Tag: army

  • October 25, 2024

    October 25, 2024

    DAY The Romanian Army Day is being celebrated today through a series of religious services and military ceremonies at the main army barracks across the country and in the operation theatres where the Romanian servicemen have been deployed. The series of ceremonies kicked off at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in the Carol Park in Bucharest in the presence of the Romanian president Klaus Iohannis, Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu and the Senate President Nicolae Ciuca. The Romanian army is the main pillar of the national defence system, president Iohannis said highlighting that it must continue to benefit ‘a solid financial ground’ significantly over 2% of the GDP. The Day of 25 October has been celebrated since 1959. We recall that on 25 October 1944 the Romanian Army liberated the north-western part of the country occupied by Hungary upon the Vienna Dictate in August 1940. In WWII, Romania’s war effort consisted of the deployment of 540 thousand troops, out of which 90 thousand lost their lives, roughly 60 thousand were reported MIA and over 330 thousand got wounded. After liberating the national territory, the Romanian army continued to fight on the territories of Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Austria alongside the Allies contributing to the Great Victory on 9 May, which marked the end of WWII in Europe.

     

    ELECTIONS The campaign for the first round of the presidential election in Romania has kicked off and is due to end on November 23. The presidential elections are scheduled this year on November 24 (the first round) and on December 8 (the second round). In between, on December 1, the parliamentary election will be held. Competing in the presidential race are 14 candidates, 10 of them backed by political parties and 4 running independently. Local and EU parliamentary elections were also held in Romania this year, on June 9.

     

    CONGRESS Speaking at the European Farmers Congress underway in Bucharest, Romania’s Agriculture Minister, Florin Barbu, has called for a referendum on the future of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) at European level. The Minister wants the farmers to decide in the aforementioned referendum that the CAP remain structured on two major pillars being separated from other European funds after 2027. Barbu says that the European Commission wants to integrate the CAP into the total funds allotted to every member state. Over 500 farmers from Europe are participating in the European Farmers Congress due in Bucharest over October 23-25.

     

    FOOTBALL Romania’s football champions, FCSB, came a cropper in Glasgow on Thursday, four-nil to local side, Rangers. The Romanians managed to win the games against Latvian side RFS and the Greek champions PAOK Thessaloniki, a side coached by the Romanian Razvan Lucescu. Rangers, whose lineup includes the Romanian Ianis Hagi, is presently ranking 11th, while FCSB, with six points out of three matches, ranks 13th.

    (bill)

  • Loan for modernizing the Army

    Loan for modernizing the Army

    Romania signed a loan agreement with the United States for the modernization of the Army. The signing ceremony took place on Wednesday at the Government headquarters, in the presence of the Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu and the US ambassador to Bucharest, Kathleen Kavalec, as well as the director of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, Michael Miller. 920 million dollars will allow both the strengthening of the defense capacity, by equipping the army with modern technology, and the development of the relevant national industry, said Prime Minister Ciolacu, underlining that this significant loan shows, at the same time, the trust and the status that Romania enjoys in the relationship with its strategic partner, the United States.

     

    Marcel Ciolacu: ʺToday Romania joins a very small group of key partner states of the United States that have so far benefited from this program developed through the US Fund for financing and I am glad that we will use this money both to strengthen Romania’s defense capacity by equipping it with modern technology, and to develop the local defense industry. We will develop new production capacities in Romania, we will create jobs for Romanians and we will become relevant again in terms of the production of military equipment at the regional level. At the same time, we will have access to state-of-the-art military equipment, which will help us work together with the United States and our NATO allies to strengthen collective defense and deter threats to Romania and the countries on the Eastern flank of the Alliance.ʺ

     

    In turn, Ambassador Kathleen Kavalec believes that the signed agreement is more than a financial one, it represents the strength and resilience of the bilateral partnership, as well as the joint commitment of the United States and Romania to ensuring peace, stability and security in the region. According to Mrs. Kavalec, in the 20 years of NATO membership, Romania has demonstrated countless times that it is a reliable ally and a pillar of stability along the eastern flank of the Alliance and in the Black Sea region. By offering American funds, Washington’s goal is to ensure that Romania remains at the forefront of innovation and military equipment for many years to come, which will equally strengthen bilateral economic relations, Kathleen Kavalec added. She also mentioned, in the context of Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, Romania’s exemplary response, from hosting thousands of Ukrainian refugees to facilitating grain transit and training the Ukrainian pilots on F-16s. (LS)

  • April 22, 2024 UPDATE

    April 22, 2024 UPDATE

    VISIT – Romanian President Klaus Iohannis on Monday started a three-day official visit to South Korea, the first country in the Asia-Pacific region which Romania has a strategic partnership with. Iohannis laid a wreath at the National Cemetery in Seoul. Political consultations will focus on issues related to the consolidation of the Strategic Partnership, political-diplomatic and defense cooperation, the main regional and global challenges and boosting trade and investments in various sectors. Among them are green and nuclear energy, new technologies, IT&C, environment and climate change management, infrastructure, health and education. The meeting will also emphasize the special inter-cultural exchanges, which have been consolidated in recent years. The Romanian president’s visit to South Korea is the first in 16 years.

     

    MISSIONS – Parliament on Monday greenlit the participation of Romanian military in demining naval missions in the Black Sea following Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, in response to the Romanian president’s request. Romania will deploy general staff and a military vessel with an 85-strong crew. Parliament also approved the participation of the Romanian Army in the EU maritime security mission in the Red Sea. 3 Romanian servicemen will join the Prosperity Guardian mission led by US in the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and the territory of Bahrain.

     

    AIRCRAFT – Three F-16 aircraft purchased by Romania from Norway, landed on Friday at the “General Emanoil Ionescu” 71st Air Base in Câmpia Turzii (center). It is the second series of three such aircraft bought by Romania from the Norway, the first being received last November. According to the Defense Ministry, through the 32 multirole F-16 aircraft that will endow two more squadrons of the Air Forces by the end of next year, Romania is strengthening its air defense at a level adapted to the security challenges in the region.

     

    SERVICEMEN – The Romanian army faces a shortage of professional servicemen. The first conscription campaign held over February-April, over 6,400 people applied for the 5,100 vacancies, 24% failed the fitness test, 18% the psychological test and 12% the medical test. The total number of candidates who passed was 2,626. The Romanian Defense Ministry says the level of difficulty for the fitness test is average, allowing people aged 18-45 with normal fitness development to pass it without major difficulties.

     

    EP – The European Parliament convenes in a new plenary sitting in Strasbourg, as of today until Thursday. The meeting’s agenda includes topics such as violence against women, the revision of the EU’s Agricultural Policy and combating money laundering. Iran’s attack on Israel, the ban on the EU market for products manufactured through forced labor, the effects of the so-called Russian interference in the European Parliament, the assessment of the results of the Russian elections and the situation of the state of law in Hungary will also be discussed. The plenary sitting this week is the last one of the current European Parliament makeup, before the European elections on June 9. (EE & VP)

  • November 30, 2023 UPDATE

    November 30, 2023 UPDATE


    COP28 The president of Romania Klaus Iohannis travels to Dubai on Friday, to attend the UN Climate Change Conference, COP28, with 140 heads of state expected to take part. The conference started on Thursday with the adoption of a historic decision to finance losses and damages for the countries affected by global warming. The year 2023 has been the hottest on record, with an average global temperature approx. 1.4°C above pre-industrial levels, the World Meteorological Organization announced.



    DEFENCE Romanias new Army Chief of Staff is the general lieutenant Gheorghiţă Vlad. At the swearing in ceremony on Thursday, president Klaus Iohannis said gen. lt. Vlad was entrusted with the responsibility of carrying on the Armys process of adapting to new challenges and of maintaining a high level of battle training for the troops. We need more determined measures to re-launch the national defence industry, the president also said, including through industrial cooperation, so that a larger share of the ammunition and equipment we need may be produced domestically. This and the high level of military training, will ensure a strong and credible defence capacity, adapted to the new security challenges, the head of state added.



    RECYCLING In Romania, the deposit and return scheme for beverage containers became operational on Thursday. Romania will run the second-largest programme of this kind in Europe, after the one in Germany, in terms of the number of containes processed. Romanians who pay a 10-Eurocent deposit on purchasing bottled beverages from retailers will be able to return the container to drop-off centres organised by retailers, and will be refunded their deposits without having to produce the receipt for the original purchase. Deposit-carrying containers will be introduced gradually, with a transition period until current stocks in shops are sold out.



    DIPLOMACY The Romanian foreign minister Luminiţa Odobescu took part on Wednesday in an informal dinner ahead of the OSCE ministerial council in Skopje, organised by the rotating chairmanship holder, North Macedonia. Talks focused on Russias war of aggression against Ukraine and the need for an efficient OSCE in times of conflict. In her address, the Romanian diplomat emphasised the difficult circumstances in which the Organisation operates, in the context of Russias unjustified and unprovoked military aggression against Ukraine. She also reiterated Romanias solidarity with the Ukrainian people, emphasising the multi-dimensional support given to Ukraine. Luminiţa Odobescu also highlighted the negative impact on the Republic of Moldova, the social and economic difficulties facing Moldova as a result of Russias various pressures, as well as the relevance of Moldova in the security dynamics of the region.



    UNEMPLOYMENT The unemployment rate in Romania was 5.4% in October, below the 6% EU average, the European Statistics Office announced. According to data released on Thursday, the Eurostat puts the number of unemployed people in the EU at nearly 13 million. The unemployment rate was 14.8% among youth, 6.4% among women and 5.8% among men. The lowest figure in October was reported in Malta – 2.5%, and the highest in Spain – 12%.



    HOLIDAY On Thursday Christians celebrated St. Andrew the Apostle, the patron saint of Romania. Historical records indicate that Saint Andrew preached in Scythia, in the north and west of the Black Sea, including present-day Dobrudja, where he ordained priests and bishops who took the word of Christ to the Dacian population between the Danube and the Carpathians. As such, he is recognised as the patron saint of Romania. He was martyred by crucifixion in the city of Patras, in Greece. (AMP)


  • Romanian Army Day

    Romanian Army Day

    The Romanian Army Day was celebrated on October 25
    with various military and religious ceremonies organised in the main military
    units in the country, as well as in the theatres of operations where Romanian
    troops are deployed.

    These are times when global peace and the security climate
    are threatened by regional conflicts able to escalate, and in this context the
    role of the Romanian Army in ensuring national and regional security is all the
    more important, the country’s top officials emphasised on this occasion.


    In his address, the president of Romania highlighted
    that Europe was facing the worst crisis since WWII as a result of the Russian
    Federation’s invasion of Ukraine and of the October 7 terrorist attack against
    Israel, which threatens to fully destabilise the Middle East in the long run.


    Klaus Iohannis: The Romanian troops, as well as the
    Allies deployed to Romania, whom I also thank on this occasion, are key
    elements in maintaining the NATO deterrence and defence posture at the Black
    Sea, a region of strategic importance for the Euro-Atlantic zone.


    The worsening of the regional security situation was
    also mentioned by PM Marcel Ciolacu. It is one more reason to have an army able
    to handle the new challenges, Marcel Ciolacu said:


    Marcel Ciolacu: Discouraging and fighting efficiently
    the various types of threats we are facing can only be achieved with massive
    investment in equipment as well. This is why as of this year we have earmarked 2.5%
    of GDP to the defence sector.


    A professional soldier, with experience in the theatres
    of operations where Romania is present together with its allies, the former PM
    Nicolae Ciucă, currently the speaker of the Senate, mentioned that the Romanian
    Army is a respected institution in the country and an appreciated one abroad:


    Nicolae Ciucă: While it may sound paradoxical, our
    troops are the ones with the highest respect for peace, and are prepared to
    safeguard it at the cost of their own lives. The Romanian Army as we know it
    today enjoys a good standing among the NATO and EU members.


    In his turn, the defence minister Angel Tîlvăr
    mentioned that the Army is already up to NATO standards in many respects, while
    the deputy secretary general of the North-Atlantic Alliance Mircea Geoană sent
    a message highlighting that the borders of the Romanian state are safer than
    ever, in spite of the war near it and the multiple current crises. The NATO official
    also mentioned that the importance of this day for the entire nation has to do
    with the patriotism and sacrifice of the Romanian soldiers, past and present.


    The events held in the capital city on Army Day were
    concluded with a traditional torch parade, a symbolic ceremony signifying the
    Romanian troops’ loyalty and sacrifice for the motherland. (AMP)

  • Equipment procurement for army

    Equipment procurement for army

    The Romanian Defense Ministry has officially requested Parliaments approval for the start, this year, of the program to purchase 32 F-35 military aircraft from the United States, and Parliament has taken note of this request. In the document, the Defense Ministry officials emphasize that, in order to fulfill the objectives of Romanias defense policy, they continue the actions for the purchase of new military equipment that should contribute to the development and maintenance of robust and resilient defense capabilities. The purchase is part of the F-35 multi-role 5thgeneration aircraft endowment program, and the amount is a record for the Romanian Army – 6.5 billion dollars. The money will be used for the purchase of aircraft, engines, logistic support, pilot and staff training services and flight simulators. The first planes are to be delivered by the American manufacturers in 2030.



    The decision to purchase the state-of-the-art American aircraft was made at the meeting of the Supreme Defense Council of Romania (CSAT) in April, and the Defense Ministry is obliged by law to ask for Parliaments approval for any purchase worth more than 100 million Euros. Moreover, in the context of Russias invasion of neighboring Ukraine, Romania, a member state of the European Union and NATO, has increased its spending for defense from 2% to 2.5% of the Gross Domestic Product this year. Romania shares a 650km-border with Ukraine and has seen the conflict approach its borders amid Moscows repeated attacks on the Ukrainian ports on the Danube.



    Last year, Romania decided to purchase 32 second-hand F-16 fighter jets from Norway, and in 2016 it also purchased 17 aircraft from Portugal. In addition, in July, Bucharest announced, after approval by the country’s Supreme Defense Council (CSAT), the creation of a regional F-16 pilots training center that will be available to NATO allies and partners, including Ukraine. “Our major interest is to have well-trained Romanian pilots as soon as possible to operate the F-16 aircraft of the Romanian Air Force. We all know how complex is the process of ensuring the security of the airspace in the Black Sea region, on the NATO border “the defense minister Angel Tîlvăr said then.



    Moreover, at the informal meeting of the North Atlantic Council together with Sweden, in the format of defense ministers, which was also held in July in Vilnius, on the sidelines of the NATO Summit, the Romanian official told the allies that the security situation in the Black Sea region must remain a constant concern of the Alliance. In this context, he mentioned the preservation of the commitments assumed by Romania within the three pillars of the concept of fair sharing of responsibilities –ensuring the financial resources, implementing the assumed capabilities and contributing to NATO operations, missions and commitments. (LS)


  • The visit of the NATO Deputy Secretary General to Chisinau

    The visit of the NATO Deputy Secretary General to Chisinau

    On a visit to Chisinau, the NATO Deputy Secretary General Mircea Geoană referred to the recent incidents on Romanias territory, near the border with Ukraine, where pieces of a drone similar to those used by the Russian army were discovered, emphasizing that these belong to the category of incidents, not deliberate attacks. He admitted that such situations might occur again but underlined that there is no information according to which Russia would deliberately attack allied territory, and NATO continues to take measures to strengthen the protection of allied territory, including that of Romania. We are in permanent contact with our Romanian ally – said Mircea Geoană – recalling that the Secretary General of the Alliance, Jens Stoltenberg, recently had a telephone conversation with President Klaus Iohannis on this subject. As regards the Republic of Moldova, the NATO official said that its place is in Europe next to the family of Western democracies.



    He added that, although there is no military risk threatening this state, it is still subject to a hybrid war, caused by Russia, from the use of the energy weapon to cyber-attacks, to disinformation, influencing democratic mechanisms, inciting to social rebellion. Mircea Geoană said that the neighboring Ukraine, which is resisting Russia, is currently also defending the Republic of Moldova from direct military attacks.



    Mircea Geoana: I want to reconfirm here, in Chisinau, the fact that we do not see a military risk from the Russian Federation towards the Republic of Moldova, for the simple fact that Ukraine is doing such a good job with our support too, so this military risk at the moment and for the foreseeable future is not here. This does not mean that the Russian Federation has not launched and continues using, as we speak, everything that means the arsenal of the hybrid war against the Republic of Moldova, from the use of the energy weapon to cyber-attacks, disinformation, influencing democratic mechanisms, instigating to social rebellion. And for us it is very important to strengthen the resilience of the Republic of Moldova, while respecting the neutrality of this country.



    In his turn, the Moldovan Prime Minister Dorin Recean emphasized that Russia’s war in Ukraine has greatly changed the perception of security in Europe and the world. He mentioned that many states understood that they need a developed defense sector and Chisinau’s priority now is to have an army in line with the NATO standards.



    It is necessary to strengthen the defense capacity, especially through investments in the army, insisted Dorin Recean: Moldova’s neutrality does not mean indifference, does not mean that were doing nothing. That’s why we have to strengthen our defense capacity, that’s why we have to make these investments in the national army, in such a way that we have the national army in line with the NATO standards and, obviously, we will have the support of our partners in this sense.



    Dorin Recean added that the Republic of Moldova will participate in the NATO programs on new technologies and innovations. (LS)

  • The special pensions reform under the scrutiny

    The special pensions reform under the scrutiny


    Under the protocols of the incumbent ruling coalition in Bucharest, the PSD leader Marcel Ciolacu will be replacing Liberal leader Nicolae Ciuca as Romanias Prime Minister. With the mandate, Ciolacu is also going to inherit the prickly issue of the so-called special pensions, which arent complying with the contribution principle and are presently benefitting former MPs, diplomats, magistrates or retired employees of the countrys defence, security and public order structures.


    The project of reforming the special pensions system can be endorsed by Parliament by the end of the present session but the assumption of the governments responsibility is also being considered, Ciolacu went on to say. He says that he is having a permanent dialogue on the issue with his party colleague and the incumbent Labour Minister Marius Budăi. The issue, as the future Prime Minister admits, is that the file should have been closed by now as it was included in the third payment request for the funding of the countrys National Plan of Recovery and Resilience, through which Brussels financially supports a part of Romanias reforms and investment.


    Budăi is expected to leave for Brussels next week for a new round of talks on this issue with European officials. Until then, the World Bank has completed a report on the impact of the new measures proposed by the coalition regarding the special pensions and according to the press the document shows the result in terms of budget spending cuts would be insignificant. According to WB experts, the progressive taxation of up to 15% of the special pensions will have negligible effects and the same goes for another measure, which eliminated five bonuses and would lead to only a 2% deduction from the servicemens pensions. Defence Minister Angel Tîlvăr, also with the PSD, has again insisted that no one should touch the pensions of the retired soldiers, which arent actually special pensions. The minister argues that a large number of young people should be attracted into the armed forces.


    “We are talking in vain about tanks, rockets, corvettes, frigates and the other things that we want and we are going to have. All these things need highly-trained personnel as the Romanian Army presently boasts, and thats why I insist on attracting young people into the army but also on encouraging them to remain in the armed forces by ensuring a certain standard of living and the predictability of a career in this field”, the minister says. The opposition USR says that the PSD and PNL are actually duping the Romanians that they really want to eliminate the special pensions and has dubbed the Liberal Prime Minister Ciuca a three-necktie statesman who is presently benefitting from the special pension of a retired general and will soon add a second one of a former MP.


    (bill)


  • April 10, 2023 UPDATE

    April 10, 2023 UPDATE

    DEFENCE The president of Romania Klaus Iohannis has convened a
    meeting of the country’s Higher Defence Council on Tuesday. The security
    situation at the Black Sea, triggered by Russia’s aggression on Ukraine and the
    foreign interference in Moldova’s democratic process are on the agenda. The
    development of the Romanian military aviation will also be discussed.


    CEREMONY We will always rely on the Romanian Army, on our
    servicemen who, together with our allies, will ensure the defence of Romania
    and of NATO’s eastern flank, PM Nicolae Ciucă said in the eastern Romanian
    town of Focsani on Monday. He attended a ceremony celebrating 140 years since
    the Union of Principalities 282 Brigade was set up. The PM reiterated that
    near Romania’s borders, a long-term war of attrition is taking place, which is
    a challenge for the free world, for democracy, for a rule-based world. The 282
    Brigade carries forward the military traditions of the 6th Infantry
    Division established on April 1, 1883, and stationed in Focşani. Throughout its
    existence, the 6th Infantry Division took part in the Balkan War and
    the 2 world wars, while in recent times structures within the brigade
    participated in many operations in the Balkans, Iraq and Afghanistan.


    DIASPORA Romanian PM Nicolae Ciuca Monday took part in the opening ceremony
    of the conference Smart Diaspora 2023 – Diaspora in higher education, science,
    innovation and entrepreneurship, held in Timisoara, western Romania. Around
    400 participants from the Diaspora, 550 from Romania and 300 from the member
    universities of Timisoara University Alliance are expected to attend the 38
    workshops held for 4 days on topics such as education, psychology, global
    economy, governance, smart cities, intercultural communication and many others.
    The guests from the Diaspora come from more than 30 countries, most of them in
    the EU, but also from the US, Britain, Moldova, Japan, Singapore and Australia. President Klaus Iohannis has
    sent a message saying education is the key to Romania’s sustainable
    development.


    EDUCATION The new education bills have reached the Chamber of
    Deputies for review. In the case of undergraduate education, new mandatory Language
    and communication and Math and sciences exams have been introduced for 2nd, 4th
    and 6th grade students, while the bill on higher education provides for an
    extension of doctoral studies from 3 to 4 years. The leaders of the ruling
    coalition have promised to pass the new legislation by the end of Parliament’s current
    session.


    HOLY WEEK Orthodox and Greek Catholic believers all over the world,
    including Romania, a mostly Orthodox country, have entered the Holy Week, the
    last week before Easter. Holy Week services are attended by large crowds.
    Romanian pilgrims have already arrived at the holy places in Jerusalem,
    Nazareth and Bethlehem, for the religious service on Easter Sunday, according
    to RRI’s correspondent in Israel. This year, Catholic and Protestant Christians
    celebrated Easter a week before the Orthodox and Greek Catholics. On Sunday,
    during his traditional Easter address before the large crowds gathered in St.
    Peter’s Square of the Vatican, Pope Francis condemned the numerous obstacles in
    the way of world peace and called on the international community to put an end
    to the conflict in Ukraine and to all other conflicts in the world.


    CUSTOMS The customs authorities in Romania and the neighbouring
    Republic of Moldova have approved a Common Action Plan designed to help
    streamline cross-border travel during the Easter holidays, more precisely
    between 7 April and 7 May 2023. According to the Romanian Customs Authority, in
    order to handle the surge in traveller numbers, the two authorities will increase
    the number of customs workers and identify and earmark separate lanes to
    redirect and speed up passenger travel. (AMP)

  • October 25, 2022 UPDATE

    October 25, 2022 UPDATE

    ARMY DAY The Romanian Army Day was celebrated on Tuesday with a
    series of events staged all over Romania and in other regions around the world
    where Romanian troops are stationed now. Wreath laying ceremonies took place at
    heroes’ monuments around Romania and abroad, in countries like Austria, Bosnia
    and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, the Russian Federation, Poland,
    the Republic of Moldova and Hungary. The Army has been and will always be a
    symbol of resilience and an essential element in the development of Romania,
    president Klaus Iohannis
    said on this occasion. He added that Romania has a distinct place within NATO
    and is an indisputable provider of security at the Black Sea and on NATO’s
    eastern flank. According to the Romanian Defence
    Ministry, during WWII, out of roughly 540,000 servicemen deployed, 90,000 were
    KIA, 60,000 MIA and over 330,000 were wounded. After freeing the Romanian
    territory on October 25th, 1944, the Romanian army continued to
    fight in Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Austria alongside the allied troops,
    contributing to the May 9th 1945 victory, which marked the end of WWII in
    Europe.


    DEFENCE The Supreme Defence Council, convening on
    Tuesday in Bucharest, approved updates to key directions of the Army 2040
    programme, including the budgeting for personnel needs,
    reconfiguring equipment procurement programmes and revamping the defence
    industry, as well as measures to better retain skilled military personnel. Army
    2040 aims to help develop national military capabilities that enable the
    government to fulfil its constitutional obligation to safeguard the territorial
    integrity of Romania. To this end, the country will earmark 2.5% of its GDP to
    defence as of 2023.The Council also
    reviewed and approved the Energy Ministry’s plan to improve Romania’s energy
    resilience, so as to protect citizens and to secure continuing supplies of
    electricity and natural gas, for prices that are not a burden to households. The
    Council also discussed the support Romania will continue to provide to Ukraine,
    and looked at ways to counter prospective threats.


    DECREE Romania’s president Klaus Iohannis Tuesday signed a
    decree acknowledging the resignation of Defence Minister Vasile Dincu and
    designating Prime Minister Ciuca as the country’s interim defence minister. The
    Social-Democrat Dincu stepped down on Monday, two weeks after he made a number
    of controversial statements concerning the situation in Ukraine. The Social
    Democratic Party (PSD) has called for an emergency meeting of the ruling
    coalition for a decision on Dincu’s successor.


    COAL Romania has increased its coal output in order to cope
    with the energy crisis. According to the National Statistics Institute, the output
    went up by 1.7% and imports by 13.5% in the first 8 months of the year. The
    National Strategy and Forecast Commission estimates for this year a coal output
    10% bigger than in 2021 and imports 2.8% higher, with the coal production expected
    to grow by 8% next year.


    REFUGEES According
    to the Romanian Foreign Ministry, since the beginning of the war in Ukraine,
    over 2.6 million Ukrainian nationals have transited Romania and over 86,500
    have chosen to stay here. Eight months on from the beginning of the conflict on
    February 24th, Bucharest highlights its active involvement in facilitating the
    transport and transit of Ukrainian grain towards international markets. At the
    same time, the humanitarian hub in Suceava, north-eastern Romania, has
    contributed to 56 humanitarian aid shipments from countries like Italy, France
    or Germany.


    ECLIPSE A partial solar eclipse was visible in Romania on Tuesday.
    According to the Astronomic Observatory in Bucharest, the sun was covered up to
    44% and the eclipse lasted for two hours and a half. (AMP, DB)

  • Romania’s troubled history in the early 19th century

    Romania’s troubled history in the early 19th century




    The
    Revolution led by Tudor Vladimirescu was held in the first part of the year
    1821, actually over February and May. It led up to the end of the Phanariot
    reigns in Wallachia and Moldavia. Its leader, later on, gained the status of a
    mythical character, thanks to the revolution he led. Tudor Vladmirescu is
    oftentimes mentioned in history textbooks; he has been immortalized through
    statues and paintings. However, the real character is less well-known by the
    lay public, at once being an interesting, even controversial character. The
    Revolution led by Tudor Vladimirescu in Wallachia was intertwined with the
    Greek revolution of liberation from the Ottoman Empire. Vladimirescu’s
    connection to the Eteria, the secret society that actually started the Greek
    revolution, eventually led to his assassination. Born into a family of freeholders, mosneni,
    in Romanian, in Gorj County, through his skill and adaptation capacity, Tudor
    Vladmirescu gained the status of an estate agent; in turn, he was a merchant
    and a purveyor of the Tsarist army, a rank similar to that of officer, a rank he
    gained during the Russian occupation of 1806 and 1812. The reasons underlying
    the outbreak of the unrest also included personal ambitions as well as the need
    of several political changes. His activity depended on the collaboration with
    the Eteria, but also on the hope of a military assistance provided by the Russians, which,
    even though it had not been promised, it was also expected by the Greeks. The
    historian Tudor Dinu, in his recently launched work titled The Greek
    revolution of 1821 on the territory of Moldavia and Wallachia, provided a
    detailed account of the personality of Vladimirescu and of the underlying
    reason of his collaboration with the Eteria revolutionaries led by Alexandru Ypsilanti. Also, the book highlights the purpose for which Tudor Vladimirescu
    started his revolt.

    Here is the historian Tudor Dinu himself, with details on
    all that.

    Tudor played a key part in the Eteria fighters’ plans. As early as 1820,
    when the Eteria revolutionary warriors convened in the town of Ismail to set up
    the general plan of the revolution, they said that in Wallachia, the revolution
    was to be started by a one Tudor Vladmirescu, whom they deemed as the
    commander of the armed men in Craiova.


    The
    Eteria revolutionaries sponsored Tudor Vladimirescu and thought he could be a
    manageable tool in their hands. But they couldn’t have been more wrong, just as
    the great boyars got it all wrong, who wanted to wind him round their little
    finger. He could be, in my opinion, the most impressive example of a self-made
    man in our history: a commoner, who believed in his star, trying to overcome
    his condition in a brilliant manner, going at all lengths for his career, first
    worming himself into the boyars’ favor, then going into trading very
    successfully, first, on behalf of this and that boyar, later, for himself,
    getting a position in administration, all that culminating with a military
    career. Gaining acceptance to the Russian consul’s entourage, collaborating
    with the Eteria, he went as far as hoping to obtain the reign in a new system,
    he even hoped for the toppling of the social order in the Principalities, which
    could have been made possible though the liberation brought by the Russians.
    The Greek sources provide many new things, in this respect, stating that the
    Eteria revolutionaries promised Tudor they would get him seated on Decebalus’ s
    throne.


    However,
    irrespective of the reasons, Tudor Vladimirescu and his army succeeded to
    destabilize the Phanariot order, also gaining the support of a relevant part of
    the domestic boyars’ class, reaching as far as the princely court in Bucharest.
    Meanwhile, the Eteria revolutionary warriors led by Alexandru Ypsilanti had
    penetrated Moldavia. There they were trying to muster an army made of locals,
    hoping the population in the Romanian principalities would rise up, on a large
    scale, against the Ottomans. Part from the political changes did the
    revolutionaries consider social changes as well?

    Historian Tudor Dinu:


    The most radical, to that effect, socially but also
    politically, was Alexandru Ypsilanti. In his political program, Alexandru
    Ypsilanti stipulated, for instance, the existence of indigenous rulers, but
    also some sort of constitutional monarchy, with the rulers’ incomes being
    checked by an early parliament of the Romanian Principalities. As for Tudor, he
    also had important proposal in the social field meant to improve the lives of
    commoners, yet they were not as radical as they were presented to us. For instance,
    he proposed, among other things, that certain taxes be reintroduced. It goes
    without saying he also had some very interesting suggestions. The most
    important one, for the development of commerce, was the dismantling of domestic
    customs, by means of which products brought from another city were very
    expensive. Also, Tudor proposed the equal decrease in revenues for bakers and
    butchers, so that bread, but also meat, could be affordable. There also was
    another proposal, perhaps the most radical one, but impossible to implement:
    the merit-based ascription of high-office dignities, something that could not
    be implemented, and as for the system of corruption, it could not disappear,
    given that Tudor himself pleaded for the income reduction in the case of
    high-office dignitaries.


    Despite
    the long-term intentions, the situation on the ground was not a happy one. The
    Eteria Army’s crossing of the Romanian territories wreaked havoc and meant
    plundering and unrest carried by the local population. Moreover, the looming Ottoman
    invasion ran the risk of yet again turning the Principalities into a war
    theater, what with the fact that the eagerly-awaited Russian assistance failed
    to appear. Under the circumstances, Tudor Vladimirescu initiated a risky
    diplomatic action, meant to protect the country, but also his past success; he
    tried to negotiate with the Sublime Porte in Istanbul. However, Alexandru Ypsilanti
    learned about those attempts and considered Tudor a traitor.

    Historian
    Tudor Dinu:


    Maybe the most important
    accusation count is a letter Tudor sent and which fell into the Sultan’s hands.
    In that letter he expressed his wish to wage war against Ypsilanti the
    traitor, provided the High Porte gave him some assistance. But that was not
    possible. The High Porte could not offer military assistance to a mutinous
    Christian. It may very well be that Tudor was extremely clever, in his bid to
    maintain good relations with the Turks, refraining from going against
    Ypsilanti. Also, Tudor kept a last-ditch hope alive that the Russian army might
    come. He
    had been given assurance, via numerous channels, that is why he was slowing things
    down a little bit. But from the viewpoint of the Eteria revolutionaries, that
    was treason.


    Accused
    of treason, Tudor Vladimirescu stood trial according to Eteria’s Criminal Code.
    He was sentenced on the grounds that he went against Eteria’s motherland,
    Greece, even though Tudor’s motherland was definitely Wallachia. That is why
    his trial and subsequent execution are, even to this day, rated as inequities,
    by the Romanian historical research and public opinion. For the Romanian Principalities,
    the revolution would come to an end once with Tudor Vladimirescu’s death on May
    28, 1821. As for the Eteria revolutionaries, they would continue their fight
    against the Ottomans on the territory of Wallachia, until their defeat in
    Dragasani in early June. Here is historian Tudor Dinu once again, this time
    speaking about the effects of the 1821 revolutionary year on Wallachia and
    Moldavia.

    Tudor Dinu:

    For the Romanian Principalities, the Greek revolution was catastrophic, because, in the wake of the
    Greek revolution, the Romanian principalities were completely devastated. The
    Romanians’ sacrifice was an exemplary one. One or two decades were needed for
    the Romanian Principalities to recover from such a devastation. Then a
    Russian-Turkish war followed. In another move, the role the 1821 Revolution
    played was fundamental, since it marked the Romanian principalities
    definitively falling within the West’s orbit, even though the process had begun
    in 1812. It took shape and was to be completed at the level of the elites, and
    not at the level of the Romanian peasant, who, in the 19th century,
    still lived according to ancestral rhythms. Such a sacrifice was necessary, so that Romania could find its place on
    the map pf Europe, and not on that of the Ottoman Empire. (EN)



  • September 11, 2022

    September 11, 2022

    9/11 In Bucharest, PM
    Nicolae Ciucă Sunday addressed a message of solidarity with the people of the
    USA, 21 years since the terrorist attacks of 2001. The tragedy of the American
    nation, shared by the entire planet, struck at the heart of freedom and democracy: the trust in and respect for the other. We honour the memory of
    those who passed away and we stand by the survivors and rescuers in the
    terrorist attacks of 9/11, the Romanian Prime Minister said. Mr. Ciucă also
    mentioned Romania’s continued solidarity with the US, as reflected in the
    military cooperation between the 2 countries. Our troops, in increasingly
    complex missions, have proved professionalism and dedication, contributing to
    the safeguarding of peace and democratic values. In the most important
    missions, in Iraq and Afghanistan, Romanian troops showed solidarity with their
    American partners, fighting together with the world’s democracies against terrorism
    and defending fundamental rights and liberties, reads the message. Nearly 3,000 people were killed 21 years ago
    by 19 Al-Qaeda terrorists hijacking 4 aircraft.


    QUEENThe state funerals for Queen Elizabeth II,
    who passed away on Thursday, aged 96, will take place on the 19 September. Meanwhile,
    Britons will have several days to pay their respects to their former sovereign,
    first in Edinburgh and then in London, where the Queen’s coffin is scheduled to
    arrive on Tuesday. On Saturday, King Charles III was proclaimed monarch, and
    today he was officially proclaimed head of state of Australia and New Zealand. The
    British monarch is the sovereign of 14 other countries apart from the UK, although
    with a largely ceremonial role. The King is also the head of the Commonwealth, an
    association of 56 countries, most of them former British colonies. For over 4
    decades, King Charles has been involved in charities lobbying for environment
    and heritage conservation, but as head of state he will take on exclusively
    constitutional responsibilities. As a Prince of Wales, the new King visited
    Romania almost every year for 2 decades, supporting a number of organisations
    and projects, especially in Transylvania, where he owns several estates. The UK
    Embassy in Bucharest opened an online condolence book for members of the
    public, but hundreds of Romanians went to the embassy offices to bring flowers
    and light candles for the Queen. The flag at the embassy office was flown at
    half-mast.


    FLIGHTS The national airline
    TAROM continues to repatriate the Romanians stranded in international airports
    after the private operator Blue Air suspended flights. Today around 200 people
    will be brought from Greece’s Zakynthos and Rhodes islands, with another 200 to
    be repatriated on Monday, after 350 Romanian nationals were repatriated from
    Greece on Saturday. Four other special flights had previously been organised to
    Israel, Greece, Cyprus
    and Spain. Several thousand Romanians have been stranded in international airports
    since Tuesday night, when Blue Air announced it was suspending flights. Although
    the authorities have unfrozen the accounts of the airline, which had excessive
    debts to the Romanian state, Blue Air said it would only resume flights on 10 October.
    Blue Air’s current estimated debts amount to EUR 230 mln.


    UKRAINE Since early September
    the Ukrainian army has freed some 2,000 sq.km of the country’s territory,
    president Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced. Ukrainian forces are currently engaged
    in 2 counter-offensive campaigns, one in the south, targeting Herson, and the
    second one in the Kharkiv area in the north-east, where they entered the key
    cities of Kupyansk and Izyum. According to international media, these are the
    most important gains for Ukraine since early April, when the Russians were
    pushed out of Kyiv area. Reuters quotes a former chief of pro-Russian militias
    in eastern Ukraine, Igor Girkin, as talking about a major defeat for Russia.



    NUCLEAR Operations
    at the Zaporozhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine, controlled by Russian
    forces, have been fully stopped as a safety measure, Ukraine’s nuclear operator
    Energoatom announced on Sunday. Another emergency shut-down had been ordered in
    August. Russia and Ukraine accuse each other of shelling the nuclear plant, while
    president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has called for the region around
    it to be demilitarised. (AMP)

  • August 3, 2022

    August 3, 2022


    AID In Romania, the people affected by recent natural disasters will receive state aid, after the government approves a draft resolution in this respect today. The largest sums, around EUR 2,000, will go to the families and individuals whose households have been affected to an extent of over 75%. In the case of fatalities, the families of the deceased will receive an additional EUR 1,500, irrespective of the number of victims. Meanwhile, the Romanian Waters Administration says the strategic water reserve in the countrys main 40 lakes, although decreasing since early July, is able to cover the needs of all relevant beneficiaries. According to current data, nearly 800 localities have introduced water supply restrictions, and the drought continues, especially in the east. As regards crops, a total of 205,000 hectares of farmland have been affected so far.



    AGRICULTURE Romanias grain yield is enough to cover the domestic demand and some exports, the agriculture minister Petre Daea said today, as 96% of the crops have already been harvested. High temperatures and extensive drought have affected crops, particularly sunflower and maize, across the country. Romania is one of the largest grain exporters in the EU and an active exporter to the Middle East. Last year the country had record-large crops, including 11.3 million tonnes of wheat. The domestic grain yield is generally 2-3 times higher than the domestic demand.



    COVID-19 The next variants of the new coronavirus will most likely be not very aggressive, but easily transmitted, the head of the Matei Bals Institute for Infectious Disease, Adrian Marinescu believes. He says the pandemic has reached a stage where we cohabitate with the virus, and many of the infected people perceive the disease as similar to a common cold. The health minister Alexandru Rafila does not rule out a 7th pandemic wave in Romania this autumn, when schools and universities resume classes. On Wednesday over 9,100 new COVID-19 cases were reported, most of them in Bucharest and in Cluj and Timiş counties. Nearly 4,000 COVID patients are hospitalized, of whom nearly 550 are children. 284 patients are in intensive care, and 41 COVID-related deaths have also been reported.



    TAIPEI The EU called for the tensions related to the U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosis visit to Taiwan to be settled through dialogue and for all communication channels with China to remain open, so as to avoid errors. China has its army on high alert in response to the visit, which it sees as a provocation. Chinas defence ministry announced “targeted military operations”, and the East Command of the Peoples Liberation Army said they involved live-fire drills near Taiwan-a self-ruled island that China views as part of its territory. In Washington, the Biden administration says there is no need for the Chinese authorities to turn this visit into a crisis. The White House spokesman for national security, John Kirby, said the House Speaker has the right to visit Taiwan, but highlighted that the trip was not a violation of Chinese sovereignty or of the One China Policy. The visit, which was not supported by US president Biden, is the first by a US official at this level in 25 years.



    REVOLUTION The prosecutor general of Romania, Gabriela Scutea, today announced the “Revolution Case” was referred back to the supreme court. In this case, the ex-president Ion Iliescu, former deputy PM Gelu Voican Voiculescu and Iosif Rus, former Military Aviation chief, are charged with crimes against humanity. According to the investigation, a widespread “terrorism” psychosis was created, which led to chaotic gun fire, fratricide, conflicting military orders. According to military prosecutors, this psychosis was induced deliberately, through disinformation and diversion, and resulted in over 850 dead, 2,380 wounded, hundreds of people illegally arrested and psychological trauma. Initiated in Timișoara in December 1989, the Romanian anti-communist revolution led to the flight, capture, summary trial and execution of the communist dictator Nicolae Ceauşescu and his wife Elena. (AMP)


  • April 28, 2022

    April 28, 2022

    REFUGEES The number of Ukrainian nationals who crossed the border into Romania
    went up 30% on Wednesday compared to the previous day, reads a news release
    issued by the Romanian Border Police. As many as 8,635 Ukrainian citizens
    entered Romania in 24 hours, coming from Ukraine or the R. of Moldova. Since
    the start of the crisis over 2 months ago, over 800,000 Ukrainians have come
    into Romania. Meanwhile, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) announced in a
    conference in Geneva that over 8 million Ukrainian may leave their country.
    According to the UNHCR spokesperson Shabia Mantoo, the Agency and its partners
    intend to raise USD 1.85 billion to support an estimated 8.3 million refugees
    in Hungary, the Republic of Moldova, Poland, Romania and Slovakia, as well as
    in other countries in the region, including Belarus, Bulgaria and the Czech
    Republic.


    TROOPS The Romanian defence ministry announced
    that the Romanian Army currently has no troops deployed in the Rep. of Moldova
    to take part in drills or other joint training programmes. The statement comes
    after a Russian-language publication released fake news according to which
    Romania plans to attack Transnistria with NATO support, and then to
    annex the Rep. of Moldova, and claimed that Romanian troops have already been
    deployed to the neighbouring country. Disinformation on Russian channels
    follows a number of attacks by unknown perpetrators, which took place in the
    past few days in Transnistria, a pro-Russian breakaway region in the east
    of the Rep. of Moldova.


    NATURAL GAS The European Union
    told Russia it would not give in to blackmail, after Moscow discontinued
    natural gas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria, which had refused to pay for
    natural gas in rubles. The European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen
    said the Union had other options to make up for the suspended deliveries, and
    warned member states not to breach the sanctions imposed by the EU after
    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. We have to guarantee alternative supplies and the
    best possible storage levels across the EU, Von der Leyen explained. EU member
    states have implemented emergency plans for such a scenario and we have worked
    together in coordination and solidarity, the EU official added.


    ARMY Military ceremonies, concerts and competitions take place in Bucharest
    today to mark the Romanian Land Forces Day. Events are announced throughout the
    day, including ceremonies, cultural, scientific and educational events, sports
    competitions and military drills, book fairs, concerts and documentary
    screenings. In Arad (west), a military equipment exhibition opens today on this
    occasion, and on Saturday the city will host military and religious ceremonies.


    COVID-19 Nearly 1,150 new SARS-CoV-2 infection cases were reported in Romania on
    Thursday. The authorities have also reported 15 Covid-related deaths. Of the over
    1,200 patients in hospitals, 193 are in intensive care, and most of them are
    unvaccinated. Meanwhile, as interest in vaccination dropped significantly,
    immunisation centres are closing these days across the country. Those who want
    to get the vaccine will be able to do so only in family physician offices as of
    May.


    TENNIS The Romanians Simona Halep, Sorana Cîrstea and Irina Begu take part in
    the first round of the WTA 1000 tournament in Madrid, which starts today.
    Sorana Cîrstea takes on Nuria Parrizas Diaz of Spain (52 WTA). Simona Halep
    plays against Shuai Zhang of China (40 WTA), and Irina Begu faces Belinda
    Bencic (13 WTA) of Switzerland. WTA Madrid Open takes place between April 28
    and May 7. Simona Halep won the 2016 and 2017 competitions. (AMP)

  • Evacuating Romanians from Afghanistan

    Evacuating Romanians from Afghanistan

    16 Romanian nationals and 7 belonging to partner
    countries, five Bulgarians, an American and a British were evacuated last week
    from Kabul. On Saturday 15 Romanians and four Bulgarians landed in Romania on
    board of a Hercules plane belonging to the Romanian Air Forces as part of an
    extremely complicated operation involving several institutions including the
    Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Defence Ministry.




    One of the repatriated Romanians, who was working
    for a company in Kabul, said he was blocked for several days in a former
    military base. He eventually managed to make it to the airport in Kabul in a
    convoy with 400 other Westerners. When the Taliban first entered Kabul, it
    seemed that nobody could be extracted from the area he said referring to the
    difficult conditions of his departure. The Romanian Hercules plane did in total
    three flights to Kabul. Over 30 Romanians had earlier been evacuated by planes
    of Romania’s partner countries.




    On August 13th, the Foreign Ministry in
    Bucharest reassessed and raised the alert level for Afghanistan urging the
    Romanian citizens to immediately leave that country and avoid any trips around
    the Afghan territory. On the same day, the head of the Bucharest diplomacy,
    Bogdan Aurescu summoned an inter-institutional crisis cell, which had to work
    around the clock to identify and implement rapid solutions for the safe
    evacuation of the Romanian nationals still in that country. The Foreign
    Ministry has announced it will continue efforts to bring to Romania the Afghan
    citizens who worked for the Romanian troops stationed in that country, and even
    some journalists.




    Bogdan
    Aurescu: We’ll continue our
    efforts to bring to Romania the Afghan citizens who cooperated with the
    Romanian troops and the students who got a Romanian scholarship. We are also
    focusing on some vulnerable categories, such as the Afghan journalists and we
    are going to keep in touch with the Romanian citizens who are still in
    Afghanistan, either they want to be evacuated or not.




    Romania joined the international coalition in
    Afghanistan back in 2002 and got actively involved in the war efforts in that
    country, a large-scale operation kicked off by the United States in response to
    the 9/11 attacks.




    ‘The Romanian army’s mission in Afghanistan is
    going to enter history books as the longest, most complex and important
    military operation outside the national territory after WWll’, Romanian
    president Klaus Iohannis said during a ceremony held in Bucharest, a month ago,
    to mark the end of Romania’s mission in Afghanistan, after almost 20 years of
    uninterrupted presence.


    Romania spent 600 million Euros in Afghanistan, lost
    27 servicemen while 200 others were wounded.


    (bill)