Tag: Development Minister Paul Stanescu

  • October 17, 2017 UPDATE

    October 17, 2017 UPDATE

    PESCO – The Country’s Supreme Defence Council on Tuesday approved Romania’s
    participation in the EU defence initiative. According to the presidential
    administration, Romania intends to participate with 10 projects as part of the
    Permanent Structured Cooperation programme (PESCO), aimed at strengthening
    common EU defence. The Council’s meeting was held two days between the European
    Council meeting in Brussels, whose agenda also includes matters relating to common defence.










    GOVERNMENT – The
    three new ministers proposed by the Social Democratic Party, the main party in
    the ruling coalition in Romania, were sworn in on Tuesday evening, in the
    presence of the head of state Klaus Iohannis. The three are Development
    Minister Paul Stanescu, Transportation Minister Felix Stroe and the Minister
    for European Funds Marius Nica. They have replaced Sevil Shhaideh, Rovana Plumb
    and Razvan Cuc, who have resigned. Shhaideh and Plumb are under investigation
    by the National Anticorruption Directorate in a case of corruption, and
    minister Cuc was accused of underperformance. The Alliance of Liberals and
    Democrats in Romania, the junior partner in the ruling coalition, has announced
    it will not withdraw support for its minister Viorel Ilie, Minister for Liaison
    with Parliament, ho is currently under
    investigation for influence peddling.






    EUROZONE – Romania must have a healthy
    economy in order to join the Eurozone in favourable conditions, said on Tuesday
    the Governor of the National Bank of Romania Mugur Isarescu. He also said that
    becoming one of the Eurozone countries was a strategic goal for Romania, even
    though Europe was faced with challenges regarding its structure and functioning. The
    head of the Central Bank also stated that Romania must be involved in
    establishing the way in which the European construction will look and function.








    ANTICORRUPTION – The head
    of the Anticorruption Directorate in Romania, Laura Codruta Kovesi, attended in
    Brussels on Tuesday a conference organised by the European Parliament. On the
    occasion, Kovesi stated that the prosecutors’ actions can be sustainable only
    if they are completed by preventive actions carried out by institutions with
    responsibilities in the field. She talked, among other things, about some of
    the characteristics of the Directorate and the results obtained by the
    institution in combating corruption, in the past 10 years. The Directorate is
    presented as one of the five best practices at the level of the EU, Kovesi also
    said. The statements were made at the conference titled Learning lesions from
    Romania: exchange of good practices between anticorruption authorities in
    Romania and Ukraine.




    IMMUNITY VOTE – The Romanian Chamber of Deputies has
    rejected, through secret voting, the request filed by the National
    Anticorruption Directorate to start the prosecution of the former minister
    delegate for European funds, Rovana Plumb. Only 99 deputies voted in favour
    of lifting her immunity, while the
    other 183 voted against. Plumb is
    accused of complicity to abuse of office while serving as minister for the
    environment and climate change, as part of a corruption case that also involves
    the former deputy prime minister Sevil Shhaideh. The National Anticorruption
    Directorate claims that, through the concerted action of persons holding public
    offices, parts of the Danube’s Belina Island and Pavel Branch were illegally
    transferred from state property to that of the Teleorman county and under the
    management of the Teleorman County Council before being leased, again
    illegally, to a private firm a few days later. Prosecutors argue that the
    property in question belongs to public domain and could not become the property
    of a county council through government order but only by law.










    CAR MAKING – The car industry
    in Romania, which accounts for a quarter of the country’s exports, has called
    for transparency from the government. The head of the Romanian-German Chamber
    of Commerce and Industry Dragos Anastasiu told a conference in Bucharest that
    insufficiently prepared fiscal and economic measures can damage the sector,
    with its almost 600 companies and around 200,000 employees. Government advisor
    Florin Vodita said the government has taken measures to stimulate innovation,
    research and development in the sector by exempting companies from paying profit
    tax in their first ten years of activity.