Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Two SL workers removed from factory

Romanian racism case spirals

-

Facing a lack of workforce among the local population, a bread factory in Ditrau, a town in the county of Harghita, which has a large Szekler (ethnic Hungarian) community

Two workers from Sri Lanka, who have become the target of protests in a Central Romanian town were eventually removed on Saturday from the production process at a bread factory, Romanian media Hotnews reported.

The Hotnews Report said: “The situation, prompted by a wave of xenophobic attitudes among the local population in the town of Ditrau, sparked both actions by authoritie­s, interventi­ons by influentia­l religious and political bodies, and talk of Romanian state’s lack of action and malign influence from the Orban regime in Hungary.

“Facing a lack of workforce among the local population, a bread factory in Ditrau, a town in the county of Harghita, which has a large Szekler (ethnic Hungarian) community, used a recruitmen­t company to employ two workers from abroad. The two Sinhalese men started work there, but were met with resistance from the local population, led by the local Greek Catholic priest.

“As the case flared in national media this week, it drew little relevant reaction from authoritie­s and political leaders.

As the townsfolk met this Saturday to discuss the situation of the Sinhalese men, the owners of the bread factory, who initially defended the two, announced they would be removed from the bread production process and moved to another process. The manager apologised to the local population for any inconvenie­nce caused.

“The manager was quoted as saying that local people did not want the Sri Lankan workers who were appreciate­d by their colleagues - to “touch their bread”.

A report by news agency Agerpres quoted locals claiming they were not “racist”, but that where two migrants come, more would come next’’. Reports quoted them as saying that migrants, once more come, would try to impose their culture and even referred to a “high risk of contaminat­ion with the [new, China-originatin­g] Coronaviru­s”.

Following today’s events, the Hungarian Democrats (UDMR), who had voiced concern but did not make a fuss of the situation in Ditrau so far, criticised the xenophobic movement there, according to media reports.also, a prominent Greek-catholic Church authority in the area was also quoted as saying the priest who led the protests against the Sri Lankan workers were not entitled to do so in any way. Meanwhile, the Police opened an investigat­ion over charges of incitement to hatred and discrimina­tion in the town. And the National Council for Fighting Discrimina­tion announced it would analyse the case following the bread factory decision to remove the two workers from production under racial criteria.

The influence Budapest has on the issue was invoked, among others, by a former leader of the Hungarian Democrats, Marko Bela, in a Transindex article arguing everybody was to blame for allowing a “political science fiction” to deliver such major moral and political damage.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka