Rural Property Bulgaria
V. Country Narratives -- Countries A through G Ethiopia is a source country for men, women, and children trafficked for forced labor and sexual exploitation. Young Ethiopian women are trafficked to Djibouti and the Middle East, particularly Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia, for involuntary domestic labor. A small percentage are trafficked for sexual exploitation, with some women reportedly trafficked onward from Lebanon to Europe. Small numbers of men are trafficked to Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states for exploitation as low-skilled laborers. Both children and adults are trafficked internally from rural to urban areas for domestic labor and, to a lesser extent, for commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor, such as street vending. The Government of Ethiopia does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking; however, it is making significant efforts to do so. T ... [Read More]
Bulgaria In July one member of the Zrunkov clan, Ivan Ivanov, attempted to set himself on fire in front of the President's office, but guards quickly extinguished the flames. Also in July, police arrested 16 Roma in Vidin after they reportedly plundered the houses and property of the departed Zrunkovs. Additionally in July, in the town of Chirpan, six Roma (including a 6-year-old child) were injured in fighting between rival clans. Most of the Zrunkovs were reported to have returned quietly to Vidin or to have emigrated by year's end. ... [Read More]
Bulgaria As individuals and as an ethnic group, Roma continued to face high levels of discrimination. NGOs reported that Roma encountered difficulties applying for social benefits, and local officials discouraged rural Roma from claiming land to which they were entitled under the law disbanding agricultural collectives. Many Roma and other observers made credible allegations that the quality of education offered to Romani children was inferior to that afforded most other students. Workplace discrimination against minorities continued to be a problem, especially for Roma. Employers justified such discrimination on the basis that most Roma only had elementary training and little education. Roma continued to suffer from inadequate access to health care. ... [Read More]
Bulgaria The Constitution forbids privileges or restrictions of rights on the basis of sex, and women are not impeded from owning or managing businesses, land, or other real property and do not suffer from discrimination under inheritance laws; however, women face discrimination both in terms of job recruitment and the likelihood of layoffs. Official figures show the rate of unemployment for women to be higher than that for men. Women are much more likely than men to be employed in low-wage jobs requiring little education, and the National Statistical Institute reports that as of November, the average salary of a woman was 76.8 percent of the average salary of a man. Statistics show that women are equally likely to attend universities, but they have less opportunity to upgrade their qualifications and generally end up in lower-ranking and lower-paying positions than their male counterparts. Women generally continued to have primary responsibility for child rearing and housekeeping, even if they ... [Read More]
2004 Country Report on Human Rights in Bulgaria NGOs reported that Roma encountered difficulties applying for social benefits, and local officials discouraged rural Roma from claiming land to which they were entitled under the law disbanding agricultural collectives. Many Roma and other observers made credible allegations that the quality of education offered to Romani children was inferior to that afforded most other students. Workplace discrimination against minorities continued to be a problem, especially for Roma. Employers justified such discrimination on the basis that most Roma only had elementary training and little education. Roma continued to suffer from inadequate access to health care. ... [Read More]
U.S. Embassy in Nicaragua - Economic and Commercial Section Foreign donors pledge 1.8 billion (March)1111Nicaragua's bilateral and multilateral donors in an 1111April 1-2 meeting in Geneva, Switzerland, pledged 1.8 billion dollars in 1111new assistance over the period 1998-2000. That is well above the 1.2 1111billion dollars that the Nicaraguan Government had previously indicated it 1111expected to receive. The U.S. pledged 35.7 million dollars for 1998 and a 1111total of 145 million dollars over the next five years. Given the tight 1111spending targets under Nicaragua's ESAF and its weak external accounts, 1111this donor assistance will allow the government to bridge its financing 1111gaps and maintain social sector spending as it waits to qualify for 1111substantial foreign debt relief starting in the year 2000 (debt service 1111payments in 1997 were equivalent to 15 percent of GDP). 1111 BUILDING MORE LINES: ENITEL PREPARES FOR PRIVATIZATION 1111(MARCH)1111 [Read More]
Working for Women, Worldwide: The U.S. Commitment One important policy reform would give women an equal right to own and inherit property and gain access to credit and business information. "In too many countries, women have little hope of advancing economically because they lack the basic right to own, and therefore sell, property," says Ambassador Ellen Sauerbrey, U.S. representative to the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women. "That's why we continue to promote property and inheritance rights for women in every forum." ... [Read More]
USIA, Economic Perspectives, January 1997 -- AID Worldwide, direct sales of land and agricultural production unitshave been rare since relatively few developing societies regardland as a transferable resource. In Albania and Romania,however, governments are now legalizing holdings seized bypeasants. The same process can be seen in Mozambique, Ethiopia,and Nigeria. In Asia, Latin America, and Africa, a number oflarge agricultural plantations have either been sold or are inthe "privatization pipeline," and major programs are under way,with USAID support, to register land held by small-scale landholders -- clearly defining property rights and facilitating thesale, lease, or joint development of the land. ... [Read More]
Moldova The law provides for restitution to politically repressed or exiled persons whose property was confiscated during the successive Nazi and Soviet regimes. This regulation has been extended in effect to religious communities; however, the Moldovan Orthodox Church has been favored over other religious groups in this area and has recovered nearly all of its property. In cases where property was destroyed, the Government offered alternative compensation. However, property disputes between the Moldovan and Bessarabian Churches have not been resolved. Despite being able to register and operate as a legal religion, representatives of the Bessarabian Orthodox Church claimed that their property rights were still being violated. The Jewish community had mixed results in recovering its property but no pending cases. Members of the Molocan community had a property claim that remained unresolved at year's end. ... [Read More]
|