ERRC Press Release: recent events in Hajduhadhaz, Hungary
Reply-To: [email protected]
Sender: [email protected]
From: MINELRES moderator <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 26 Mar 1999 10:00:28 +0200 (EET)
Message-Id: <[email protected]>
Subject: ERRC Press Release: recent events in Hajduhadhaz, Hungary
From: MINELRES moderator <[email protected]>
Original sender: European Roma Rights Center <[email protected]>
ERRC Press Release: recent events in Hajduhadhaz, Hungary
Information service of the European Roma Rights Center
this is not a discussion list DO NOT REPLY TO THIS MESSAGE
for subscription and additional information see end of the message
--------------------------------------------------------------------
European Roma Rights Center Press Release concerning recent events in
Hajduhadhaz, Hungary
March 23, 1999
The ERRC is deeply concerned about the human rights situation of Roma
in the town of Hajduhadhaz, eastern Hungary, approximately 20
kilometres from the city of Debrecen. Hajduhadhaz is home to
approximately 13,000 persons, around 3000 of whom are Romani. The ERRC
first visited Hajduhadhaz in September 1997 and documented instances
of police brutality against Romani individuals at that time. Since
then, the situation - especially in terms of relations between Roma
and the police - appears to have either remained as critical or to
have worsened. On March 14 and 15, 1999, the ERRC documented recent
instances of alleged police brutality against Romani individuals.
Additionally, four individuals - three of them Romani and one a
non-Romani man - recently gave accounts of their experiences with the
police in Hajduhadhaz on a nationally televised documentary program
aired in Hungary on the evening of March 12, 1999. According to the
testimony of Romani and non-Romani individuals in Hajduhadhaz, the
police now appear to be intent on taking revenge against persons who
spoke about their experiences on the program.
The ERRC conducted interviews with three Romani men, all of whom
independently alleged that they and one other Romani man had been
physically abused and their ethnicity insulted on March 6, March 8,
March 9 and March 10, while they were in detention in connection with
a reported break-in on the night of March 5, 1999. According to
testimony provided to the ERRC by 21-year-old AR, his brother
19-year-old ZR, and their cousin, 15-year-old LH, acting on the basis
of unknown information, police conducted house searches on the morning
of March 6 in two flats occupied by the Romani men and their
relatives. During these searches, police impounded a pair of boots.
The same morning, police officers detained the three men. A fourth
Romani man, 19-year-old Mr DR, reportedly turned himself into the
police shortly thereafter, after having heard a rumour that police
were looking for him.
In the subsequent hours, three police officers whose names are known
to the ERRC physically abused the four Romani concerned during
successive periods lasting fifteen minutes to half an hour in which
they were interrogated independently. The officers also insulted the
ethnic origins of the men while interrogating them. They were
apparently attempting to extract a confession from them to a break-in
which had occurred the night before in a local shop. The four men were
released without being charged at approximately four in the afternoon
on Saturday March 6, but told to return on Monday March 8 at seven in
the morning. They were subsequently interrogated on March 8, March 9
and March 10. On all three days, officers physically abused and
insulted them. Their allegations include:
Officer SN reportedly pushed AR face first into the seat of a chair.
He reportedly struck AR in the head with his fist. Another officer, Mr
IN, allegedly punched AR in the mouth, causing his mouth to bleed. His
subsequent request to be allowed to go to the bathroom to wash the
blood from his mouth was refused. IN also reportedly punched AR in the
stomach and slapped him repeatedly. Officers called AR a "dirty Gypsy"
and uttered a range of profanities about his relatives.
Police officer IN reportedly knelt on the thigh of ZR, causing pain by
pressing his knee into ZR's thigh. He additionally struck ZR's head
against a wall, causing it to swell. He also stabbed ZR on the top of
his head with a set of keys and kicked ZR on the knees and ankles.
Officers slapped ZR repeatedly. Officers called ZR a "stinking Gypsy",
said obscene things about his relatives and told him "not to Gypsy",
by which they meant "Don't lie".
Fifteen-year-old LH, a minor, was also interrogated on March 6, March
8, March 9 and March 10. He told the ERRC that he was physically
abused on March 6. Officer SN struck him twice across the mouth with
his open hand. He was not physically abused on subsequent days.
Officers did not inform his legal guardian of his detention, in
contravention of Hungarian law. On March 8, his father came to the
police station while he was being interrogated but was not allowed
into the interrogation room, in contravention of Hungarian law.
On March 10, while all four men were being photographed by police in a
courtyard in back of the police station, officers paraded a dog
amongst them and approximately ten other Romani men who had been
detained, encouraging the dog to snap at them. None of the men were
bitten. Officer IN allegedly walked behind the Romani men with a pair
of scissors, pretending to cut their hair. Officer IN also suggested
to AR that he jump on the upturned prongs of a garden rake in the
courtyard. AR did not do so.
On all four days, the interrogations were audible to the other men,
who were made to wait either in the hall outside the interrogation
room, or in a detention cell. LH told the ERRC that he signed a
two-page text on March 8 which he did not read and which was not read
to him. AR and ZR told the ERRC that they did not sign any statements.
None of the Romani men have been informed whether or not charges have
been brought against them. During the week, Romani relatives of the
four men were threatened with beating when they stated their intention
of filing a complaint about police ill-treatment.
A second incident concerns an incident of police ill-treatment which
took place in January, as well as subsequent efforts at revenge by the
police following the publication of the story on a television program
shown nationally. On March 15, the ERRC interviewed a 16-year-old
Romani youth named Attila Rezes concerning an incident of police
brutality in Hajduhadhaz which almost cost him his life in January
1999. At approximately 8:00 PM on January 11, according to his
testimony, Mr Rezes was walking home from a local video shop with a
friend of his when a police car approached them at high speed. Two
officers not known to Mr Rezes got out of the car, threw Mr Rezes and
his friend to the ground and repeatedly kicked and struck them with
rubber truncheons. Officers struck Mr Rezes a number of times in the
head.
Officers then ordered the two men to stand and handcuffed them. Mr
Rezes told the ERRC that he felt dizzy as he stood. Officers then
allegedly forced his friend to get into the trunk of the car, while Mr
Rezes was put in the back seat of the police car with a non-Romani man
in a leather jacket whom he did not know. The two Romani men were
brought to the police station in Hajduhadhaz where they were made to
stand facing a wall. Officers warned them not to touch the wall, and
various officers struck Mr Rezes several times for disobeying this
order.
Approximately half an hour later, the two men were reportedly brought
together into an office and interrogated in connection with an
incident in which the window of a shop was broken. During the
interrogation, officers reportedly struck Mr Rezes with their fists
and with truncheons on his head, legs and shins, approximately ten
times. At around 12:30 AM, Mr Rezes was released from custody. He was
not asked to sign any documents and he was not charged with a crime.
Upon arriving home, Mr Rezes felt ill. He told the ERRC that he asked
his father for an aspirin and went to bed. He reportedly remembers
little after arriving home. His father, Mr Imre Rezes, told the ERRC
that he did not wake up the next day.
On January 13, his father brought him to hospital, where he was
admitted and diagnosed as having intra-cranial haematomae. A medical
protocol issued subsequently documents a three centimetre long wound
on the left side of his head. He was successfully operated on the same
day. He remained in hospital for approximately eleven or twelve days.
He was released while still in pain and subsequently had difficulty
speaking.
The Hajdu-Bihar County Prosecutor's Office subsequently opened
investigation into police conduct in connection with the incident. Two
officers were reportedly detained in connection with the incident in
late January. One was released shortly thereafter, while a second
spent approximately one month in detention. Attila Rezes has been
interrogated three or four times by an official from the prosecutor's
office, the first time in Debrecen, and subsequently in the office of
the local government in Hajduhadhaz. The most recent such hearing took
place on March 16.
On March 12, the television channel RTL-Klub, seen nationally in
Hungary, broadcast an episode of the documentary program Fokusz, in
which they featured allegations of police brutality in Hajduhadhaz.
Attila Rezes was shown with his face and name broadcast in full, and
three other individuals testified with their faces obscured.
Since the March 12 broadcast, police officers have reportedly expended
intense effort to discover the identities of the three persons shown
on the Fokusz program. On March 13, one of the men, a 23-year-old
non-Romani man named Jozsef Vass was detained by police, allegedly in
connection with the March 5 theft described above. Officers conducted
a house search in which they confiscated items including two bars of
chocolate, a package of tea and cosmetic products including shampoo.
Mr Vass alleges that he was physically abused in police custody and
that officers stated that they should treat him "specially", since he
had appeared on "that television program". Mr Vass was told to report
to police at 7:00 AM on March 16. The ERRC engaged a lawyer to
accompany Mr Vass to the interrogation, but he was reportedly not let
into the interrogation room, in contravention of Hungarian law. In
late morning, Mr Vass was released, but following the departure of his
lawyer, he was reportedly detained near the police station, taken back
into custody and physically abused. The two other men who appeared on
the March 12 Fokusz program, both of whom are Romani, went into hiding
because they feared retaliatory action by police.
On March 17, journalists from the Fokusz program returned to
Hajduhadhaz and accompanied Mr Vass and Mr Imre Rezes, the brother of
Attila Rezes and one of the Romani individuals who had appeared on the
March 12 Fokusz programme, to a pub known to be frequented by police
officers. In the presence of a hidden television camera, officers
assaulted and physically abused Mr Vass. The incident was broadcast on
the television station RTL-Klub on March 18. In the broadcast,
individuals identified by the two youths as police officers
responsible for earlier incidents of police brutality visibly punch Mr
Vass three times in the face. Mr Vass suffered a bloody nose and other
facial injuries in the assault.
Roma in Hajduhadhaz state that police brutality in the town is
endemic. One 21-year-old Romani man interviewed by the ERRC stated
that he had been physically abused three times by the police and that
he personally knew of ninety or one hundred instances in which police
officers assaulted Roma. Mr Istvan Horvath, the head of a Debrecen
regional office of the Foundation for Roma Civil Rights, one of the
leading Romani organisations in Hungary, told the ERRC that although
his office is aware that the situation in Hajduhadhaz is among the
worst the county, local Romani leaders do not call him in connection
with instances of police brutality because it would be too dangerous.
According to information made available to the ERRC, one officer from
Hajduhadhaz has previously been sentenced in connection with an
instance of abuse in which he broke the ribs of a Romani man outside a
discotheque in 1994 or 1995. The officer concerned, whose name is
known to the ERRC, was reportedly given an eight-month sentence. He
allegedly paid a fine of 24,000 Hungarian forints (approximately 100
euros) and did not serve time in prison. He is reportedly still an
active member of the police force.
Persons wishing to express concern about the situation in Hajduhadhaz
are urged to write to:
General Prosecutor of Hungary Dr Kalman Gyorgyi
1055-Budapest
Marko u. 16
Hungary
Fax: (36-1) 269 2862
Parliamentary Commissioner for National and Ethnic Minorities Mr Jeno
Kaltenbach
1054-Budapest
Tukory u. 3
Hungary
Fax: (36 1) 269 35 29
----------------------------------------------------------------
The ERRC is an international public interest law organisation which
monitors the situation of Roma in Europe and provides legal defence
in cases of human rights abuse. For more information, visit ERRC on
the web at http://errc.org. You can also contact us at:
H-1525
Budapest 114
PO Box 10/24
Hungary
telephone: (36-1) 4282-351
fax: (36-1) 4282-356
The purpose of this service is to provide its subscribers with
information on the current Roma rights situation in Europe
to subscribe / unsubscribe to this service, visit
http://errc.org/publications/mlist/
or send a message to [email protected]
with a single line:
[un]subscribe errc [your e-mail address -- optional]
in the body of the message
--
==============================================================
MINELRES - a forum for discussion on minorities in Central&Eastern
Europe
Submissions: [email protected]
Subscription/inquiries: [email protected]
List archive: http://www.riga.lv/minelres/archive.htm
==============================================================