The post you are reporting:
In reply to Brian's question, if you read the article in post 1, from BBC, the walls of shame in Slovakia started going up in 2009, which is about six years after Slovakia joined the European Union.
It has nothing to do with the Soviet era, Barrie.
Since 2009, 14 such walls have gone up in Slovak localities, the latest being in the city of Kosice, which has 240,000 inhabitants and is Slovakia's second city.
Because the Slovak government and municipal authorities have been allowed to get away with it from 2009 in smaller towns, they have hence proceeded to do the same in Kosice, a very large city.
I assume that the Roma in these ghettos are denied fair access to hospitals, clinics, dentists, schools and other social infrastructure, including shops, as they cannot pass the wall that cuts them off, unless they go the very long way round and through the designated gate - if there is one.
This is institutionalised ghetto racism in a European Union member state:
locking an ethnic group of people up and denying them access to basic infrastructure.
Brian, rather than Hess-Goebels (I assume you meant Goebels, as Goering was the commander of the Luftwaffe), why not just keep to "the EU", in defining the culpable system.
Now back to my original question in post 1:
Do we pay for these racist discrimination policies - such as erecting walls to cut off Romany people from basic civil infrastructure - when we pay £50 million a day to the EU?
Is this money we pay to the EU systematically denied to Romany people and given only to "racially clean" peoples.
And my other question was:
Is this the beginning of ethnic cleansing in Eastern EU Europe?
(Ethnic cleansing usually starts by locking people up in confined areas and depriving them of basic civil rights).