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Roma Rights: EU Commission Opens Infringement Proceedings Against Three Member States
Brussels escalates action against EU countries failing to implement the Roma Equality and Inclusion Framework.
The Long Road to Equality: EU Takes Action on Roma Rights Failures
The European Commission opened formal infringement proceedings against three EU member states in early 2026 for failures to implement the EU Framework for Roma Equality, Inclusion and Participation — a strategic framework requiring member states to adopt concrete national strategies to address the systemic discrimination, poverty, and exclusion experienced by Europe's largest ethnic minority. The proceedings, the first time the Commission has used its legal enforcement powers specifically in relation to Roma rights, signal a significant shift toward treating Roma exclusion as a legally actionable failure of EU obligations rather than a domestic political choice.
Estimates suggest that between 10 and 12 million Roma live in Europe, the vast majority within EU member states, making them the continent's largest ethnic minority. Despite decades of EU and national programmes addressing Roma integration, the evidence consistently shows that Roma remain dramatically worse off than the general population on virtually every indicator of wellbeing: educational attainment, employment rates, housing quality, health outcomes, life expectancy, and exposure to violence and discrimination. In several member states, residential segregation has actually deepened over the past decade as Roma communities are physically separated into peripheral districts with inferior infrastructure and services.
The legal basis for the infringement proceedings rests on the binding anti-discrimination directives that require member states to prohibit discrimination on grounds of race or ethnic origin in employment, education, and access to goods and services. Commission investigators have documented systematic patterns of school segregation in which Roma children are placed in separate classes or facilities, employment discrimination that prevents Roma from accessing jobs for which they are qualified, and housing policies that exclude Roma from certain municipalities or residential areas. These patterns, the Commission argues, constitute violations of EU law that member states have failed to address despite years of warnings and recommendations.