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Tuesday, 6 March 2007, 10:45 GMT

UN urges EU to help Roma children

Roma children in Belgrade About one million Roma children "remain invisible" in South-East Europe, without documents or adequate healthcare, a Unicef report says.

The report by the UN body for the protection of children found that in the region Romas (Gypsies) face exclusion and discrimination.

It also found that some 50,000 Roma children live as refugees in Germany.

Unicef urges the European Union to help improve the condition of Roma children, many of whom live in dire poverty.

The study found that in Romania and Bulgaria - new EU member states - up to one-third of Roma children were not in school, a proportion which reaches 80% in Bosnia-Hercegovina.

Unicef warned that when these children become adults, they will not be able to vote, make use of social services or register their own children.



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Related to this story:
Plea for action on child poverty (18 Oct 06 |  Europe )
Children 'failed' over nutrition (01 May 06 |  Health )
Changing winds in ex-Soviet lands (02 Nov 05 |  Asia-Pacific )
Serbia's scrapheap scavengers (05 Apr 05 |  Europe )
Nations unite to help Roma people (02 Feb 05 |  Europe )

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Unicef report on Roma children in South East Europe
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