Tag: asylum-seeker center

  • Romania and the Refugee Crisis

    Romania and the Refugee Crisis

    The first Syrian
    refugees arriving in Romania have been taken over by the Regional Accommodation
    and Procedure Centre for Asylum-Seekers in Timisoara, western Romania. They are
    four citizens found in a railway station with no documents on them, who said
    they wanted to reach Germany and requested asylum in Romania.

    According to
    official data, Romania is not subject to any pressure with regard to migration,
    with 944 asylum applications registered this year, as compared to 900 in 2014.
    The Romanian Government, however, has taken precautionary measures and has rendered operational two camps in
    the west of the country, with a capacity of 500 places each. Besides immediate
    measures, the Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta has warned that the
    situation is unsatisfactory with regard to this country’s capacity to integrate
    refugees.


    Prime Minister Victor Ponta:

    There
    are several issues here that need to be addressed, such as getting the
    necessary documents, accessing
    health-care services, especially for the elderly, and children accessing
    education services, not to mention integration and access to jobs. So far,
    Romania’s stand and mentality have been the proper ones, and I believe it’s our
    duty to properly understand the scale and significance of this phenomenon at
    European level, and be prepared for any type of challenge. We need to have in
    place the necessary mechanisms, which
    would ensure not only prevention, but also integration, when the right moment
    comes.


    According to the European
    Commission’s plan to relocate 120,000 migrants among the 28 EU member states,
    Romania has been allocated another 2475 refugees, adding to the 1785 that
    Bucharest had announced it could receive. Prime Minister Victor Ponta says
    authorities and institutions should make a joint effort, given that regulations
    regarding the protection of refugees, of children and people in need have not
    yet been properly transposed into the national legislation. Romanian
    authorities can only spend 0,8 Euro per day for each refugee who reaches
    Romanian soil, because this is what a law of 2006 says, but this law must be
    amended, the prime minister has also stressed. In turn, the opposition has
    voiced its availability to support whatever measures may be needed, for Romania
    to display solidarity with the rest of Europe.

    Here is liberal deputy Ionut
    Stroe:

    You’ve
    got Parliament’s support, at least in statements, but we need to turn these
    statements into reality and come up with legislative proposals that would
    create the necessary social integration and health-care mechanisms, and all
    those things that you have mentioned.


    Also, Ionut Stroe has stated that
    Romania is one of the very few countries that still have an embassy in Syria,
    and this is a reality that should be capitalized on.