Tag: Alexander Lukashenko

  • Reactions to the Ryanair flight diversion

    Reactions to the Ryanair flight diversion

    A
    totally unacceptable action, the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs,
    Josep Borrell, said on Sunday after news hit the media that Minsk authorities
    forced a Ryanair flight to land. The aircraft flying from Athens to Vilnius was
    intercepted while crossing Belarusian airspace by a military fighter jet and forced
    to land over an alleged bomb threat. No explosive device was ever found on
    board, and the real reason for the flight diversion was the detention of Roman Protasevich,
    an opponent of Alexander Lukashenko’s regime. Aged 26, Protasevich previously worked
    for Nexta, a media outlet on the frontline of the wave of protests sparked by
    Lukashenko’s reelection in 2020. Last year, Belarus’s secret intelligence put Roman
    Protasevich on the list of people involved in terrorist actions. Protasevich
    was placed under arrest after getting off the plane.

    EU Commissioner for Transport,
    Adina Vălean, spoke about this unprecedented incident, which she says will have
    consequences. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in turn condemned the flight
    diversion and called for Protasevich’s immediate release, saying this shocking
    act perpetrated by the Lukashenko regime endangered the lives of more than 120
    passengers. We stand with the Belarusian people in their aspirations for a
    free, democratic, and prosperous future and support their call for the regime
    to respect human rights and fundamental freedoms, Secretary Blinken also said.

    In turn, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg described the action as a
    serious and dangerous incident, demanding an international inquiry. The Romanian
    Foreign Ministry also expressed its deep concern with what it called an inadmissible
    undertaking of Belarusian authorities which it firmly condemned. No Romanian passenger
    was onboard. Several European governments on Sunday condemned Belarus’s action.
    Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki says the gesture is an act of state
    terrorism and demanded immediate sanctions. The diversion of the Ryanair
    flight by Belarusian authorities is unacceptable. It is key Europeans respond firmly
    and consistently, the French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said on
    Sunday. Lithuania’s president, Gitanas Nauseda described the action as abhorrent
    and has granted Roman Protasevich refugee status. Lithuanian prosecutors have
    launched a criminal investigation into a possible terrorist high-jacking and
    the ill-treatment of people with the breach of international regulations. (VP)

  • August 24, 2020

    August 24, 2020

    Covid-19 RO. 825 new cases of people infected with SARS-CoV-2 have been registered in Romania since the latest report, the Strategic Communication Group has announced today. The total number of cases thus reaches 79,330. Another 37 people infected with the new coronavirus have died, one registered in the 10-19 age bracket, and the total number of deaths in Romania has reached 3,309. 7,410 people with COVID-19 are hospitalized in specialized health units and 494 patients are in intensive care. On the Romanian territory, 10,742 people confirmed with the new coronavirus are in isolation at home, and 5,433 in institutionalized isolation. Also, 29,404 people are in quarantine at home, and 37 in institutionalized quarantine. As regards the Romanian citizens abroad, 5,920 have been confirmed as carriers of the new coronavirus, mostly in Germany, Italy and Spain, and 124 have died.



    Pandemic. The health situation related to the COVID 19 pandemic keeps deteriorating around the world, with signs of recurrence in a growing number of countries. Several countries have reported in recent days the highest daily figures since the spring wave, or even since the onset of the pandemic. The total number of Covid-19 diseases has exceeded 23.5 million worldwide on today, 16 million of whom are cured patients. At the same time, according to centralized data by worldometers.info, more than 805 thousand people have lost their lives. US President Donald Trump has urgently authorized the transfusion of blood plasma from cured people to infected patients, a treatment already widely used in the world. The United States, with 5.8 million cases of infection and more than 176 thousand deaths, remains the most affected country in the world. Second comes Brazil with almost 2.8 million diseases and over 114 deaths. In Europe, the UK is the most affected country, with a total of over 41,000 dead.



    Debt. Romania has to recover over 650 million US dollars from goods and services exported before 1990, said the former foreign minister Cristian Diaconescu in an interview for Radio Romania. According to him, with about 400 million dollars, Iraq is at the top of the list of countries that still owe money to Romania, followed by Sudan, Mozambique, Libya, Guinea, the Central African Republic, Nigeria, Somalia, Tanzania, the Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly Zaire) and North Korea. In addition to these amounts, Cuba owes Romania over 1.5 billion transferable rubles. Diaconescu stressed that it is a state issue involving very difficult partners, because many of them no longer recognize these debts or even demand political compensation for their payment.



    Elections. In Romania, the constituency electoral bureaus will officially report today the final candidacies for the September 27 local elections. The election campaign begins on Friday and ends on September 26. The joint order of the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Permanent Electoral Authority, regarding the health protection rules to be applied during the election campaign and during the elections, is to be approved early this week.



    Belarus. In Minsk, for the second Sunday in a row, tens of thousands of people protested against the re-election of President Alexander Lukashenko, who is believed to have rigged the elections. The High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell has warned that the EU does not intend to turn Belarus into a second Ukraine. In an interview published Sunday in the Spanish daily El Pais, Josep Borrell said that in Ukraine tensions between Europe and Russia have been resolved through armed violence and the disintegration of Ukrainian territory, a situation that continues to this day. The head of the European diplomacy believes, however, that the people of Belarus should not have to choose between Europe and Russia, but to gain freedom and democracy.



    Tennis. The pair made up of the Romanian tennis player Horia Tecău and the Dutch Jean-Julien Rojer play, today, against the pair Raven Klaasen (South Africa) / Oliver Marach (Austria), in the round of 16 of the doubles event of the ATP Masters 1,000 tournament in Cincinnati. The tournament, with over $ 4.2 million in prize money, is hosted this year by the Flushing Meadows arenas in New York. Tecău and Rojer qualified after defeating 3-6, 6-3, 10-8 the Frenchmen Jeremy Chardy / Fabrice Martin. Tecău and Rojer lost a final in Cincinnati, in 2016. Tecau had won the title in 2012 together with the Swede Robert Lindstedt. (M. Ignatescu)

  • August 17, 2020

    August 17, 2020

    No-confidence
    motion.
    The Social Democratic Party, the
    largest opposition party in Romania, is negotiating with other parliamentary
    parties support for the no-confidence motion it plans to file today against the
    Liberal cabinet led by Ludovic Orban. According to the Social Democrats, Romania
    is drifting, and the government has zero credibility, against the background of
    the current huge chaos, downgraded economy and rampant unemployment. They say
    the only concern of the current executive has been to siphon off public money
    since coming to power and in the midst of the health crisis generated by the
    new coronavirus. According to the interim leader of the Social Democratic
    Party, Marcel Ciolacu, the motion is to be read, debated and voted on this
    week. 233 votes are required for the document to be adopted. If it passes, it
    would be the second time in a single year that a government led by Ludovic
    Orban is sacked by means of a motion of no-confidence. The Social Democrats are
    supported by the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats and PRO Romania, also in
    opposition, as well as by independent parliamentarians. The motion, on the
    other hand, is criticized by the Save Romania Union and the People’s Movement
    Party, who say now is not the time to replace the government given the
    situation in health, the opening of the school year and the local elections
    scheduled for September 27. The National Liberal Party has stated that the
    Social Democratic Party, the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats and PRO Romania
    have deliberately sabotaged the Orban government, at parliamentary level,
    during the health crisis.




    Elections. In view
    of the local elections in Romania, due on September 27, parties are submiting
    their lists of candidates for the seats of mayor, local and county councilors.
    On Sunday, the main candidates for the Bucharest City Hall made official their
    intentions: the current mayor, the Social Democrat Gabriela Firea, the former
    president of Romania and mayor of the capital Traian Băsescu, and the
    independent candidate supported by the National Liberal Party and USR PLUS,
    Nicuşor Dan. This year’s local elections will be held in special conditions, given
    the Covid-19 pandemic. Local elections
    will be followed by parliamentary elections, to be held by the end of the year.






    Covid-19 RO. In
    Romania, 733 new cases of COVID-19 have been reported today by the Strategic
    Communication Group. Thus, over 71,000 cases of infection with the new
    coronavirus have been confirmed in the country, since the beginning of the
    epidemic, at the end of February. More than 32,700 patients have been declared
    cured. 38 deaths have also been reported, raising the death toll to 3,029. 497
    patients are in intensive care.












    Pandemic. The total
    number of people infected with the new coronavirus in the world, so far, has
    exceeded 21.6 million in 188 countries, according to data from Johns Hopkins
    University. Over the entire pandemic period, more than 774,000 people have died
    and 13.6 million have recovered. The most affected country remains the United
    States, followed by Brazil, India and Russia. Mortality rate in some European countries
    remains high, with the United Kingdom, Italy, France and Spain in the first
    places. These states have reintroduced sanitary measures to manage the new
    increase in the number of infections that foreshadow a possible second epidemic
    wave. Greece has also tightened rules after an increase in the number of cases.
    On the other hand, Russia has announced that the first vaccine against Covid-19
    has entered production, so that it can be delivered at the end of this month,
    but Western specialists believe that the vaccine has not been tested enough.








    Protests. Belarusian
    opposition leaders have called for a strike after a weekend of massive protests
    against President Alexander Lukashenko, accused of rigging recent elections
    that extended his term of office for another quarter of a century. According to
    Reuters, 200,000 opponents took part in a freedom march in Minsk, while
    Lukashenko’s supporters gathered in parallel to listen to his call to defend
    the country against alleged foreign interference. He said NATO planes and tanks
    were deployed 15 minutes from the country’s borders, an accusation immediately
    rejected by the Alliance. Alexander Lukashenko, who has been in power for 26
    years, has been faced with protests before. This time, however, it is the
    strongest wave of protest against the authoritarian way in which he leads the
    country. Last week, police brutally intervened to end the protests. At least
    two people were killed and nearly 7,000 detained.




    Tennis. Romanian tennis
    player Simona Halep, world number two, jumped last night, dressed in sports
    equipment, in the water of the Vltava River, after winning the tennis
    tournament in Prague. The image quickly went viral. She thus kept the promise
    she made before the final with the Belgian Elise Mertens, whom she defeated
    6-2, 7-5. The tournament in Prague was the first played by Simona since
    February, after the interruption of the women’s circuit due to the coronavirus
    pandemic. For Simona Halep, the Prague Open trophy is the 21st of her career
    and the second this year. However, Simona was not 100% original. Similar
    celebrations of victory have happened before. Rafael Nadal, for example, throws
    himself into the pool with the ball persons after each title won in Barcelona,
    ​​and so far he has won 11 such titles. (M. Ignatescu)