an overview of immigration detention-deportation centres in Romania.







    This report, however, may not be used as an excuse to evict refugees and asylum seekers whether in Romania or in the Europe’s Dublin Regulation Member States.



    This description of the circumstances under which Torture Victims are in detention centers aims to stop all forms of cruelty and humiliation as well as all forms of physical or psychological ill-treatment, and this report is not intended in any way to endanger the persons(survivors of torture, witnesses, detainees) concerned at risk. Whether those who are in Detention Centers or released them from Detention Centers in Romania.



    Many Torture Victims have faced torture in a number of different torture methods, both physically and psychological. Some of the most common methods of physical torture including beatings(frequently, severe and repeated beating with Baton or other instruments), suffocation, submersion and stretching.



    Psychological forms of torture and ill-treatment, which very often have the most long-lasting consequences for victims, commonly include: isolation, threats, humiliation and witnessing the torture of others.









    Torture and ill-treatment in Romanian Immigration Detention Centres



    • Handcuffed in Bed for many hours up to a few days, denying them adequate food and water or toilet breaks
    • Throwing tear gas into cell, so that causing trouble breathing,
    • Severe and repeated beating with baton or other instruments causing deep cuts, pain, bleeding and broken bones. Other arbitrary punishments include being kicked or punched. Survivors of torture reported being assaulted or beaten on all parts of the body, most commonly on the head and face, arms, back, chest, abdomen and legs.
    • During beating, victims are thrown to the ground on broken glass or other things and when the beating ended the prison officers' steps on the victims' head and puts lot of pressure on deep cuts too to cause more pain, some victims were unable to walk at all, victims have described how the body would swell and their clothing would be stained with blood from the head to the feet as a result of beatings but the authorities of detention centres have refused to give them permission to have medical treatment outside the detention centres,
    • Frequently beating a father in the presence of his child,
    • Suffocation, Submersion, Water-boarding,
    • Humiliation and mistreatment,
    • Holding detainees in very stress positions, being forced and deported back to their countries of origin, thus facing torture again.
    • Insufficient access to medical services after torturing and beating.



    These physical and psychological torture can be very dangerous and have negative impact on refugees and asylum seekers for rest of their life.








    We condemn such action taken against vulnerable refugees and asylum seekers who have already been subject to violence and persecution in their countries of origin as well as in Romanian Immigration Detention Centres too.





    There are many questions such as,


    Why the perpetrators do not fear arrest, prosecution or punishment?



    Why “Europe’s Dublin Regulation Member States” do not stop the deportation of refugees and asylum seekers to Romania?




    ________________________________________________________
      
    Shorten URL, goo.gl/RROhVj



    Related Topics by 

     Detainees stories collected by Migreurop based in Paris, an international network of NGOs, activists and researchers, working on migrant's detention, externalization of EU immigration policies and on borders:
    Arad Immigration detention : "We are in hell" , on the 08/03/2012
      • English Arad camp (Romania): "We are in hell"
    http://www.migreurop.org/article2088.html?lang=en
      • français Camps d’Arad (Roumanie): "on est en enfer"
    http://www.migreurop.org/article2089.html?lang=fr

    Arad Immigration detention: handcuffed and beaten for a lighter, collected on the 26/03/2012
      • English Arad Camp (Romania): handcuffed and beaten for a lighter
    http://www.migreurop.org/article2100.html?lang=en
      • français Camp d’Arad (Roumanie) : Menotté et tabassé pour du feu.
    http://www.migreurop.org/article2098.html?lang=fr

    Otopeni Immigration detention: « We are not animals! » ; Story collected on the phone on the 13th and 14th of June 2012
      • English Otopeni camp (Romania): «We are not animals!»
    http://www.migreurop.org/article2144.html?lang=en
      • français Camp d’Otopeni (Roumanie) : « Nous ne sommes pas des animaux ! »
    http://www.migreurop.org/article2143.html?lang=fr

    Otopeni Immigration detention: « We are not allowed to go outside! » ; Detainee’s stories collected on the phone on the 11/06/2012
      • English Romania, Otopeni camp: «We are not allowed to go outside!»
    http://www.migreurop.org/article2140.html?lang=en
     • français Roumanie, centre de rétention d’Otopeni : « On a pas le droit de sortir dehors !»
    http://www.migreurop.org/article2139.html?lang=fr


    September 03, 2016

    Immigration Detention(deportation) Centres in Romania

    Immigration Deportation Centres in Romania:

     


    Shorten URL: http://goo.gl/oD70tc

    1. Arad Immigration Detention, Centre for Accommodation of Foreigners taken in Public Custody Arad
    Comuna Horia, Judetul Arad (The centre is not in ARAD but in a small village closed to Arad, called Horia (20-30 km) far away).



    2. Otopeni Immigration Detention, Centre for Accommodation of Foreigners taken in Public Custody Otopeni
    Sos. Bucuresti- Ploiesti, nr.257, Otopeni, judet Ilfov
    (The centre is near to Bucharest, 15 km far away, in Otopeni)


    ___________________________________


    Shorten URL: http://goo.gl/YD28Sl

    September 12, 2014

    Life in Romania is impossible for Refugees

    European countries must stop sending refugees and asylum seekers back to Romania.

    Detention centres and living conditions of Refugees and Asylum seekers in Romania constituted inhuman or degrading treatment.


    According to the European Union law's "Dublin Regulation", the first Member State that an asylum seeker enters should be the one to examine the asylum application. Therefore, the authorities of “Dublin Regulation Member States returned refugees & asylum seekers to Romania where they were in degrading and inhuman conditions.

    The authorities of “Dublin Regulation Member States” routinely refuse to examine asylum applications of refugees and asylum seekers who have transited Romania on the basis of the 'safe third country' concept.

    This is based on the flawed assumption that refugees and asylum seekershave access to protection there.

    “Protect Refugees Network (PRN)” wants that Western & Northern European to know this truth: "Life is not possible for refugees and asylum seekers in Romania".

    In addition, European countries such as Germany, The Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, the United Kingdom, Austria, Denmark etc. must stop sending refugees back to Romania.

    Returning refugees and asylum seekers from 
     “Dublin Regulation Member States” to Romania 
    violates the European Convention on Human Rights
    (An asylum seeker may not be transferred to a Member State where he risks being subjectedto inhumane treatment, 21 December 2011) and 
    the PRESS RELEASE No 147/13 of the Court of Justice of the European Union, 14 November 2013.


    This report (Refugees in Romaniatreated ‘Worse than Animals’ in Detention Centres) documents the extremely sorrowful detaining conditions of refugees & asylum seekers that detained in Detention Centres in Bucharest (Otopeni) and Arad, Romania.

    Refugees and Asylum-Seekers are alone in finding a way for saving themselves.


    ‘Inhuman Conditions’ after Deportation from European countries to Romania under the Europe’s Dublin Regulation.

    “Protect Refugees Network (PRN)” describes the receptions conditions for refugees & asylum seekers in Romania as ‘deplorable’ and ‘at variance with the right to human dignity and respect for privacy’.



    The Refugees who have "refugee status" are hunger and homeless in Romania.

    The Refugees who took "refugee status" are homeless in Romania. No health insurance, medicine, social security, housing, work and no food.

    Situation of Refugees and Asylum Seekers at Regional Centre for Accommodation and Procedures(a Half Open Centre) in Romania; some problems are the lack of safety(Ex. electric shock), foods, safe drinking water, medical assistance and the fact that the buildings are not designed to host asylum seekers.

    Asylum seekers who granted refugee status must leave Regional Centre for Accommodation and Procedures(a Half Open Centre) before a certain period of time has ended(within a few months) without any accommodation for sleep, thus become a homeless.


     Inhuman situations at immigration Detention Centres(Deportation Cntres) in Romania:

    The medical problems that detained migrants and asylum seekers suffer from, often as a result of substandard conditions and the lack of consistent or adequate medical assistance.
    Conditions include respiratory, gastrointestinal,
    dermatological, and musculature diseases, as well as anxiety, depression, and extreme acts such as hunger strikes.


    The video recorded by asylum seeker's mobile in Detention Centres, in Comuna Horia, Judetul Arad in Romania.




    Detention Centres (
    Closed Centre)
    in Romania:
    1.
    Centre for Accommodation of Foreigners taken in Public Custody Arad
    Comuna Horia, Judetul Arad for irregular migrants
    ((The centre is not in ARAD but in a small village closed to Arad, called Horia (20-30 km) far away))
    2.
    Centre for Accommodation of Foreigners taken in Public Custody Otopeni Sos. Bucuresti- Ploiesti, nr.257, Otopeni, judet Ilfov
    For irregular migrants (The centre is near to Bucharest, 15 km far away, in Otopeni –)


     Protect Refugees Network requires from the European Union and the authorities of “Dublin Regulation Member States” to Stop the Deportation of Refugees and Asylum Seekers To Romania.



    “Protect Refugees Network (PRN)


    http://protect-refugees.blogspot.com/

    See more:
    EU court issues ruling against Greece for 'inhuman treatment' of refugees,            


    “Suntem trataţi mai rău ca animalele”.  By Costi Rogozanu, 21.03.2012


    Refugees in Romania – treated ‘Worse than Animals’ in Detention Centres. April 5, 2012

    By Dr Gill Gillespie, UK Director and Walton K Martin, US Director
    https://iranian-refugees.com/2012/04/05/refugees-in-romania-treated-worse-than-animals-in-detention-centres/ 
    Locations of open centres and closed detention centres for asylum seekers and irregular migrants in Romania.

    Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms as amended by Protocols No. 11 and No. 14, Rome, 4. XI.1950 [Article 1 – Obligation to respect human rights: The High Contracting Parties shall secure to everyone within their jurisdiction the rights and freedoms defined in Section I of this Convention. Article 3 – Prohibition of torture: No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Article 5 – Right to liberty and security: 1. everyone has the right to liberty and security of person.]


    JUDGMENT OF THE COURT (Grand Chamber), 21 December 2011, In Joined Cases C411/10 and C493/10,



    European Commission: Summaries of important judgments, May 2012



    “All EU Member States, Norway, Switzerland, Liechtenstein and Iceland apply the Dublin system”.

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