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4. FRA-Bulletin about Impacts of the PandemicAs an organisation working in the Fundamental Rights Agency (FRP) of the EU, we report on their publications when they concern our issues. The current report concerns the fourth FRA Bulletin on Coronavirus Pandemic in the EU: Implications for fundamental rights FRA is publishing its fourth FRA Bulletin on the Coronavirus pandemic in the EU: fundamental rights implications, which looks at how EU Member States tackle the pandemic and the impact on fundamental rights. The bulletin covers measures in place in the 27 EU Member States from 1 to 30 June 2020 and shows: 1. States of emergency: Many governments continue to lift states of emergency or equivalent to manage the pandemic but they often extend or impose other crisis measures. Courts, national human rights bodies and civil society organisations continue to question the legality of fundamental rights restrictions. 2. Daily life: Although governments gradually eased restrictions, all EU governments maintain physical distancing measures. These include wearing of masks in some places and stay-at-home orders for COVID-19 sufferers. As Member States reopen schools and plan for the next school year, various assessments underline how children from disadvantaged backgrounds lack equipment and support for distance learning. With many people working again, studies point to the pandemic’s disproportionate impact on women when it comes to work-life balance and caring responsibilities. 3. Vulnerable groups: COVID-19 measures continue to affect some groups more. Restrictions eased for older people and people with disabilities in institutions. But sometimes visiting guidelines are too complex or restrictions are over-implemented or disproportionate leading to greater stress and loneliness. Some Member States run initiatives to counter the impact on Roma communities, such as educational programmes or access to information and healthcare. 4. Digital concerns: Many Member States work on contact-tracing apps and other technological tools, including the use of drones and other forms of surveillance to combat the pandemic. Data protection bodies continue to call for legal clarity on the use of such tools. 5. Racism: The pandemic is further stoking intolerance towards minorities. In several Member States, politicians reportedly used racist and xenophobic language. Some countries also reported racial profiling and disproportionate enforcement of COVID-19 related restrictions towards ethnic minority groups. Kind regards, Read more https://fra.europa.eu/en/publication/2020/covid19-rights-impact-july-1 Category[21]: Unsere Themen in der Presse Short-Link to this page: a-fsa.de/e/3ba Link to this page: https://www.aktion-freiheitstattangst.org/de/articles/7360-20200815-eu-grundrechtsagentur-veroeffentlicht-4-bulletin-zu-corona-massnahmen.html Link with Tor: http://a6pdp5vmmw4zm5tifrc3qo2pyz7mvnk4zzimpesnckvzinubzmioddad.onion/de/articles/7360-20200815-eu-grundrechtsagentur-veroeffentlicht-4-bulletin-zu-corona-massnahmen.html Tags: #Corona #Grundrechte #Menschenrechte #Ausnahmezustand #Distanzregeln #Maskenzwang #Kindererziehung #Gleichberechtigung #Gender #Diskriminierung #Ungleichbehandlung #Überwachung #Kontakt-Apps #FRA #FRP #Bulletin #Transparenz #Informationsfreiheit Created: 2020-08-15 01:16:25 Hits: 789 Leave a Comment |
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