Tag: collective pardoning

  • January 25, 2017 UPDATE

    January 25, 2017 UPDATE

    COUNCIL OF
    EUROPE
    Romania’s President Klaus
    Iohannis said on Wednesday in plenary session of the Council of Europe’s
    Parliamentary Assembly that the world needs democratic societies, where
    majorities do not take undue advantage of their rights, societies where the
    principle of loyal and constructive cooperation between democratic institutions
    works flawlessly. The President said that Romania has turned into a role-model
    as regards the protection and promotion of national minorities’ rights, a model
    acknowledged at European level. Also, the head of state announced that on April
    6th, together with the Secretary General of the Council of Europe
    Thorbjorn Jagland, will inaugurate in Bucharest an international conference
    organized in cooperation with the Venice Commission on the roles played by the
    majority and the opposition in a democratic society. On Tuesday, on the first
    day of his visit to Strasbourg, the Romanian head of state met with Romanians
    working at the Council of Europe and with representatives of the Romanian
    community in Alsace. Also, he attended the ceremony marking the International Holocaust Remembrance Day.








    GOVERNMENT ORDINANCES On Wednesday, Romania’s Superior Council of
    Magistracy, which has a consultative role in the debate on the draft government
    ordinances on pardoning and amending the Criminal Code, advised against the
    proposed changes. Among other things, according to the drafts set forth by the
    new left-wing Government in Bucharest, convicts sentenced to less than 5 years
    in prisons would be pardoned. The pardon would not benefit repeat offenders and
    those who committed certain offences stipulated by the Criminal Code or by
    special laws. One of the proposed amendments to the Criminal Code stipulates
    that a case of abuse of office will be considered a criminal offence only if
    the damage exceeds 44,000 thousand Euros, and the maximum sentence will no
    longer be 7, but 3 years in prison for such an offence. The two draft emergency
    ordinances have been vehemently criticized by the opposition and citizens. Last
    week, dozens of thousands of people marched the streets of Bucharest protesting
    against these measures and President Klaus Iohannis joined them. The Justice
    Minister Florin Iordache claims that these changes are necessary in order to
    solve the issue of prison overcrowding and to get the legislation in line with
    certain rulings of the Constitutional Court.










    CVM REPORT Romania continues to make progress in
    reforming the judiciary and fighting corruption, but criticism leveled by
    politicians and the press against judicial institutions, the National
    Anticorruption Directorate in particular, might undermine trust in the justice
    system. This is one of the conclusion of the European Commission’s report on
    progress in Romania under the Cooperation and Verification Mechanism (CVM),
    presented in Brussels on Wednesday. According to the report, the fact that many
    top-level politicians in Romania have been indicted and convicted is a sign
    that, as regards the independence of the judiciary, the trend is positive. In
    ten years of EU membership and by implementing reforms under the CVM, Romania
    has made major progress, reads the report drawn up by the European Commission,
    according to which the positive trend of the past three years will also be
    reflected in the 2017 report. Romania’s President Klaus Iohannis, the left-wing
    Government in Bucharest and the main judicial institutions in the country have
    appreciated the report. The next CVM report is to be drawn up at the end of
    2017. We recall that Romania’s judiciary system has been monitored since 2007,
    when the country joined the EU.








    2017 BUDGET Romania’s revised
    draft budget will be debated by Government on Friday, and will be submitted to
    Parliament on the same day, Prime Minister Sorin Grindeanu has announced. He
    has also said that most of the money will go to the ministries of transport,
    agriculture and health and to SMEs. The Presidential Administration and the
    Romanian Intelligence Service, on the other hand, will get lower budgets, the
    Prime Minister has also stated.








    BREXIT The British Government has announced that
    it will present on Thursday the bill under which it calls for Parliament’s
    approval to officially start negotiations on withdrawing from the European
    Union. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom ruled that Prime
    Minister Theresa May must ask for Parliament’s approval to trigger article 50
    of the Lisbon Treaty. Brexit Minister David Davis has stated that the British
    Parliament will have to vote on the simplest bill possible. We recall that Theresa
    May has repeatedly stated that the withdrawal procedure will start by late
    March, and negotiations with Brussels will last two years.










    CORRUPTION
    PERCEPTIONS INDEX
    The rise of
    populism in many countries is a reason for concern, according to Transparency
    International’s annual Corruption Perceptions Index made public on Wednesday. Corruption and inequality feed off each other to
    create a vicious circle between corruption, unequal distribution of power in
    society, and unequal distribution of wealth. This makes people feel
    disappointed and turn towards populist trends, which are by no means the right
    remedy, the report says. The Corruption Perceptions
    Index 2016 covers perceptions of public sector corruption in 176 countries.Denmark and New Zealand perform best
    with scores of 90, closely followed by Finland (89) and Sweden (88).For the tenth year running, Somalia is the worst
    performer on the index, scoring only 10 this year. Romania is on the 57th
    position.