Tag: Airport in Cluj

  • January 17, 2020 UPDATE

    January 17, 2020 UPDATE

    HOLOCAUST – The Romanian
    president Klaus Iohannis will be in Israel from Tuesday to Thursday, the
    president’s office has announced. He will make this trip in order to attend the
    5th forum of world leaders
    dedicated to the remembrance of the victims of the Holocaust and the 75th
    anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. The
    forum, entitled Remembering the Holocaust, Fighting Anti-Semitism,
    will take place on the 23rd of January in Jerusalem. The
    participation of the Romanian president in this international forum is part of
    the efforts made by the Romanian state to consolidate education about the
    Holocaust, preserve the memory of the Holocaust, combat anti-Semitism, racism
    and xenophobia and promote European values, tolerance and respect for the
    fundamental rights and liberties. On the sidelines of the forum, president
    Iohannis will also have a meeting with his Israeli counterpart Reuven Rivlin.




    AID – The Romanian
    government has approved aid worth 41 million euros, to rescue the National Air
    Transport Company Tarom. Without the aid, Tarom would no longer be able to
    finance its activity as of March. According to the head of the prime minister’s
    office Ionel Danca, this is the first step and can take the form of
    restructuring aid, following the notification of the European Commission and
    the latter’s approval of the aid. Tarom estimates losses of around 36 million
    euros for 2019. The Romanian state-owned airliner has not had profit since
    2007.




    AIRPORT – The Avram Iancu
    International Airport in Cluj has been authorized to introduce pets from third
    countries for non-commercial purpose, thus becoming the first regional airport
    to provide this facility to its passengers. Pets could only be introduced in
    Romania via the Henri Coanda International Airport in Bucharest.




    WHO -
    The World Health Organization (WHO) on Friday warned that the lack of new
    antibiotics threatens global efforts to contain drug-resistant infections,
    which kill tens of thousands of people every year, France Press reports. Never
    has the threat of antimicrobial resistance been more immediate and the need for
    solutions more urgent, says Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General
    of WHO. Numerous initiatives are underway to reduce resistance, but we also
    need countries and the pharmaceutical industry to step up and contribute with
    sustainable funding and innovative new medicines. The WHO believes the world
    is headed to an era where common infections could start killing again. Some
    33,000 people die every year in Europe and 35,000 in the United States to
    drug-resistant infections, one of the greatest health challenges yet
    identified, WHO officials say. Bacteria develop resistance when patients misuse
    antibiotics or don’t finish their treatment, thus becoming immune to drugs.




    BREXIT -
    The UK will not automatically kick out EU citizens who have not obtained a stay
    permit, the European Parliament’s coordinator for Brexit, Guy Verhofstadt said.
    The EU official said that those who have not filed for resident status by the
    end of June 2021 will be given a six-month grace period to solve their status.
    The information was confirmed by Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s spokesman. Under
    the current post-Brexit legal framework, EU citizens who have an attested stay
    of at least 5 years in the UK are granted permanent resident status. The others
    can file for temporary resident status, which can be upgraded to permanent at
    the end of 5 years spent in the UK.




    TENNIS -
    Romanian tennis player Monica Niculescu, world no. 128, has qualified for the
    main draw of the Australian Open, the first Grand Slam tournament of the year.
    She defeated the Swiss player Stefanie Voegele on Friday in three sets, in the
    last qualifying round. Three Romanian players go straight into the main draw in
    the women’s singles: world no. 4 Simona Halep, world no. 74 Sorana Cirstea, and
    world no. 105 Irina Begu. In the opening round, Halep will face world no. 49
    Jennifer Brady of the US, Cirstea will face world no. 33 Barbora Strycova of
    the Czech Republic and Begu will face world no. 10 Kiki Bertens of the
    Netherlands.


    (Translated
    by C. Mateescu & V. Palcu)