GOVERNMENT COMMUNICATION OFFICE
Home > About Slovenia > Publications > Slovenia News > Slovenia News 31 July 2007 > Ombudsman Identifies Children's Rights and Erased in Report

Ombudsman Identifies Children's Rights and Erased in Report

Ljubljana, 24 July

Human Rights Ombudsman Zdenka Cebasek Travnik presented to the press on Tuesday the 2006 Ombudsman's Report, highlighting violations of children's rights and the need to introduce a special spokesman to safeguard the rights of children, the elderly and the disabled.

The report, compiled by Cebasek Travnik's predecessor Matjaz Hanzek, shows that the ombudsman's office dealt with 2,492 cases in 2006, a 3.2% decrease over 2005. As usually, most of the cases were related to judicial and police procedures (654), while social security and administration issues were close behind. In her foreword to the report, Cebasek Travnik highlighted among other things violations of the rights of children, which often occur during divorce procedures. According to the ombudsman, Slovenia's divorce legislation fails to protect children involved in divorce proceedings. Cebasek Travnik announced she would focus this year on violence in all areas of life.
She meanwhile also pointed to the problem of the erased (some 18,000 people from the former Yugoslavia who were removed from Slovenia's permanent residence registry in 1992), which was also once more highlighted by Hanzek. "The Constitutional Court has rendered its verdict, it is now up to the legislative branch of power to adopt adequate measures implementing the decision of the Constitutional Court," Cebasek Travnik said. She explained she had also pointed to the problem of the erased when handing the report to Parliament Speaker France Cukjati last week and at Monday's meeting with President Janez Drnovsek.
Other areas highlighted by Cebasek Travnik include education, health care, labour legislation, discrimination and the environment. Hanzek meanwhile included in his report a number of issues which have been dragging on in Slovenia for years: the erased, the integration of the Roma population, the need for a law on mental health, and domestic violence.
He also highlighted the disregard for rulings of the Constitutional Court - 13 of the court's rulings remained unimplemented in 2006, the report says. Among grave violations of human rights and the rule of law, Hanzek singled out the events in Ambrus and the subsequent relocation of the Strojans, a Roma family involved in a dispute with its neighbours.
According to the report's findings, in 2006 the greatest increase was recorded in discrimination, with the Ombudsman's Office dealing with 46 such cases. Also up was the number of social security-related cases (324), while the most obvious decrease was recorded in housing, judicial and police procedure cases.
The 2006 Ombudsman's Report is expected to be discussed by parliament in October.

More articles from this issue:

Politics
Several Parties Hold Talks with US Gaming Company Exec
Ljubljana, 25 July
Foreign Policy
Slovenia to Use EU Presidency to Solve Balkan Issues, Financial Times Says
London, 31 July
Bilateral Cooperation
Slovenian and Serbian Agriculture Minister Discuss Cooperation
Ljubljana, 24 July
Vizjak Discusses Cooperation with Head of Ukrainian Region
Ljubljana, 25 July
Bilateral Relations
PM Jansa Expects Croatia to Answer Initiative Soon
Ljubljana, 30 July
Slovenia Establishes Diplomatic Ties with Burundi
New York, 28 July
Government
Government Successful in Achieving Goals, PM Claims
Ljubljana, 30 July
Brucan Denies That Health Sector is Going Private
Maribor, 28 July
Minister Discusses Membership, Reforms with Senior OECD Official
Ljubljana, 24 July
Economy
Petrol Sets Up Joint Venture with Montenegro Bonus
Cetinje, 24 July
Mobitel and Simobil Set Same Euro Tariffs
Ljubljana, 27 July
Abanka Reports 32% Increase in Half-Year Profit
Ljubljana, 27 July
Inflation at 3.8% in July, Up 0.2 Percentage Points over June
Ljubljana, 31 July
Agriculture
EU Commission Confirms Slovenia's Rural Development Programme
Ljubljana, 24 July
EU Topics
Rupel Says New EU Treaty Talks a Boon for Macedonia
Ljubljana, 24 July
Financial Times Says Slovenia's Approaching EU Presidency Sign of Maturity
London, 31 July
NATO Topics
Defence Minister Says Macedonia Meeting NATO Standards
Skopje, 27 July
Culture
Esperanto Speakers to Converge on Maribor
Ljubljana, 24 July
Society
Ombudsman Identifies Children's Rights and Erased in Report
Ljubljana, 24 July
Kindergartens to be Free for Second, All Subsequent Children
Ljubljana, 26 July
Sport
Gymnastics: Pegan Wins on Return to Horizontal Bar
Shangai, 29 July
Ceplak Rejects Doping Accusations, IAAF Issues Temporary Ban
Ljubljana, 26 July
Tourism
Visitor Numbers Up in First Half-Year
Ljubljana, 25 July
Health
Ljubljana Hospital to Get New Emergency Ward
Ljubljana, 24 July
Calendar of Events
Schedule of Events for 31 July - 5 August

Archive

year month
2008 1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12
2007 1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12
2006 1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12
2005 1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12
2004 1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12

Subscribe

To receive our weekly newsletter by e-mail subscribe here.


HOME
Government | Calendar of Events | Media Room | About Slovenia
Sitemap | Contact us | About us | Graphic version | Slovensko


© Government Communication Office