Toronto Star Ottawa to probe cause of Roma refugee increase Increase in applications prompts mission to Czech Republic Mar 10, 2009 04:30 AM Lesley Ciarula Taylor IMMIGRATION REPORTER Canada is accepting almost all Roma from the Czech Republic as refugees and is sending a fact-finding mission there to find out why so many are keen to leave. In 2008, 853 people applied for refugee status from the Czech Republic, which on Jan. 1 took over presidency of the European Union council for a six-month term. Most of the refugee cases are pending; 106 have since dropped their claims. The Immigration and Refugee Board has so far accepted 84 people as Czech refugees and rejected five, a rate of 94.4 per cent. That's much higher than for other countries with Roma, once called gypsies. "Some of the worst things are happening at the municipal level, which the national government has very little control of," said Donald Sparling, a Canadian who is director of the Office for International Studies at Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Republic. Towns are turning over public housing to developers, who move the Roma to "horrible conditions" in the countryside, he said. "This is happening in many, many places." The refugee board's 10-day mission, tentatively starting March 21, will quiz Czech government and non-government authorities. The flood of asylum seekers resumed in late 2007 after Ottawa lifted a visa curb imposed after an exodus of 4,000 Roma a decade ago. "Roma aren't in danger of their lives the way they were in the late 1990s," said Sparling, but in the past year there has been a rise in neo-Nazi groups that target them. "It's very clear large segments of the public are in favour of this." The Canadian mission will probe how Czech Roma are treated, what kind of protection they have against violence and intimidation, and whether they have safe places to move to inside the republic. Paul St. Clair at the Roma Community Centre in Toronto has asked Ottawa to add three areas of interest to this list: the segregated schools where many Roma children are sent; the emergence of neo-Nazi parties; and what non-government organizations and Roma journalists have to say. "A lot of NGOs are doing tremendous work," Sparling said. "Many things have changed in the last decade, particularly among the younger generation." But the presence of two registered parties with openly white supremacist programs amounts to "state-condoned racism," St. Clair said. And segregated schools still exist, he said, although they were supposed to be abolished in 2005, [the online version ends here]