Romanian Gypsy Leader Compares Sarkozy To Nazis

by The Associated Press

 

Enlarge <javascript:void(0);>  Associated Press 

A Romanian Roma man goes under a table with a baby in a local tradition while 
attending a religious service at the Bistrita Monastery in Costesti, Romania, 
Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010. A Romanian Gypsy leader on Wednesday compared French 
President Nicolas Sarkozy to Romania's pro-Nazi wartime leader, following the 
expulsion of hundreds of Gypsies from France. Speaking during an annual Gypsy 
feast held on a hill at the foots of the Carpathian Mountains, Iulian 
Radulescu, not in picture, told the Associated Press that Gypsies also known as 
Roma are being unfairly expelled from France.

 

Enlarge <javascript:void(0);>  Associated Press 

Gypsy leader Iulian Radulescu gestures in Costesti, Romania, Wednesday, Sept. 
8, 2010. Radulescu on Wednesday compared French President Nicolas Sarkozy to 
Romania's pro-Nazi wartime leader, following the expulsion of hundreds of 
Gypsies from France. Speaking during an annual Gypsy feast held on a hill at 
the foots of the Carpathian Mountains, Radulescu told the Associated Press that 
Gypsies also known as Roma are being unfairly expelled from France.

 

Enlarge <javascript:void(0);>  Associated Press 

A Romanian Roma man kisses a cross after attending a religious service at the 
Bistrita Monastery in Costesti, Romania, Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010. A Romanian 
Gypsy leader on Wednesday compared French President Nicolas Sarkozy to 
Romania's pro-Nazi wartime leader, following the expulsion of hundreds of 
Gypsies from France. Speaking during an annual Gypsy feast held on a hill at 
the foots of the Carpathian Mountains, Iulian Radulescu, not in picture, told 
the Associated Press that Gypsies also known as Roma are being unfairly 
expelled from France. 

 

Enlarge <javascript:void(0);>  Associated Press 

A Romanian Roma girl eats an ice-cream in Costesti, Romania, Wednesday, Sept. 
8, 2010. A Romanian Gypsy leader on Wednesday compared French President Nicolas 
Sarkozy to Romania's pro-Nazi wartime leader, following the expulsion of 
hundreds of Gypsies from France. Speaking during an annual Gypsy feast held on 
a hill at the foots of the Carpathian Mountains, Iulian Radulescu, not in 
picture, told the Associated Press that Gypsies also known as Roma are being 
unfairly expelled from France.

 

Enlarge <javascript:void(0);>  Associated Press 

A large ring is seen on the finger of a Romanian Roma man attending a religious 
service at the Bistrita Monastery in Costesti, Romania, Wednesday, Sept. 8, 
2010. A Romanian Gypsy leader on Wednesday compared French President Nicolas 
Sarkozy to Romania's pro-Nazi wartime leader, following the expulsion of 
hundreds of Gypsies from France. Speaking during an annual Gypsy feast held on 
a hill at the foots of the Carpathian Mountains, Iulian Radulescu, not in 
picture, told the Associated Press that Gypsies also known as Roma are being 
unfairly expelled from France.

 

Associated Press 

A Romanian Roma baby chews on a banknote while attending a religious service at 
the Bistrita Monastery in Costesti, Romania, Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010. A 
Romanian Gypsy leader on Wednesday compared French President Nicolas Sarkozy to 
Romania's pro-Nazi wartime leader, following the expulsion of hundreds of 
Gypsies from France. Speaking during an annual Gypsy feast held on a hill at 
the foots of the Carpathian Mountains, Iulian Radulescu, not in picture, told 
the Associated Press that Gypsies also known as Roma are being unfairly 
expelled from France.

 

Enlarge <javascript:void(0);>  Associated Press 

A Romanian Roma woman holds a baby while attending a religious service at the 
Bistrita Monastery in Costesti, Romania, Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010. A Romanian 
Gypsy leader on Wednesday compared French President Nicolas Sarkozy to 
Romania's pro-Nazi wartime leader, following the expulsion of hundreds of 
Gypsies from France. Speaking during an annual Gypsy feast held on a hill at 
the foots of the Carpathian Mountains, Iulian Radulescu, not in picture, told 
the Associated Press that Gypsies also known as Roma are being unfairly 
expelled from France.

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COSTESTI, Romania September 8, 2010, 12:59 pm ET 

A Romanian Gypsy leader on Wednesday compared French President Nicolas Sarkozy 
to Romania's pro-Nazi wartime leader, following the expulsion of hundreds of 
Gypsies from France.

Speaking during an annual Gypsy feast held on a hill at the foots of the 
Carpathian Mountains, Iulian Radulescu told The Associated Press that Gypsies — 
also known as Roma — are being unfairly expelled from France.

Dressed in a gray suit and sitting inside a white marquee tent, Radulescu said 
that hundreds of Gypsies are paying the price "for the crimes of the few."

"It is not right to be expelled if you are a law-abiding citizen," the 
71-year-old Radulescu said.

France has sent back about 1,000 Gypsies to Romania and Bulgaria in recent 
weeks as part of its crime fighting measures. Sarkozy has linked Roma to crime, 
calling the camps in which some of them live, sources of trafficking, 
exploitation of children and prostitution.

There are between 10 million and 12 million Gypsies in the EU, most living in 
dire circumstances, victims of poverty, discrimination, violence, unemployment 
and bad housing. An estimated 1.5 million of them live in Romania, a country of 
22 million, which has the largest population of Gypsies in Europe.

Both France and Romania are members of European Union, and under the rules 
governing the 27-member bloc its citizens can travel freely within the union, 
but the governments are also legally permitted to send citizens of other EU 
countries home if they can't find work or support themselves.

The expulsions have been criticized from several quarters including the Roman 
Catholic Church and the United Nations, and even by some members of Sarkozy's 
government and political party have expressed concerns about them.

Also Wednesday, the U.N.'s top human rights official, Navi Pillay, warned that 
France's expulsion policy would "only exacerbate the stigmatization of Roma" 
and worsen the poverty they face, and called on all European countries to enact 
policies that would help the Gypsies "overcome their marginalization." The 
comments came in a statement she plans to deliver Monday at the opening of the 
U.N. Human Rights Council's three-week meeting in Geneva.

Gypsy leader Radulescu compared the expulsions to the ones carried out by 
Romania's pro-Nazi dictator Marshal Ion Antonescu, who ruled the country during 
the World War II.

Antonescu deported 25,000 Gypsies from Romania to the Soviet region of 
Trans-Dniester in 1942. Some 11,000 Gypsies died from exposure, typhus, 
starvation and thirst after they were deported from Romania. A lack of wartime 
records makes it difficult to determine the overall number of Gypsies killed 
during the Holocaust, but according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, it 
is between 220,000 and 500,000.

"Sarkozy is doing what Antonescu did," Radulescu said. He also urged Gypsy 
leaders to try and stop crime within their communities.

A French foreign ministry spokesman, Bernard Valero, dismissed the comments, 
saying he declined to enter into "fruitless debates."

"We consider that it is an European problem that should be solved with an 
European solution," Valero said.

The issue of expulsion will top the agenda of planned talks between French 
Immigration Minister Eric Besson and the Minister for European Affairs, Pierre 
Lellouche, who will visit Romania on Thursday, Valero said.

Romania's President Traian Basescu sent his adviser Peter Eckstein to tell the 
revelers that he supports their freedom of movement within the European Union, 
but also urged them to send their children to school.

At the festival, Gypsies roasted pigs and chicken on open spits, while children 
played on merry go rounds and listened to Gypsy pop and French rap music.

Another Gypsy leader Florin Cioaba told hundreds gathered that they are being 
discriminated in Europe.

"There is one set of laws for European citizens and different laws for the 
Roma," Cioaba said.

———

Associated Press writer Alison Mutler in Bucharest, Frank Jordans in Geneva and 
Daphne Rousseau in Paris contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS spelling to read 'Lellouche'.)

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129723445

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