Barbora Bukovská


Barbora Bukovská is a Czech-Slovak human rights attorney and activist, known for her work on racial discrimination of Romani people in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Before anti-discrimination laws were adopted, she initiated the first Czech strategic litigation cases concerning discrimination against Romani people in access to public services, housing, employment and within the criminal justice system, and used the courts to bring a change in the law.

Advocacy

Bukovská is a founder of the Center for Civil and Human Rights, Košice, Slovakia. In 2002, she uncovered a practice of forced sterilization of Romani women in Slovakia in her controversial report "Body and Soul", for which she was criminally prosecuted by the Slovak Government. The Slovak Government rejected the report as unfounded; but it was widely supported and backed up internationally, including by the U.S. Congress Helsinki Commission, the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe, Amnesty International and others. Since then, she has been representing victims of this practice in the courts.
In 2009, she won a case, K.H. and Others vs. Slovakia at the European Court for Human Rights, concerning access of forcibly sterilized women to their medical documents. Subsequently, she won several cases at the ECHR concerning forced sterilizations:
Further cases are pending at the European and Slovak courts.
Other high-profile cases at the European Court include:
She received a Woman of the World Award from American magazine Marie Claire in 2004.
In 2006, she published another controversial paper on exploitation of the suffering of victims of human rights violations by international human rights organizations at the Cairo conference of the Open Society Institute; the paper was later re-published by PILnet: The Global Network for Public Interest Law, and Sur Journal.

Personal life

She is the niece of John Bukovsky, the first papal nuncio in the Russian Federation. She volunteers for the Catholic Worker Movement.