The report also said that racism in the police and security forces was a problem across the continent. In Belgium, for example, a one in nine violent incident was blamed on police and gendarmes. Beate Winkler, the centre’s director, pointed to worrying discrepancies between official and unofficial reporting of racist violence: the Netherlands figure was 200 incidents for 1999, but the Anne Frank Foundation estimated that the true number ranged between 800 and 8,000. The EU centre had been uncomfortable few months this year because it is situated in the Austrian capital, Vienna, the target of unprecedented sanctions by all 14 other member states after Jorg Haider’s anti-immigrant Freedom Party entered government after doing well in national elections. In the 1999 election campaign in Austria "a climate of fear and intolerance was ... stoked up against the immigrant and Jewish community," the report said. Jean Kahn, director of the Vienna centre, said he wanted anti-racism measures agreed in the EU’s Amsterdam treaty — which was ratified in 1997 — fully implemented in all member states. And the chairman of the European Parliament’s citizens’ rights committee, Graham Watson, argued that clear rules had to be set governing when a member state could be suspended for failing to meet accepted standards on democracy and human rights. Some governments want this written clearly into the treaty of Nice, due to be drawn up at the EU summit on the Cote d’Azur next month. — By arrangement with |