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The Roma Committee is tasked with monitoring the implementation of the Strategy of Bosnia and Herzegovina for Addressing Roma Issues (Official Gazette of BiH, No. 67/05) and its action plans: the revised Roma Action Plan in the areas of Employment, Housing and Health (2017) and the Revised Plan on the Educational Needs of Roma in Bosnia and ...
Roma population lives in 104 districts. Belgium – – 20,000 40,000 Bosnia and Herzegovina 12,583 (2013 census) [103] 40,000 76,000 Roma population lives in 92 municipalities. In 3 villages the Roma are the majority. Brazil 800,000 (2010 census) 680,000 1,000,000
Population Roma population Roma % Note Elbaevo village Mozdoksky, North Ossetia–Alania: 504 376 74.6% Kalinovsky farm Kochubeyevsky, Stavropol: 358 217 60.61% Donetsky farm Zimovnikovsky, Rostov: 151 72 47.68% Rynok Romanovsky farm Tsimlyansky, Rostov: 74 70 94.59% Kovalevsky farm Zimovnikovsky, Rostov: 106 59 55.66% Niva farm Martynovsky ...
Because Irish Travellers, a sub-group of the Irish (having the same ancestral genetics from within the general population of Ireland [221]) lived as nomads, [222] the Roma and the Irish travellers came to be conflated with each other and in time some of the Roma mixed with some of the native Irish travellers (beginning in the 1650s) because of ...
These latter include 2.73% of the total population of the country, [1] i.e. 96,539 persons. The biggest community is the Romani people in Bosnia and Herzegovina , which are estimated at around 58,000 persons.
Italy is the most common destination for Romanian emigrants, with over one million Romanians living there.. In 2006, the Romanian diaspora was estimated at 8 million people by then President of Romania, Traian Băsescu, most of them living in the former USSR, Western Europe (esp. Italy, Spain, Germany, United Kingdom, France, and Austria), North America (Canada and the United States), South ...
Ethnic map of Bosnia and Herzegovina according to 2013 census. More than 96% of the population of Bosnia and Herzegovina belongs to one of its three autochthonous constituent peoples (Serbo-Croatian: konstitutivni narodi / конститутивни народи): Bosniaks, Serbs, and Croats.
Serbia: in the disputed territory of Kosovo the vast majority of the Romani population is Muslim. [68] Bosnia, Montenegro and Herzegovina: Islam is the dominant religion. [68] Croatia: Following World War II, a large number of Muslim Roma relocated to Croatia (the majority moved from Kosovo). [68]