• EU ’covered up’ Croatia’s failure to protect migrants from border brutality

    Exclusive: Brussels officials feared disclosing Zagreb’s lack of commitment to monitoring would cause ‘scandal’

    EU officials have been accused of an “outrageous cover-up” after withholding evidence of a failure by Croatia’s government to supervise #police repeatedly accused of robbing, abusing and humiliating migrants at its borders.

    Internal European commission emails seen by the Guardian reveal officials in Brussels had been fearful of a backlash when deciding against full disclosure of Croatia’s lack of commitment to a monitoring mechanism that ministers had previously agreed to fund with EU money.

    Ahead of responding to inquiries from a senior MEP in January, a commission official had warned a colleague that the Croatian government’s failure to use money earmarked two years ago for border police “will for sure be seen as a ‘scandal’”.

    Supervision of the behaviour of border officers had been the condition set on a larger grant of EU funds to Croatia. There have been multiple allegations of violent pushbacks of migrants and refugees by Croatian police on the border with Bosnia, including an incident in which a migrant was shot.

    In response to allegations of a cover-up, an EC spokesman told the Guardian that what was known had been withheld from MEPs as the information was believed to have been “incomplete”.
    Crosses on our heads to ’cure’ Covid-19: refugees report abuse by Croatian police
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    It throws a spotlight on both the Croatian government’s human rights record and the apparent willingness of the EU’s executive branch to cover for Zagreb’s failure.

    Croatia is seeking to enter the EU’s passport-free Schengen zone – a move that requires compliance with European human rights standards at borders.

    Despite heated denials by the Croatian authorities, the latest border incident has been described by aid workers as the most violent in the Balkan migration crisis. On 26 May, 11 Pakistani and five Afghan men were stopped by a group wearing black uniforms and balaclavas in the Plitvice Lakes, 16km (10 miles) into Croatia from the Bosnian border.

    “The men in uniforms tied each of the Pakistanis and Afghanis around a tree, so their wrists were bound and they had to turn their faces toward the trees,” according to a report from the Danish Refugee Council (DRC), which provides healthcare for migrants in Bosnia. “Once these people were unable to move, the men in uniforms fired several shots in the air with guns placed close to the ears of the Pakistanis and Afghanis. There were also shots fired close to their legs.’’

    “They kept shooting. They were shooting so closely that the stones under our feet were flying and being blown to pieces,” one of the men told the Guardian. “They kept saying: ‘I want to beat and kill you.’ They tortured us for three to four hours.”

    The council’s report says electro-shockers were placed on people’s necks and heads. “One of the men in uniform was cutting several victims with knives and the same person inflicted cuts on both of the palms of one person.”

    One asylum seeker said that one of the men put his knee on his neck, then cut at him with a blade. ‘‘He sliced the index finger of my left hand, and blood started spurting out like a small shower,’’ he said. “Then he smiled and cut my middle finger followed by my palm with a larger cut. The whole hand is swollen beyond recognition.”

    After a while, the men in balaclavas called other uniformed officers.

    According to the victims and a report by the DRC, “before the police arrival, one of the men in uniform made a film with his mobile phone, while others in his company were laughing, yelling and provoking”.

    Upon the arrival of police officers, the migrants were put into vans and taken to the border at Šiljkovača, a village close to Velika Kladuša. Police officers did not beat them, but ordered them into Bosnian territory.

    “All of them had bleeding wounds on their heads and numerous bruises on various parts of the body,” Nicola Bay, the DRC country director for Bosnia, told the Guardian. “Four of them had broken arms and one had a broken leg and both arms.”

    Contacted by the Guardian, the Croatian police denied the allegations and suggested that asylum seekers could have fabricated the account and that the wounds could be the result of “a confrontation among migrants” that took place ‘‘on 28 May in the vicinity of the Croatian border, near Cazin’’.

    Volunteers and charities who have treated migrants involved in the fight in Cazin, said the two incidents are unrelated and happened two days apart. Those involved in the fight in Cazin have not claimed they were attacked by the police.

    The establishment of supervisory mechanisms to ensure the humane treatment of migrants at the border had been a condition of a €6.8m (£6.1m) cash injection announced in December 2018 to strengthen Croatia’s borders with non-EU countries.

    The mechanism was publicised by the European commission as a way to “ensure that all measures applied at the EU external borders are proportionate and are in full compliance with fundamental rights and EU asylum laws”.

    Croatian ministers claimed last year that the funds had been handed over to the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and the Croatian Law Centre to establish the supervisory mechanism.

    Both organisations deny receiving the money.

    In January this year, the commission was asked by Clare Daly, an Irish MEP in the Independents 4 Change party, to account for the discrepancy.

    A commission official responded that the UNCHR and Croatian Law Centre had established the monitoring mechanism but from “their own funds” to ensure independence from the government.

    He added: “Hopefully [this] clarifies this matter once and for all”.

    But both organisations have again denied being involved in any monitoring project, clarifying that they had only been engaged in an earlier initiative involving the examination of police files.

    Beyond the apparent inaccuracy of the response to Daly, internal emails suggest the full facts of the “underspending” – as its known to the commission – were also withheld.

    The EC failed to inform Daly that the Croatian government had decided to ring-fence only €102,000 of the €300,000 provided for the monitoring mechanism and that ultimately only €84,672 was actually spent – €17,469.87 was given to the interior ministry and €59,637.91 went to NGOs. A roundtable conference accounted for €1,703.16.

    “While we know that there has been underspending on the €300,000 … we thought that around € 240,000 were nevertheless spent in the context of the monitoring mechanism,” an EU official had written while discussing how to deal with the MEP’s questions. “Having spent only EUR 102,000, will for sure be seen as a ‘scandal’.”

    The commission did not pass on information on the spending to Daly but privately officials agreed to seek answers urgently. They also discussed in a phone and email exchange the possibility of intervening in the member state’s planned report due to the poor handling of the matter by the Croatian government.

    “Seeing how unfortunate [Croatia] is presenting this issue, [Croatia] definitively needs (your?) help in putting some ‘final touches’ to the report,” an official in the commission’s migration department wrote to a colleague. “Will [Croatia] provide you with an advance copy of the final report?”

    Daly told the Guardian: “It is outrageous – the commission appears to be colluding with the Croatian authorities in a cover-up.”

    An EC spokesperson said the EU’s executive branch was committed to the establishment of a fully independent border monitoring mechanism.

    The spokesperson said: “We would caution against drawing misleading conclusions from reading the internal email exchanges in isolation.”

    He added: “The Croatian authorities are explaining in their final implementation report how the monitoring mechanism was established, how it works in practice and outline the results.

    “Given that the report submitted by the Croatian authorities was incomplete, the commission asked the Croatian authorities for clarifications first in writing and orally regarding outstanding issues (eg factual data confirming the achievements of the project indicators relating to internal controls and trainings).”

    https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/jun/15/eu-covered-up-croatias-failure-to-protect-migrants-from-border-brutalit
    #complicité #EU #UE #Croatie #violence #réfugiés #asile #migrations #violence #violences #hauts_fonctionnaires #fonds #argent #gardes_frontière #route_des_Balkans #frontières #Plitvice_Lakes #commission_européenne #Union_européenne #couverture

    • Report from Centre for Peace Studies on the pushback of children

      On 29th May 2020, the Centre for Peace Studies – a key member of the Border Violence Monitoring Network (BVMN) – presented a new report alongside the Welcome! Initiative. Addressing the Croatian Government, the “Report on violent and illegal expulsions of children and unaccompanied children” is based on testimonies collected by activists through the BVMN shared database. The publication shares the story of children who sought protection from Croatia, and how Croatia answered in violence.

      “We came to the door of Prime Minister Plenković and Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior Božinović, who have been turning their backs on testimonies and accusations for years and silently pursuing a policy of flattering the European Union. Even the most vulnerable are not excluded from violence – children “, said Tea Vidović on behalf of the Welcome! Initiative.

      The report submitted to the Government by the organizations provides testimonies of children and their families and unaccompanied children on violent and illegal methods that they had to experience at the hands of police authorities. This illegal and inhuman behavior violates national laws, international law and human rights, prevents access to international protection and, most importantly, marks children’s lives. Although the Government of the Republic of Croatia and the Ministry of the Interior should take into account the special vulnerability of children, respect their rights and best interests, children experience police brutality and limitation of their freedom for hours without access to water and food.

      “While the government uses every opportunity to emphasize the importance of border protection, we wonder in which way is police protecting Croatian borders? By beating children, confiscating their personal belongings, locking children in police vans for several hours in which they are exposed to extremely high or extremely low temperatures, shooting and using electric shocks, is this how the police protect Croatian borders? ”, points out Ana Ćuća.

      The exact number of children who are victims of police brutality remains unknown. BVMN has reported 209 cases of violent and illegal expulsions of children from Croatia since 2017, while Save the Children recorded 2969 expulsions of children at the borders in the Western Balkans during the first 9 months of last year.

      Two cases are currently pending at the European Court of Human Rights against Croatia, both involving violence and pushback. The first is the case of the family of the tragically late six-year-old girl Madina Hussiny, who was killed at the Croatian-Serbian border. The second includes pushbacks, illegal detention and inhumane treatment of a 17-year-old Syrian boy by Croatian police, who was pushed back to Bosnia and Herzegovina despite seeking asylum in Croatia.

      The latest report presented is the sixth report on violent and illegal expulsions published in the last four years, and it is the collective work of the Centre for Peace Studies, the Society for Psychological Assistance, the Welcome! Initiative and the Border Violence Monitoring Network. It also brings a short graphic novel based on the story of little #Madina, a young girl killed in transit, for whose death no one has yet been held accountable.

      Therefore, the organisations ask the Government and the Ministry of the Interior to finally take responsibility and for those who sanction and carry out systematic violence. Responsible institutions are obliged to investigate those who commit violence and push back children in need of protection. All children deserve justice and protection.

      https://www.borderviolence.eu/report-from-centre-for-peace-studies-on-the-pushback-of-children
      #enfants #enfance #mineurs

      Pour télécharger le #rapport:
      https://www.cms.hr/system/article_document/doc/647/Pushback_report_on_children_and_unaccompanied_children_in_Croatia.pdf

    • Policiers croates accusés de violences contre des migrants : l’UE réclame une "enquête approfondie’’

      Après avoir été interpellée par Amnesty International sur la « violence » des policiers croates à l’égard des migrants, la Commission européenne a réclamé à Zagreb une « enquête approfondie ». L’institution prévoit d’envoyer une mission sur place, quand la situation sanitaire le permettra.

      L’Union européenne est sortie de son ’’silence’’ au sujet des accusations de violences contre des migrants perpétrées par la police croate. Vendredi 12 juin, la Commission européenne a réclamé à Zagreb une "#enquête_approfondie'' à la suite de la publication d’un rapport à charge de l’ONG Amnesty International dénonçant des #passages_à_tabac, des #tortures et des tentatives d’#humiliation de la part de policiers croates (https://www.infomigrants.net/fr/post/25339/on-les-suppliait-d-arreter-de-nous-frapper-ils-chantaient-et-riaient-l).

      « Nous sommes très préoccupés par ces allégations », a déclaré un porte-parole de l’exécutif européen, Adalbert Jahnz. « La #violence, l’humiliation et les #traitements_dégradants des demandeurs d’asile et migrants n’ont pas leur place dans l’Union européenne et doivent être condamnés », a-t-il assuré.

      L’Union européenne avait été directement interpellée par Amnesty International dans son rapport. Ce document affirme que 16 migrants, qui tentaient d’entrer illégalement en Croatie, ont été « ligotés, brutalement battus et torturés » pendant plusieurs heures par des forces de l’ordre, dans la nuit du 26 au 27 mai. « L’Union européenne ne peut plus rester silencieuse et ignorer délibérément les violences et les abus commis par la police croate à la frontière », avait déclaré Massimo Moratti, directeur adjoint de l’antenne européenne de l’ONG.

      https://twitter.com/Jelena_Sesar/status/1271044353629335553?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E12

      Une mission sur place quand la situation sanitaire le permettra

      L’exécutif européen a également indiqué être « en contact étroit » avec les autorités croates qui « se sont engagées à enquêter » sur ces accusations de mauvais traitements à leur frontière avec la Bosnie (https://www.infomigrants.net/fr/post/18721/plusieurs-migrants-retrouves-blesses-a-la-frontiere-entre-la-bosnie-et). « Nous attendons que ces accusations fassent l’objet d’une enquête approfondie et que toutes les actions nécessaires soient prises », a poursuivi le porte-parole.

      La Commission prévoit aussi d’envoyer, quand la situation sanitaire le permettra, une mission sur place, dans le cadre d’un mécanisme de surveillance du respect des droits fondamentaux par les autorités aux frontières lié à l’allocation de fonds européens.

      Le ministère croate de l’Intérieur a, de son côté, immédiatement démenti ces accusations, en ajoutant cependant qu’une enquête serait ouverte.

      Des milliers de migrants empruntent chaque année la « route des Balkans » pour essayer de rejoindre l’Europe occidentale. La plupart passent par la Croatie, pays membre de l’UE, le plus souvent en provenance de la Bosnie.


      https://www.infomigrants.net/fr/post/25354/policiers-croates-accuses-de-violences-contre-des-migrants-l-ue-reclam

    • Croatia: Fresh evidence of police abuse and torture of migrants and asylum-seekers

      In a horrifying escalation of police human rights violations at the Croatian border with Bosnia, a group of migrants and asylum seekers was recently bound, brutally beaten and tortured by officers who mocked their injuries and smeared food on their bleeding heads to humiliate them, Amnesty International has revealed today.

      Amnesty International spoke to six men among a group of 16 Pakistani and Afghan asylum-seekers who were apprehended by the Croatian police on the night between 26 and 27 May near Lake Plitvice, as they tried to cross the country to reach Western Europe.

      Between eight and ten people wearing black uniforms and balaclavas identical to those used by Croatia’s Special Police, fired their weapons in the air, kicked and repeatedly hit the restrained men with metal sticks, batons and pistol grips. They then rubbed ketchup, mayonnaise and sugar that they found in one of the backpacks on migrants’ bleeding heads and hair and their trousers. Amnesty International also spoke to doctors who treated the men and NGOs who witnessed their injuries.

      “The European Union can no longer remain silent and wilfully ignore the violence and abuses by Croatian police on its external borders. Their silence is allowing, and even encouraging, the perpetrators of this abuse to continue without consequences. The European Commission must investigate the latest reports of horrifying police violence against migrants and asylum-seekers.” said Massimo Moratti, Deputy Director of the Europe Office, following the latest incident on the Croatian border.

      Physical and psychological abuse

      Amir from Pakistan told Amnesty: “We were pleading with them to stop and show mercy. We were already tied, unable to move and humiliated; there was no reason to keep hitting us and torturing us.” He said the armed men showed no sympathy. “They were taking photos of us with their phones, and were singing and laughing.” Amir had a broken arm and nose, stiches on the back of his head, and visible bruising all over his face and arms.

      Ten men suffered serious injuries that night. Thirty-year-old Tariq now has both of his arms and a leg in a cast, visible cuts and bruises on his head and face and is suffering from severe chest pain.

      “They did not give us a chance to say anything at all when they caught us. They just started hitting us. While I was lying on the ground, they hit my head with the back of a gun and I started bleeding. I tried to protect my head from the blows, but they started kicking me and hitting my arms with metal sticks. I was passing in and out of consciousness the rest of the night.” Tariq is now forced to use a wheelchair to move around and it will take months before he is able to move on his own again.

      The men told Amnesty International how they felt humiliated as militia rubbed mayonnaise and ketchup on to their bloody heads and faces. One masked man squirted mayonnaise on an asylum-seeker’s trousers between his legs, while others laughed and sang “Happy Birthday” around them.

      After almost five hours of continuous abuse, the migrants were handed over to the Croatian Border Police who transported them close to the border with Bosnia and Herzegovina in two vans before ordering them to walk. “They were taken aback by our condition. We were drenched in blood and very shook up. We could barely stand, much less walk for hours to Bosnia. But they told us to go. They told us to carry the guys who couldn’t walk and just go.” Faisal told Amnesty.

      Some of the men eventually reached Miral, a reception centre run by the International Organization for Migration in Velika Kladusa in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but five, who were too weak to walk, stayed behind and were eventually picked up by an NGO operating in the camp.

      An emergency doctor at the medical clinic in Velika Kladusa who treated the men told Amnesty International that they all had injuries on the back of their heads which were consistent with a blow by a blunt object and required stiches. Most had multiple fractures, joint injuries, collapsed lungs, cuts and bruises and several were traumatized. Their recovery could take months.

      Routine violent pushbacks and torture by the Croatian police remain unpunished

      While only the latest in the series, the incident points to a new level of brutality and abuse by the Croatian police. In early May, the Guardian reported about a group of men who were forced across the Croatian border after being beaten and having orange crosses spray-painted on their heads. The Croatian Ministry of Interior dismissed the allegations, but the testimonies of violence and intimidation fit the trend of unlawful pushbacks taking place not only on the Croatian, but also on other external borders of the European Union.

      Numerous reports over the past three years have revealed how the Croatian border police routinely assault men, women and teenagers trying to enter the country, destroy their belongings and smash their phones before pushing them back to Bosnia. People are sometimes stripped of their clothes and shoes, and forced to walk for hours through snow and freezing cold rivers.

      A physician in the Velika Kladusa clinic told Amnesty International that approximately 60 per cent of migrants and asylum-seekers who required medical treatment reported that their injuries were inflicted by the Croatian police, while they were trying to cross the border. “Many injuries involve fractures of long bones and joints. These bones take longer to heal and their fractures render the patient incapacitated for extended periods of time. This appears to be a deliberate strategy – to cause injuries and trauma that take time to heal and would make people more reluctant to try to cross the border again or any time soon,” the physician told Amnesty International.

      The Croatian Ministry of Interior has so far dismissed these allegations, refusing to carry out independent and effective investigations into reported abuses or hold its officers to account. In a climate of pervasive impunity, unlawful returns and violence at the border have only escalated. Amnesty International has shared the details of this incident with the Ministry of Interior, but has not received an official response.

      The EU’s failure to hold Croatia to account

      The European Commission has remained silent in the face of multiple, credible reports of gross human rights abuses at the Croatian border and repeated calls by the European Parliament to investigate the allegations. Furthermore, Croatia remains a beneficiary of nearly EURO 7 million of EU assistance for border security, the vast majority of which is spent on infrastructure, equipping border police and even paying police salaries. Even the small proportion (EURO 300,000) that the Commission had earmarked for a mechanism to monitor that the border measures comply with fundamental rights and EU asylum laws, has been no more than a fig leaf. Last year, the Commission recommended Croatia’s full accession to the Schengen Area despite human rights abuses already being commonplace there.

      “The European Commission cannot continue to turn a blind eye to blatant breaches of EU law as people are being branded with crosses on their heads or brutally tortured and humiliated by Croatian police. We expect nothing less than the condemnation of these acts and an independent investigation into reported abuses, as well as the establishment of an effective mechanism to ensure that EU funds are not used to commit torture and unlawful returns. Failing urgent action, Croatia’s inhumane migration practices will turn the EU into an accomplice in major human rights violations taking place at its doorstep,” said Massimo Moratti.

      Violent pushbacks from Croatian border have been a regular occurrence since late 2017. The Danish Refugee Council recorded close to 7,000 cases of forcible deportations and unlawful returns to Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2019, most of which were accompanied by reported violence and intimidation by Croatian police. Despite the brief respite during the lockdown due to COVID-19 pandemic, pushbacks continue with 1600 cases reported only in April. The figures are increasing daily, as the restrictions across the region are being lifted and the weather is turning milder.

      Amnesty International has interviewed over 160 people who have been pushed back or returned to Bosnia and Herzegovina since July 2018. Nearly one third reported being beaten, having their documents and telephones stolen, and verbally abused in what appears to be a deliberate policy designed to deter future attempts to enter the country.

      https://www.amnesty.eu/news/croatia-fresh-evidence-of-police-abuse-and-torture-of-migrants-and-asylum-se
      #rapport #Amnesty_international

    • Croatia, police abuse is systemic

      While the world is outraged and protests after George Floyd’s death to denounce institutionalised violence, migrants have been beaten and tortured on the Balkan route for years. A brutal practice often covered up, even by the EU itself.

      George Floyd’s death on May 25th sparked protests around the world against police violence and institutional racism. In the Balkans as elsewhere, sit-ins have been held in support of #BlackLivesMatter , followed by calls to report abuses committed locally by the police. And in the region there is no lack of such abuses. In fact, police violence is routine on the “Balkan route”, the flow of migrants and refugees that has crossed the peninsula since 2015 in the hope of reaching the European Union. The events of the past few weeks have unfortunately confirmed once again the link between police brutality and immigration, bringing us back to the Croatian-Bosnian border. It is a story of systemic abuse, both proven and covered up, which involves a member state of the EU, candidate for accession to the Schengen area and, according to the latest revelations of The Guardian, the European Commission itself.
      Torture in Croatia

      When it comes to police abuse on the Croatian-Bosnian border, one does not really know where to start. The accidents recorded in recent years are so many that we can no longer even speak of “accidents”, or unexpected events. On the contrary, violence is rather a common practice, the only news being the increase in brutality by the agents, who have gone from illegal pushbacks to outright torture.

      “We rarely use the word ’torture’ in Europe, but in this case we had to”, explains Massimo Moratti, deputy director of the Europe office of Amnesty International (AI). Last week, AI published yet another report of the mistreatment of migrants by the Croatian police along the border with Bosnia and Herzegovina. Mistreatment is an understatement. The testimonies collected no longer speak of broken mobile phones, or – as has happened more recently – destroyed with a screwdriver to prevent recharging, but instead contain “actual sadism”, as Moratti puts it.

      The case in question is that of 16 Pakistani and Afghan asylum seekers arrested by the Croatian police near the Plitvice lakes between May 26th and 27th. Their testimony is chilling. “We asked them to stop and show mercy. We were already tied up, there was no reason to continue hitting and torturing us", Amir told Amnesty International. Singing and filming on mobile phones, the agents continued to beat the 16 unfortunate men hard, finally smearing their wounds with ketchup and mayonnaise found in the backpack of one of the migrants. Eventually, the group was brought back to the border and forced to walk to Bosnia. Those who were unable to walk, because they are now in a wheelchair, had to be transported by others.

      “It is a pattern, a trend. These are the same practices that we have already seen in Hungary in 2015, 2016, and 2017. Dogs, sticks, broken bones... The goal is to intimidate and frighten so that no one tries to cross the border anymore", resumes Massimo Moratti, who adds: “the fractures we saw in the latter case will take months to heal”. The Amnesty International report and the attached photos tell the rest.
      Four years of violence

      How did we get to this? It is useful to make a brief summary of recent years to understand the evolution of violence. First, the “Balkan route” became a media phenomenon in the summer of 2015, when hundreds of thousands of Syrians, Iraqis, and Afghans began to travel up the Balkan peninsula to reach the European Union. At the beginning, the destination of the route was Hungary, then, with the closure of the Hungarian wall, it became Croatia, which leads to Slovenia and then to the Schengen area. In 2015, Croatian policemen showed themselves to be tolerant and benevolent, as reminded by this cover of Jutarnji List .

      In the spring of 2016, the agreement between the EU and Turkey led to the closure of the Balkan route and a change of pace. “The first case of pushback is registered in 2016 on the Serbo-Croatian border. In 2017, we have the first cases of violence", says Antonia Pindulić, legal advisor to the Centre for Peace Studies (CMS) in Zagreb. At the end of 2017, Madina Hussiny, 6, died hit by a train while returning from Croatia to Serbia following the tracks. Together with her family, she had been illegally pushed back by the Croatian policemen.

      In the summer of 2018, the Croatian police fired on a van that carried 29 migrants and refused to stop. Nine people were injured and two minors ended up in hospital in serious conditions. Since then, it has been a crescendo of accidents, especially on the Croatian-Bosnian border, where what remains of the Balkan route passes. Here, the testimonies collected by NGOs speak of beatings, theft, destruction of mobile phones and, as always, illegal pushbacks. Then, the situation has deteriorated up to the torture of the last few weeks. All in the silence of the authorities.
      The silence of the institutions

      How could the Zagreb government not complete an investigation in four years, address the police abuse, punish the guilty? It just didn’t. In fact, Andrej Plenković’s government has just “denied everything” for four years, while “no investigation has produced results”, as Antonia Pindulić of CMS summarises. And this despite the fact that there have been complaints from NGOs and also the actions of the institutions themselves in Croatia.

      “In 2019, a group of policement wrote an anonymous letter to the Croatian Ombudswoman asking to be protected from having to carry out illegal orders”, recalls Pindulić. The agents then revealed the pushback technique: GPS off, communications only on Whatsapp or Viber, no official report. Also in 2019, then President Kolinda Grabar Kitarović had let slip , during an interview on Swiss television, that “of course, a little strength is needed when making pushbacks”. Later, she said she had been misunderstood.

      After dozens of complaints have fallen on deaf ears and after in 2018 the Ombudswoman, in her investigations, had been denied access to video surveillance videos with the excuse that they were lost, the CMS decided a couple of weeks ago to file a complaint “against unknown police officers” guilty of “degrading treatment and torture against 33 people” and “violent and illegal expulsion [of these people, ed.] from the territory of the Republic of Croatia to Bosnia and Herzegovina”. “We hope that the prosecutor will open an investigation and that people who have violated the law are identified. But since the institutions themselves have violated the law for four years, I don’t know what we can expect”, says Antonia Pindulić.

      The complaint filed brings together four cases, all of which occurred at the beginning of May 2020. “We suspect that the cases are linked to each other, as all the migrants and refugees involved have reported beatings, theft of their belongings, being stripped and, above all, having a cross drawn on their head with orange spray”, says Antonia Pindulić. This very detail had brought the story on the Guardian and sparked controversy in Croatia.
      Towards a turning point?

      In their brutality, the cases seem to repeat themselves without any change in sight. But the Croatian government may soon be forced to answer for what appears to be institutionalised violence. Not only the legal action taken by the CMS “could likely end in Strasbourg”, as Massimo Moratti of Amnesty International speculates, but a lawsuit filed by three Syrian refugees against Croatia reached the European Court of Human Rights at the end of the May . And last week, after the publication of the AI ​​report, the European Commission announced that an observation mission will be sent to Croatia.

      And there is more. This week, the Guardian also revealed that communications between officials of the European Commission show how the European body “covered up Croatia’s failure to protect migrants from brutality on the border”. In question are the European funding received from Zagreb for border security: 7 million Euros, of which 300,000 for the implementation of an independent control mechanism that should have supervised the work of the police. Not only has the mechanism never been implemented, but there have been contradictory communications in this regard, with the Commission declaring that UNHCR was part of the mechanism and the latter publicly denying at the end of 2019 .

      In short, although Brussels allocated a (small) budget for the control of the brutality of Croatian agents, the mechanism that was to be activated with those funds was never created. And the Commission is aware of this. How long, then, will the Plenković government manage to hide its system of violence on the Bosnian border?

      https://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Areas/Croatia/Croatia-police-abuse-is-systemic-202952

      #violence_systémique

    • Croatia: Police brutality in migrant pushback operations must be investigated and sanctioned – UN Special Rapporteurs

      Croatia must immediately investigate reports of excessive use of force by law enforcement personnel against migrants, including acts amounting to torture and ill-treatment, and sanction those responsible, UN human rights experts said today.

      “We are deeply concerned about the repeated and ongoing disproportionate use of force by Croatian police against migrants in pushback operations. Victims, including children, suffered physical abuse and humiliation simply because of their migration status,” Felipe González Morales, the Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, and Nils Melzer, Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, said in a joint statement.

      They said physical violence and degrading treatment against migrants have been reported in more than 60 percent of all recorded pushback cases from Croatia between January and May 2020, and recent reports indicate the number of forced returns is rising.

      Abusive treatment of migrants has included physical beatings, the use of electric shocks, forced river crossings and stripping of clothes despite adverse weather conditions, forced stress positions, gender insensitive body searches and spray-painting the heads of migrants with crosses.

      “The violent pushback of migrants without going through any official procedure, individual assessment or other due process safeguards constitutes a violation of the prohibition of collective expulsions and the principle of non-refoulement,” González Morales said.

      “Such treatment appears specifically designed to subject migrants to torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment as prohibited under international law. Croatia must investigate all reported cases of violence against migrants, hold the perpetrators and their superiors accountable and provide compensation for victims,” Melzer added.

      The UN Special Rapporteurs are also concerned that in several cases, Croatian police officers reportedly ignored requests from migrants to seek asylum or other protection under international human rights and refugee law.

      “Croatia must ensure that all border management measures, including those aimed at addressing irregular migration, are in line with international human rights law and standards, particularly, non-discrimination, the prohibition of torture and ill-treatment, the principle of non-refoulement and the prohibition of arbitrary or collective expulsions,” they said.

      During his official visit to Bosnia and Herzegovina in September 2019, González Morales received information on violent pushback of migrants by Croatian police to Bosnia and Herzegovina. He has exchanged views with relevant Croatian authorities on this issue on several occasions. Already during his official visit to Serbia and Kosovo* in 2017, Melzer had received similar information from migrants reporting violent ill-treatment during pushback operations by the Croatian police.

      * All references to Kosovo should be understood to be in compliance with Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).

      https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=25976&LangID=E

      #OHCHR

    • Dva policajca u pritvoru u Karlovcu zbog ozljeđivanja migranta - protiv njih pokrenut i disciplinski postupak

      Zbog sumnje u počinjenje kaznenih djela obojica su, uz kaznenu prijavu, dovedeni pritvorskom nadzorniku Policijske uprave karlovačke. Također, obojica su udaljeni iz službe, odgovoreno je na upit KAportala

      Dva policajca PU karlovačke nalaze se u pritvoru i to zbog sumnje u ozljeđivanje ilegalnog migranta, stranog državljanina.

      Na naš upit iz policije su nam rekli da je u četvrtak, 11. lipnja, u večernjim satima, tijekom utvrđivanja okolnosti nezakonitog ulaska u Republiku Hrvatsku, u policijsku postaju Slunj doveden strani državljanin na kojem su policijski službenici uočili da je ozlijeđen.

      https://kaportal.net.hr/aktualno/vijesti/crna-kronika/3836334/dva-policajca-u-karlovackom-pritvoru-zbog-ozljedjivanja-migranta-protiv

      Commentaire reçu via la mailing-list Inicijativa Dobrodosli, mail du 23.06.2020

      two police officers were arrested this week for injuring migrants. This is a big step for the Ministry of the Interior, but small for all cases that have not yet been investigated. However, it is important to emphasize that the violence we are witnessing is not the result of isolated incidents, but of systemic violence for which those who issue and those who carry out these illegal orders should be prosecuted.

    • Cette histoire est d’une telle violence ! Je ne sais pas, c’est totalement indescriptible… Même le droit ultime d’enterrer dignement ses morts, on ne peut pas l’avoir quand on est migrant ? « Like a dog » effectivement.

    • «Care #Divany e #Medina, scusateci»

      Avevano 3 e 6 anni, sono morte rispettivamente il 6 e il 21 novembre nel mar Mediterraneo e sulla ferrovia alla frontiera tra Croazia e Serbia. La mamma di Divany la ricorda a Scicli con una corona di fiori, i genitori di Medina non si danno pace. Attorno a loro volontari e operatori che condividono il dolore e denunciano la disumanità delle frontiere chiuse: ecco la lettera-monito di Silvia Maraone di Ipsia che era con la bimba afgana pochi giorni prima della tragedia

      http://www.vita.it/it/article/2017/12/12/care-divany-e-medina-scusateci/145422

    • Morire di Europa a sei anni.

      Numeri.

      L’altra sera mi trovavo a Milano e leggevo i numeri delle migrazioni negli ultimi quattro anni. Oltre ai diversi ingressi registrati, c’è un’altra statistica che viene citata poco. Il numero delle persone morte nel tentativo di arrivare da noi, in Europa. Sono stime, perchè di tante persone non conosceremo mai veramente il destino. Chi annega in mare e viene sommerso dai flutti. Chi muore di sete e di caldo nel deserto e sparisce ingoiato dalla sabbia rovente. Chi congela nei fiumi e tra le montagne dei Balcani e viene divorato dagli animali selvatici. Sono in media quattromila all’anno le persone che spariscono così. Seppellite in fosse comuni, lontane dalle proprie famiglie e dalle proprie case. Noi li vediamo come una massa indistinta, fatta di numeri. E non ci sconvolge.

      Viviamo tra i morti, nuotiamo tra i cadaveri nel Mediterraneo. E non ci pensiamo, se non quando magari una foto più di un’altra non ci colpisce. Ci fu il caso di Aylan nel 2015, con la sua maglietta rossa, riverso a faccia in giù sulla riva del mare, che ci fece trattenere per un attimo il fiato e che spalancò di colpo le porte del sogno EU a quasi un milione di persone. Dopodichè, quel quasi milione di persone divenne troppo da gestire e firmammo un accordo a Marzo 2016, per chiudere la rotta balcanica, lasciando quasi 80.000 persone ferme tra la Grecia, la Macedonia e la Serbia.

      Di loro, dei quasi settemila bloccati in Serbia, la maggioranza Afghani, ci siamo dimenticati in fretta. Sono stati sistemati tutti quanti nei 18 campi profughi aperti dal governo con il finanziamento dell’UE. I siriani sono rimasti in Grecia, prima o poi verranno ricollocati. E quasi quattro milioni sono in Turchia, bloccati dopo l’accordo di cui sopra.

      In questi mesi, da Maggio, quando sono arrivata in Serbia, ho conosciuto diverse centinaia di persone. Famiglie sopratutto, ragazzi, uomini. Sono in viaggio da due anni, per lo più. Hanno già conosciuto la durezza del cammino, la paura dell’acqua, il dolore dei colpi dati dal manganello. Uomini, donne, bambini.

      Quando ho cominciato a fare volontariato vent’anni fa nei campi profughi in Slovenia, erano sopratutto loro, i bambini, l’energia in più che faceva sembrare meno brutta la vita in quel limbo. Con loro era facile dimenticare dove ti trovavi, la durezza e la noia della vita nel campo, l’incertezza del futuro. Quei pensieri consumavano e consumano sopratutto gli adulti, coloro che sanno quanti soldi hanno già speso e quanto ancora devono indebitarsi per andare avanti nel game. Quanto costerà provare ad attraversare la Croazia o l’Ungheria con i trafficanti.

      Negli ultimi mesi molti hanno cominciato a tentare di attraversare i boschi tra la Serbia e la Croazia da soli, con le mappe di Google. L’Ungheria è più difficile da attraversare, lì il confine è più sorvegliato, ci sono fili spinati doppi con lame di rasoio in cima, ci sono i cani, ci sono i sensori di rilevamento termico e le telecamere a infrarossi. E poi ci sono i manganelli, gli ungheresi prima di cacciarti ti pestano, così forse non proverai più la prossima volta. E’ così che rimandano in Serbia brandelli di umanità, feriti nello spirito e nel corpo. La Croazia invece da quest’estate sembrava più porosa, sembrava quasi si riuscisse a passare e poi se proprio non si riusciva ad andare più in là, verso Austria o Ungheria, si poteva chiedere l’asilo. Non sarà Shengen, ma è pur sempre EU.

      Da novembre, osserviamo impotenti i tentativi che le persone fanno di andare di là, a Nord dalle parti di Šid. Dal nostro campo decine di persone sono partite e le abbiamo viste ritornare.

      Una di queste famiglie non è tornata intera. Avevano lasciato il nostro campo ad Agosto e passato un paio di mesi tra Tutin e Belgrado, fino a quando non hanno provato ad attraversare il confine.

      Di Madina ricordo che aveva gli occhi grandi, i capelli neri e folti, uno sguardo vispo e un sorriso furbo. Era piccolina e si confondeva in mezzo ai suoi fratelli e sorelle. Una mattina di Maggio, ero da poco arrivata in Serbia, arrivo al campo e sento i bambini che urlano e corrono verso di me: “cats, cats”! Madina mi prende per mano e mi porta a un grande vaso in cemento, dentro il quale ci sono due gattini neri di meno di un mese, terrorizzati. I bambini sono eccitati e contenti, giocano coi gatti, senza pensare a quanto siano spaventati. Prendo i gatti, li metto in una scatola e li porto in auto. I gatti, avranno molta più fortuna dei profughi bloccati da anni nel limbo migratorio, loro sono a Milano e vivono pasciuti e felici in una bella famiglia, con documento di identità e regolarmente registrati in Comune.

      Madina era così, curiosa, sorridente, chiacchierona. Anche se non parlava così bene inglese riusciva a farsi capire e ti saltellava intorno.

      Mi immagino come sia stato faticoso per lei, con le sue gambette corte, attraversare la “jungle” tra la Serbia e la Croazia, di notte, tra i fili spinati e le pattuglie della polizia, senza probabilmente capire cosa stava succedendo. Così come non avrà capito cosa è successo, quanto un treno l’ha travolta, uccidendola e lasciando il suo corpo insanguinato al buio, vicino ai binari, mentre gli altri della sua famiglia cercavano di capire al buio dove fosse finita la piccola. L’ha trovata Rashid, suo fratello. Un ragazzo alto e gentile, taciturno, sempre disponibile e attento ai piccoli della famiglia. Mi immagino le urla di Nilab, la sorella maggiore con cui giocavo a pallavolo e con cui parlavamo dei sogni di arrivare in Europa e poter vivere liberamente, in Germania.

      La versione ufficiale della polizia croata è che abbiano assistito con i visori infrarossi ai movimenti di un gruppo di persone lungo la ferrovia, dal lato serbo del confine e di come sia passato il treno, a seguito di questo parte del gruppo è andata di corsa verso le pattuglie portando in braccio il corpo di una bambina. La polizia afferma che stavano compiendo i loro compiti routinari di difesa delle frontiere, così come previsto dalle leggi del’UE, applicando i respingimenti forzati.

      La versione della famiglia, supportata da organizzazioni umanitarie (tra cui MSF) e gruppi di attivisti e volontari è che la famiglia avesse invece già raggiunto la Croazia e che sia stata respinta verso la Serbia, ricevendo come indicazioni di seguire la ferrovia, senza essere avvisati del potenziale pericolo del passaggio dei treni anche di notte e rifiutando la richiesta della madre stremata che chiedeva solo di poter riposare un po’ con i figli, stanchi, affamati e infreddoliti. Oltre a questo, in nessun modo la famiglia ha avuto alcun aiuto da parte né dei croati, né tantomeno dei serbi, che per alcuni giorni non hanno nemmeno dato il corpo alla famiglia e hanno loro imposto un funerale senza rispettare le usanze musulmane. E’ così che la piccola Madina ora si trova sepolta a pochi chilometri dal luogo in cui è stata uccisa, lontana dalla sua casa, dalla sua famiglia. Era la notte tra il 20 e il 21 Novembre.

      Questa notizia all’inizio era passata in silenzio, diffusa tra i social, twittata da alcuni organizzazioni, sino a quando Al Jazeera non l’ha ripresa, seguita dal Guardian e anche dal nostro Corsera. Le parole di Nilab, che Madina non venga dimenticata, sono state ascoltate.

      E noi, cosa possiamo fare? Come si può restare indifferenti alla morte di Madina e delle migliaia di innocenti che cercano solamente un futuro migliore, mettendo in gioco tutto ciò che hanno, cioè la loro vita?

      Io li vedo questi confini insaguinati e queste vite miserabili. Ero in Croazia il giorno dopo che Madina era morta, lungo la strada che passa dietro il confine. Ho visto le pattuglie, i cani, la caccia all’uomo. Ho visto la polizia croata. E ho visto la polizia ungherese e la caccia all’uomo da quella parte del confine. Ho visto il filo spinato, ho respirato la paura, il buio e il freddo. Ho visto i fuocherelli accesi nella notte da chi parte per il game, le immondizie abbandonate dietro di sé, le scarpe spaiate, le coperte grigie dell’UNHCR. Ho sentito i racconti di bambini di sei-sette anni, di come dopo aver camminato per tanti chilometri non riuscivano più a fare un passo e si addormentavano ogni volta che si dovevano abbassare per sfuggire alle vedette. Mi hanno parlato del freddo, della sete, della fame. Della paura.

      E no, bambini, non è questo il game. Non è giusto che il gioco sia questo. Io ho avuto fortuna, sono stata una bambina amata e cresciuta in una grande città, dove andavo a scuola, giocavo coi compagni, ho fatto gli scout, sport e volontariato. Dopo la Slovenia, sono stata in Bosnia e in Kosovo e ora qua in Serbia, e provo a portare sorrisi e giocare, a dimenticare, a ricordare che siete solo bambini e che avete diritto alla felicità e alla spensieratezza, ad andare a scuola, avere vestiti caldi e puliti, pupazzi e giocattoli, dei nonni che vi coccolino e vi vizino, dei genitori che si preoccupino per voi.

      E no, non posso dimenticare Madina, non posso dimenticare il suo entusiasmo per i gattini, il modo in cui ballava “tutte le scimmiette in fila per sette”. Non posso dimenticare lei, la sua famiglia e tutte le persone incontrate in questi anni di Balkan route, accampate a Idomeni, a Hotel Hara, a Eko station, al campo profughi di Sounio, a Helliniko, a Horgos e Kelebija, nelle barracks di Belgrado, nell’Afghan park e il modo in cui nonostante tutto, i bambini riescano a giocare. Non posso.

      E se vi chiedete come si fa, non lo so nemmeno io come si fa, so solo che quando vedo mia nipote Anna che ha 4 anni e dei ricci bellissimi e le ho appena regalato un pigiama con Elsa di Frozen, penso solo che lei è fortunata e le auguro che la vita non le dia mai quello che sta dando a queste migliaia di Madina in giro per il mondo alla ricerca di fortuna.

      Tra poco è Natale, spenderemo un sacco di soldi per cibo, regali, luminarie e decorazioni.
      Qualcosa lo potete fare anche voi. Ricordatevi di Madina e di quelli che stanno ancora facendo il game.

      Potete fare un regalo ai bambini di Bogovadja. Non sono giocattoli, non sono dolci e caramelle, sono scarpe e vestiti per l’inverno, dignitosi e caldi, che forse gli serviranno quando dovranno attraversare i boschi al confine.
      http://www.caritasambrosiana.it/emergenze-caritas/emergenze-in-corso/emergenza-freddo-bogavadja

      Ciao, Madina.


      https://nellaterradeicevapi.wordpress.com/2017/12/09/morire-di-europa-a-sei-anni

    • Odvjetnica obitelji #Madine: “Policija me zastrašivala, nisam to nikad doživjela”

      NJEMAČKA javna televizija ARD sinoć je emitirala 45-minutni dokumentarac “Smrt na balkanskoj ruti” koji se bavi smrtnim slučajevima migranata i izbjeglica koji pokušavaju preko područja bivše Jugoslavije doći do Europske unije od 2015. do danas. Dio dokumentarca je posvećen ponašanju hrvatske policije prema migrantima, naročito u slučaju afganistanske djevojčice Madine.

      U ARD-ovom dokumentarcu se hrvatsku policiju optužuje da na granici provodi tzv. push back, tj. ilegalno vraćanje migranata u državu iz koje su ušli, a da im se ne omogućuje traženje azila, što je protiv važećih pravnih propisa Europske unije i Hrvatske. No ističe se i licemjerje njemačkih vlasti koje tvrde da nemaju nikakvih dokaza o takvom postupanju hrvatske policije, iako su “već stotine takvih slučajeva dokumentirane”, navodi se u dokumentarcu. Tj. jasno se kaže da hrvatska policija uz prešutno odobravanje službenog Berlina krši važeće zakone i onemogućava migrantima konzumiranje njihovih ljudskih prava.

      Ilegalna politika “push backa” migranata

      U dokumentarcu su razgovarali i sa SDP-ovim bivšim ministrom unutarnjih poslova Rankom Ostojićem koji kaže da je “push back” postao neslužbena politika EU-a prema migrantima.

      Detaljno se obrađuje i smrt male Madine koja je poginula nakon što su hrvatski policajci na granici Hrvatske i Srbije uhvatili njenu obitelj u ilegalnom prelasku te ih vratili u Srbiju po željezničkoj pruzi unatoč tome što je Madinina majka zatražila azil. Madinu je onda udario vlak, a hrvatska policija je djevojčicu odvela u bolnicu u Hrvatskoj, dok njenoj majci nije dozvolila da ide s njom, nego ju je protjerala opet prema Šidu na srbijanskoj strani granice.

      Odvjetnica Madinine obitelji: “Nešto tako nisam doživjela u svojoj karijeri”

      Odvjetnica Madinine obitelji Sanja Jelavić u dokumentarcu ARD-a svjedoči o tome kako je hrvatska policija dolazila u njen ured i pokušala je zastrašiti, kao i da joj nisu dozvoljavali da kontaktira svoje klijente. “Nešto tako nisam još doživjela u svojoj karijeri”, kaže Jelavić te dodaje da je to ipak nije pokolebalo u zastupanju klijenata.

      Pučka pravobraniteljica pak proziva hrvatsku policiju zbog toga što je misteriozno nestala toplotna snimka protjerivanja Madinine obitelji u Srbiju te ističe da postoje toplotne snimke tog dana i prije i poslije tog incidenta. Ni sama ne vjeruje u službeno objašnjenje hrvatske policije da je baš u tom periodu “nestalo struje”, no još više zabrinjava činjenica da nestanak snimke sugerira kako policija zapravo uništava dokaze o vlastitom kršenju zakona.

      Novinari ARD-a uspjeli su nakratko o svemu tome pitati i premijera Andreja Plenkovića koji je Madininu smrt opisao kao nesretan slučaj, no na detaljnija pitanja nije htio odgovarati, ustvrdivši da hrvatska policija sve radi po zakonu.


      https://www.index.hr/vijesti/clanak/odvjetnica-obitelji-madine-policija-me-zastrasivala-nisam-to-nikad-dozivjela/2073807.aspx

    • Two years ago, because of the violence and the illegal actions of Croatian police officers, a young Afghan girl lost her life: her name was Madina, and she died hit by a train after being pushed back during a cold night of November 2017. A date that activists in the region remember with great sadness and concern. Welcome! Initiative decided to commemorate this date remembering Madina and the square that was named like her one year ago - on our facebook event you can see how several people took some time to remember Madina and her family, by taking pictures with the panel writing the real name of that square: Trg Madina Hussiny (https://www.facebook.com/events/2425274427693693). “the square with her name as a lasting reminder that no one and no nation-state, government, military force, economy or political regime has the right to determine whose life is worth living and who is not”. H-alter wrote more about today’s date in this article: https://www.h-alter.org/vijesti/pravda-za-madinu-hussiny-ldquomadina-dobrodosla-u-srediste-zagrebardquo

      Because of the work of several individuals, activists and organizations on the tragic event of Madina, and the decision of the family to file a legal complaint against Croatia to the European Court of Human Rights, a lot of measures of criminalization of solidarity and intimidation started, towards the same lawyers, individuals and organizations that supported the family in their request for justice. Today, Centre for Peace Studies and Are You Syrious talked about it at the European Parliament (https://www.greens-efa.eu/en/article/event/shrinking-spaces), bringing the Madina’s memory there and firmly asking the European politicians to do everything in their power to stop the violence at the borders and the human rights violations against refugees and whoever decides to support them.

      Reçu via Inicijativa Dobrodosli, mail du 27.11.2019.

    • Finally, justice for Madina!

      This week, The European Court of Human Rights has rejected Croatia’s request to reconsider the decision in the case of little Madina’s death. In fact last year, Croatia has been found guilty, and Madina Hussiny and her family were recognized by the European Court of Human Rights as victims of illegal expulsion by the Republic of Croatia, which resulted in the loss of Madina’s life, a six-year-old girl, on November 21, 2017. In addition, the judgment showed that the Republic of Croatia treated children inhumanely by keeping them in detention, illegally deprived the whole family of their liberty, collectively expelled part of the family from Croatia and, after all, denied them access to lawyer precisely with the aim of preventing this case from reaching the European Court of Human Rights. The verdict, which confirms that Croatia has violated her right to life, has become final. An effective investigation in this case was never conducted. Centre for Peace Studies in their press release (https://www.cms.hr/en/azil-i-integracijske-politike/presuda-esljp-a-u-slucaju-obitelji-hussiny-je-konacna-trazimo-hitnu-smjenu-vrha-) declared: “After this strong and final confirmation of the ruling, the Government of the Republic of Croatia and Prime Minister Andrej Plenković can no longer turn their heads, but must urgently dismiss those responsible, led by the Minister of the Interior Davor Božinović. In addition to urgently finding and sanctioning the direct perpetrators, we again demand the immediate dismissal of those with command and political responsibility, namely Chief of Police Nikola Milina and Chief of Border Police and Assistant Chief of Police Zoran Ničeno, as well as Secretary of State Terezija Gras who participated in pressures against human rights defenders and blocking the independent international investigations.”

      In this occasion, to permanently remember and never suppress the truth about the death of Madina Hussiny, several local initiatives together with Welcome! Initiative (Zagreb city-refuge, and Initiative for Madina Hussiny Square Naming), sent to the Committee for the Naming of Settlements, Streets and Squares a proposal for the name Madina Hussiny for inclusion in the Name Fund. Zagreb can and should have Madina Hussiny Square, for her and all the other lives lost because of racist border regimes.

      –-> via Inicijativa Dobrodosli (mailing-list du 08.04.2022)

    • Madina Hussiny

      According to Aleksandra, a volunteer in the refugee camp in Sofia, where Madina Hussiny (Hosseini, Husseni), a girl from Afghanistan who was at most five or six years old when she died on the Croatian-Serbian border during the pushback from Croatia, lived for several months in 2016 with her large family: The biography of someone who hasn’t even lived their life can’t actually be written. The milestones of life’s journey, intimate and socially recognized struggles and achievements, everything that makes up the essence of a biography, are actually the privilege of those who had the opportunity to live, grow up, grow old. Madina had no such chance. Madina was at most five or six years old when she died on the Croatian-Serbian border at the end of 2017.

      The biography that follows covers only the last stops of Madina’s journey from Afghanistan, through Iran and Turkey to Europe. In addition to the summary of events of the night in which she tragically died, the biography contains the impressions she left on employees and volunteers in the facilities for collective accommodation on the peripheries of the European Union. It is based on information from the media, court rulings and reports, as well as interviews conducted in 2021 with Aleksandra, Andrijana, Jovana, Francesca, Katerina, Margarita and Silvia who met Madina in Bulgaria and Serbia, in the camps where, according to the interviews quoted here in italics, bed sheets can be a luxury, and torn furniture comes standard.

      They remember Madina as tiny, really tiny, small, with a big head and large, curious eyes that were something really special. They remember her as very beautiful, very sweet, with a slightly round face, chubby and with a big smile and wonderful eyes, with curly, very curly hair, quite black and quite thick, and a skin that was darker, olive, and with a Sherpa hairstyle, which slowly grew out. They emphasize Madina’s special, sweet voice, similar to the voice of a very small child who does not yet know how to pronounce all the words. They remember her as an extremely cheerful girl who radiated happiness. As summed up by Jovana, who met Madina at the camp in Bogovađa, Serbia: It’s as if she carried some sort of joy. She stood out with that kind of joy, and just by being in a room she changed its atmosphere. Aleksandra specifically remembered how disappointed and unhappy Madina was when she couldn’t go on a trip with the other children from the camp because she was too young. Silvija and Francesca, who saw her every day at the camp in Bogovađa, remember Madina’s pride and happiness when she found some kittens, but also the sadness and disappointment she felt because she could not keep them.

      Aleksandra, as well as Slivia and Francesca to a certain extent, remember that Madina was inseparable from her slightly older sister, and that volunteers and employees often confused them for one another, because the two of them looked alike, with the same hair color, the same hairstyle, similar height and build. Andrijana, who occasionally came to the camp in Bogovađa, primarily remembers Madina in the company of her younger brother, who also looked a lot like her, and they were close in age as well. She remembers how she took him by the hand and imitated the way adults take care of children, she took his hand, then started talking as if she was warning him about something, like she was scolding him.

      Madina, according to our interlocutors’ memories of her, was always in a group of other children of a similar age, with whom, in the words of Jovana, she played around the camp. Sometimes she used to hang out with them in front of the classroom doors or on the windows in the camp in Sofia, waiting for the arrival of volunteers, calling them: Teacher! Teacher! or We are here! We want to go to medresa, medresa! In Bogovađa, they also used to yell out: Caritas! Caritas! because of the words printed on the volunteers’ T-shirts. Silvia jokingly states that Madina was the worst child of all the children there, of all the little rascals, as she called them. She was impossible to deal with and unbearable. She didn’t follow any rules, because she’s very small and very cute, so it goes without saying that she can do whatever she wants. In short, Madina was very active, restless, hyperactive, always running and jumping, she was generally delighted with physical contact, even ready for physical confrontations with other children.

      She always wanted to participate in everything, in all activities in the camp. In addition to some Bulgarian and Serbian, she also learned English, which, as Francesca summed up, she could follow, but of course she didn’t speak very well. Francesca recalls: How she talks to us, a kind of child-like English, but English. The famous photo of Madina shown below was taken after one such activity at the camp in Bogovađa, with her looking straight into our eyes, playfully sticking out her tongue, arms and body in motion. In that photo, Madina is wearing her black Star Wars T-shirt and was photographed by Silvia on a sunny, summer day after a water coloring workshop attended by many children. Francesca recollects how she took them all to wash their hands on the ground floor, to a shared bathroom and toilet. All of them were dirty and I know the photo was taken at the moment when they all came out of that toilet together. Madina, as Silvija remembers, simply ran out, along with two other children she always spent time with, the same two she was with when she found the kittens.

      In the camp in Sofia, Madina socialized with other children her age every day and in the classroom which was always quite noisy. About twenty children were usually in the classroom, and Margarita and Katerina remember that Madina especially loved the dressing room corner, where she would dress up as a princess. Aleksandra also remembers Madina in that little corner, in a very big princess dress. It wasn’t meant for her age. It was very big. She could barely walk in it. It piled up under her feet, but she was happy and kept on saying: Teacher, teacher. She also mentions that Madina loved dolls. And reading. There was a book, Shark in the Park by the British children’s writer Nick Sharatt, which Aleksandra read to the children every day, and they loved to repeat after her. Madina also liked to listen to her read the book and repeat after her. The classroom was a place for play, drawing, singing. This is where Madina probably drew the colorful hearts on the messages for Bulgarian citizens that Margarita and other volunteers distributed in Sofia on World Refugee Day in 2016.

      Aleksandra remembers Madina in a purple jacket that was big for her, too big for her, always unbuttoned. She was always running around in that jacket that was always unbuttoned. The photos at the beginning of the video about the organization of the camp in Sofia show Madina in such a jacket around the one minute mark, with a hood over her head and a big scarf around her neck, the way she was described in interviews: small, with wide-open eyes full of questions. Jovana, who occasionally came to Bogovađa, also remembers Madina in a cyclamen-colored coat and in general in those kinds of colors she wore. Jovana, however, also remembers that same coat, jacket covered Madina’s dead body when they returned it to her parents just like that, so cruelly, harshly. When Francesca saw Madina for the last time, at the camp in Belgrade where the family was getting ready for the game, Madina was wearing that pink jacket, like in that photo that you sometimes see on the Internet. I think it might be the last photo of her, Francesca concludes.

      Madina went on the game on November 21, 2017, with her mother and five siblings. An hour after they clandestinely crossed the border between Serbia and Croatia in the afternoon, they were intercepted by the police. Madina’s mother, as she stated in the complaint she sent to the ombudswoman through Doctors Without Borders, asked the Croatian police for asylum for herself and her underage children. However, they told her that they had to return to Serbia. They told them to come to Croatia again next month. The mother then started begging the policemen to let them at least spend the night in Croatia, because the children were exhausted, but they ignored her pleas. After some time, a police vehicle arrived and transported them to the border, to a place next to the railway line near Tovarnik, which at the time was already known as the place where the Croatian police bring people they pushed back to Serbia. The policemen then ordered them to go back to Serbia, to Šid by following the railway line. Shortly thereafter, the train that knocked Madina down came. The ambulance doctors who arrived at the railway station in Tovarnik, where the police brought Madina after the accident, could only declare Madina’s death at twenty-one hours and ten minutes. Madina’s body was kept in Croatia, while the family was deported to Serbia the same night. The body was subsequently sent to Serbia and handed over to the family. Madina was buried in Šid, where she still rests to this day.

      The responsibility for Madina’s death was investigated by the Ombudswoman, the State Attorney Office, at the Municipal Court in Vukovar, the County Court in Osijek, the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Croatia and, finally, at the European Court of Human Rights. However, justice for Madina has not been served to this day. Those responsible for her death have not been identified nor punished.

      Madina has become a symbol of harsh migrant routes going through Croatia and neighbouring countries, a symbol of border deaths, but also of resistance to policies that imply and produce such deaths. The first anniversary of Madina’s death was marked by the renaming of Republic of Croatia Square in Zagreb to Madina Hussiny Square. This action, as well as other counter-memorialization actions in the following years, was aimed at determining who is responsible for Madina’s death and for all those who were persecuted and died at the borders and in the name of borders. The renaming was used to demand, as stated in the leaflets, swift responsibility for the committed act, for the irretrievably lost life and the system that produces such deaths (cf. grief activism). The third anniversary of Madina’s death was commemorated by a giant graphic novel titled Madina by Ena Jurov, exhibited at the Square of the Victims of Fascism in Zagreb, and on the fourth anniversary, the Zagreb Sanctuary City Initiative submitted a request to the city authority and the Committee for Naming Neighborhoods, Streets and Squares of the Zagreb City Assembly to have the name Madina Hussiny included in the pool of names from which public areas for the area of the City of Zagreb are named.

      https://e-erim.ief.hr/pojam/p-madina-hussiny-p?locale=en

      #toponymie #toponymie_migrante #commémoration