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Today, the Border Violence Monitoring Network (BVMN) will share findings in the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) related to pushbacks and protection concerns in Bosnia-Herzegovina (BiH). In this 70th session of the Committee, BVMN has been invited to present a recent submission made regarding BiH and to outline abuses that people-on-the-move are facing in the country. These include both violations of economic and social rights suffered during cross-border pushbacks and violations within State borders. The submission findings also cover the systemic failings in provision of shelter, health access and basic amenities, which relate to both camps and squated accommodation.

Issues addressed

These violations are laid out in the submission alongside first hand testimonies from people-on-the-move who have been pushed back from BiH, or were subject to these conditions during their stay. The submission also cites a variety of reports by BVMN and it’s members, as well as videos and external sources which evidence these patterns.

The publication looks at the unfolding situation around Temporary Reception facilities like Lipa camp, and situates them within a broader context of precarious living for people-on-the-move in BiH such as the informal Vučjak camp of 2019. The report also looks at pushback cases from BiH where cages were used to detain people-on-the-move, and outlines other forms of violence that have been used against transit groups during their expulsion to either Serbia or Montenegro.

The CESCR is a body of 18 independent experts that monitors implementation of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights by its States parties. As such, BVMN’s submission aims at tackling some of the primary violations faced by people-on-the-move and provides recommendations on how these can be addressed.

Reccomendations

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