Tag: Easter

  • After the Easter holidays

    After the Easter holidays

    Easter was an occasion for celebration for the more than 250 million Orthodox and Greek-Catholic Christians around the world.




    They attended the Easter Vigil, and religious leaders sent out messages of peace and reconciliation. Patriarch Kirill of Moscow performed the Easter Liturgy Mass in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow, in the presence of president Vladimir Putin.




    In Cairo, Egypt, the Coptic Christians, the oldest Christian community in the Middle East, attended the service led by their spiritual leader, Pope Theodore II of Alexandria. In Bucharest, the Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church, Daniel, called on Christians to share the joy of the celebration with the people close to them.




    As it happens every year, a lot of Romanians took part in the religious services performed in churches and monasteries around the country and abroad. For most Romanians, Easter also stands for families reunited around the table for the Easter Sunday lunch, with painted eggs, Easter cheesecake, lamb steak and wine. Many Romanians who live and work abroad have actually come home to be with their loved ones these days.




    Others, however, chose to spend the 4-day holiday in seaside or mountain resorts, or abroad. Accommodation was impossible to find these days in any of the resorts in the Prahova Valley area, where the great attraction was the generous snow layer on ski slopes. Valea Dorului, Valea Soarelui and Valea Pelesului were the most sought-after ski slopes in the region.




    The Easter travel packages, which included accommodation in a 3-star hotel or boarding house, breakfast and the Easter dinner, cost around 110 euros in Sinaia. Guesthouses in Moldavia, Bukovina and Maramures also welcomed those who came to discover the beauty of those regions and the local traditions. Those Romanians in the Diaspora who could not come home for Easter still celebrated Romanian-style, with traditional food sent over by their families.




    Now the holiday is over, and people came back to work. Parliament prepares to work hard in the coming days, when new debates are scheduled regarding the Criminal Code and the Code of Criminal Procedure. Also, the special parliamentary committee investigating the dismantling of the Protection and Anti-Corruption Directorate General within the Justice Ministry, has convened for fresh hearings. Students and pupils are back in school, until June 16 when summer holiday begins.


  • April 9, 2018 UPDATE

    April 9, 2018 UPDATE

    EASTER — Orthodox and Greek-Catholic Christians in Romania on Monday celebrated the second day of Easter and a new day in Easter Week, which follows the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. On this day people attend mass while priests’ vestments are white. The first day of this week is believed to be the day when the gates of heaven are open and all sins are forgiven. People who die on this day go straight to Heaven without undergoing the Last Judgment. Psalms are not recited on this day, while funeral services are replaced by Resurrection mass.



    EURO — The National Commission for the switch to the euro will convene on Thursday in its first session. Talks will focus on convergence criteria for adopting the European single currency. Two weeks ago Prime Minister Viorica Dancila announced the setup of the commission, whose role is to prepare the roadmap for Romania joining the Eurozone, as well as the necessary actions to prepare the Romanian economy and society for this move.



    ELECTION — Viktor Orban has secured a new term as Prime Minister after his party Fidesz won the parliamentary elections in Hungary by a landslide. The right-wing nationalist politician says the result will ensure the security of Hungary. Orban’s party grabbed nearly half of the vote and will hold two thirds of the seats in Parliament. The nationalist Jobbik party won 26 seats, while Hungarian socialists won 20 seats. The Democratic Coalition led by former Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsnay could win 9 seats, while the ecologist LMP party will get 8 seats. The Together party won one seat while an independent and a representative of the German minority will each get one seat. The final results will be made public at the end of the week. On Monday, the leader of the Democratic Union of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania, Kelemen Hunor, congratulated Viktor Orban on his win.



    MARCH — The “Eudoxiu Hurmuzachi” Institute for Romanians Worldwide, an institution subordinated to the Ministry for Romanians Worldwide, in cooperation with the Lauder-Reut Educational Complex, is organizing “The March of Holocaust Survivors — Let’s Learn Together”, held over April 9-13 in Poland. Taking part in the event are young people from 52 countries. The march has an educational purpose, aimed at familiarizing participants with a tragic chapter in world history. Romania’s delegation is made up of students and teachers from the Lauder-Reut school in Bucharest, but also from the Republic of Moldova. The project is part of the IEH-led program “Caravan of Romanian Identity”, which involves a series of cultural actions, aimed at promoting Romanian culture and consolidating Romania national identity. The project is also part of the Romanian Cultural Space strategic programme devoted to the celebration of one hundred years since the Great Union of 1918.



    AIRPORT — A few dozen Romanians were left stranded on Sunday on Ciampino Airport in Rome, after Ryanair canceled its flight to Bucharest. Some of the passengers were rescheduled for flights on Wednesday, Thursday or Friday. Those who accepted to change their flight schedule will receive accommodation for just one night. Others bought tickets with other flight operators at double or triple the price. Ryanair has cancelled flights in the past without providing too many explanations.



    RUSSIA — Russian authorities believe the latest US sanctions on Russia have no legal grounds and will entail a response, including regarding ongoing trade agreements, Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev said on Monday. On Friday, Washington announced fresh sanctions against thirty-eight Russian individuals and entities accused mainly of taking part in Russia’s attacks against western democracies, France Press reports. Seven Russian oligarchs and their companies have been targeted as well as 17 senior government officials, a state-owned weapons trader and its subsidiary, a Russian bank. All those targeted will have their assets under US jurisdiction frozen. The US has taken these measures in response to Russia’s malign actions such as the annexation of Crimea, the incitement to violence in eastern Ukraine, the support of the Syrian government and its malicious cyber activities, France Press quoted a US official as saying.



    BOOK FAIR — The 47th edition of the International Book Fair in London will take place over April 10-12. Romania’s participation in the fair is under the aegis of the Romanian Cultural Institute. Under the heading “Writing and Making History: Remembering the Great War Generation”, events organized at Romania’s pavilion are first of all evoking Romania’s participation in the first world war and the Great Union by means of literary and artistic echoes of these two crucial moments in history.


    (Translated by V. Palcu)

  • April 5, 2018 UPDATE

    April 5, 2018 UPDATE

    ROMANIAN ACADEMY – Historian Ioan-Aurel Pop, the rector of the ”Babeş-Bolyai” University in Cluj-Napoca (north-western Romania) on Thursday was elected president of the Romanian Academy. He received 86 of the 148 votes that were cast during the General Assembly of the Romanian Academy. The newly elected president, who will have a four-year term in office, will take over the position 15 days since his election. The elections for four positions of vice-president and one of secretary general will be held on April 20. The former president of the Romanian Academy, Ionel Valentin Vlad, passed away in December 2017.



    SECURITY MEASURES – Over 50,000 employees of the Romanian Interior Ministry have been mobilised to maintain public order, safety and security across the country at Easter. Gendarme and police troops will be chiefly deployed around churches and other religious institutions. 250 thousand people are expected to attend more than 700 public events that will take place in Romania in the next four days. Traffic police, equipped with more than 300 traffic radars and backed by helicopters, will be monitoring traffic on Romanias motorways at Easter.



    MARCH – The “Eudoxiu Hurmuzachi Institute for the Romanians abroad, an institution subordinated to the Ministry for the Romanians Abroad jointly with the Lauder-Reut Educational Complex will be staging a March of Holocaust survivors – “Lets learn together, in Poland, over April 9-13. The event, which has an educational character and is aimed at teaching students a dramatic episode in history, involves the participation of young people from 52 countries. The Romanian delegation includes students from Romania and the Republic of Moldova. The project is part of the IEH “The Romanian Identity Caravan, which includes a series of cultural events destined to promote Romanian culture and to consolidate Romanian national identity, and is part of the Strategic Programme – “The Romanian Common Cultural Area – the Great Union Centennial 1918 – 2018.



    HEALTHCARE – Romanian health minister, Sorina Pintea, on Thursday said a revision of the legislation on the purchase of medicines is needed, in order to make sure that suppliers who take part in tenders provide the necessary amount of pharmaceutical products throughout the duration of the contract. She also said that the line authorities are permanently monitoring the stocks and the consumption level of pharmaceutical products in order to intervene urgently and legally, so that the necessary amount of medicines be provided to patients. The statements were made after last month, the relevant minister requested a report with centralised data as to the lack of medicines or to discontinuities in the process of supplying with medicines hospitals and medical centres included in the national oncology program.



    SKRIPAL CASE – The US diplomats who have been declared persona-non grata by Russia, in retaliation for the expulsion of 60 Russian diplomats by the US, in the wake of the Skripal scandal, on Thursday left the US Embassy in Moscow, on the last day set by the Kremlin for them to leave the Russian soil. Serghei Skripal, a former Russian double agent who was living in the UK and his daughter, Yulia, were poisoned with a nerve agent in Salisbury, south-western England on March 4. London has openly accused Russia of involvement in the case and has announced the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats from British soil, a decision which was followed by similar measures taken by the US and over 20 other countries, with a total of 150 Russian diplomats being sent home. In late March, Russia, which denies any involvement, took a retaliatory measure, by expelling 60 US diplomats, closing down the US Consulate in Saint Petersburg and calling on London to reduce the number of its embassy and consular staff in Russia.



    HANDBALL – The Romanian womens handball team CSM Bucharest on Friday will meet on home soil the French team Metz, in the first round of the Champions League quarter finals. In the three other matches, the defending champion, Gyor of Hungary will meet Buducnost Podgorica of Montenegro, FC Midtjylland of Denmark will face Vardar Skopje of Macedonia, and Ferencvaros Budapest of Hungary will take on Rostov- Don of Russia. The winners will qualify for the Final Four tournament. We recall that CSM Bucharest won the Champions League in 2016.(Translated by D.Vijeu and D. Bilt)

  • April 5, 2018

    April 5, 2018

    MAUNDY THURSDAY Greek Catholic and Orthodox believers, who are a majority in Romania, are today celebrating Maundy Thursday recollecting the Lord Jesus Christs last supper, his arrest and death sentence. 12 excerpts from the Bible describing these events are to be read tonight in churches all over Romania.





    TENNIS Romanian tennis player Irina Begu (13th-seeded) has defeated Claire Liu of the USA 6-4, 6-2 and will be playing in the round of 16 of the WTA tournament held in Charlston, South Carolina, against third-seeded and title holder Darya Kasatkina. In the second round of the tournament with total prizes of 776 thousand dollars, 15th-seeded Mihaela Buzarnescu of Romania has been outperformed by Italian Sara Errani 3-6, 7-6, 6-2. The Romanian has qualified for the quarter finals of the doubles contest where she will join British Heather Watson after a 3-6, 6-3, 10-8 against the all-Japanese pair made up of Misaki Doi and Christina McHale. Buzarnescu and Watson will be playing US-German pair Raquel Atawo/Anna-Lena Groenefeld in the quarterfinals.





    PROTESTS Members of the Trade Federation of Train Drivers have today picketed the Transport Ministry in Bucharest. The protesters have denounced several issues such as the debts of rail company CFR SA, the situation of rail infrastructure, the statute of the rail personnel as well as the low salaries. The train drivers have announced they will be picketing the Transport Ministry on three days, April 5th, 12th, and 19th and stage a march towards the government headquarters on April 23rd. Also today, disgruntled with the pay law, employees of the Marius Nasta Lung Center in Bucharest are on their second day of protests.





    EASTER Over 50 thousand employees of Romanias Interior Ministry have been summoned to ensure public security all over the country during Easter. Gendarme and police troops will be chiefly deployed around churches and other religious institutions. 250 thousand people are expected to attend more than 700 public events that will take place in Romania in the next four days. Traffic police, equipped with more than 300 traffic radars and backed by helicopters, will be monitoring traffic on Romanias motorways on Easter days.





    MARCH The Euxodiu Hurmuzachi institute for the Romanians abroad, an institution subordinated to the Ministry for the Romanians Abroad jointly with the Lauder-Reut Educational Complex will be staging a March of Holocaust survivors – Lets learn together, in Poland over April 9th and 13th. The event, which has an educational character and is aimed at teaching students a dramatic episode in history, involves the participation of young people from 52 countries. The Romanian delegation includes students from Romania and the Republic of Moldova. The project is part of the IEH “The Romanian Identity Caravan, which includes a series of cultural events destined to promote Romanian culture as well as the consolidation of the Romanian national identity being also in line with the Strategic Programme – The Romanian Common Cultural Area – Great Union Centennial 1918 – 2018


    translated by bill

  • Easter Preparations

    Easter Preparations

    Like every year,
    Easter, the greatest feast in Christendom, which the majority Orthodox
    Romanians always look forward to, overshadows everything else going on at the
    moment. The usual political scandals and almost daily social protests we’ve
    seen recently will die out for a few days to make room for prayer,
    introspection, generosity and, last but not least, celebration.

    The Church says
    Easter is a time for love, peace and joy. The Romanians are thus called upon to
    help the orphans, the lonely elderly and the helpless sick, in other words all
    those in need and sorrow. On Saturday night, many people will be attending the
    special services held in most churches and monasteries across the country and
    in Orthodox churches abroad. At midnight, the priest will greet the news of
    Christ’s resurrection by proclaiming Christ is risen! and the congregation
    will respond Truly He is risen!.

    Betrayed by Judas, one of his 12 apostles,
    Christ is tried for blasphemy by the Jewish religious authorities. His
    conviction is, however, a political act, as the Roman authorities of the day
    decide to crucify him for his alleged attempt to undermine the state. Jesus
    dies on the cross in terrible pain, is put in his grave, but rises from the
    dead on the third day. His death does not therefore mean entry into
    nothingness, but into the divine light of the Father.

    In fact, on Saturday
    night, the priest invites people to get Holy Light by lighting a candle. This
    light, considered a miracle of Orthodox Christianity, is brought over all the
    way from Jerusalem, where it descends every year on Holy Saturday from 12.30 to
    14.30. A fire ignites in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, descending on the
    tomb where Jesus was placed now more than 2,000 years ago. The Patriarch of
    Jerusalem lights two bunches of 33 candles and then starts distributing the
    Holy Light to the congregation and the religious delegates who will then
    deliver it back to their countries.

    94% of Romanians say they celebrate Easter,
    with 87% of them saying they will attend the Saturday night service. For most
    of them, Easter is also about enjoying a good meal, so the week before Easter
    is spent making the final culinary preparations. Women dye the Easter eggs red
    and make the special sweet dishes called paska and cozonac. Lamb roast and wine
    are also part of the Easter meal, which brings families together. Many Romanians
    who work and live abroad return to Romania for the Easter holidays to be with
    their loved ones. Others spend Easter in the mountains, at the seaside and even
    on a mini-holiday abroad.

  • April 2, 2018

    April 2, 2018

    HEALTHCARE – In Romania, a new framework contract for public healthcare services took effect on April 1. Aimed at improving the access to healthcare services and medicines, and at reducing red-tape and making the operations in the sector more transparent, the document stipulates that as of July 1 members of the public health insurance system will be able to purchase subsidised medicines from any participating chemists in the country, instead of only those units which have a contract signed with the same insurance agency as the prescribing physician.




    DIPLOMACY – A cooperation programme in the field of professional training was signed by the Romanian and Algerian education ministries, during an official visit made by the Romanian Foreign Minister Teodor Meleşcanu to Algeria. The Romanian official pointed out that broadening cooperation with non-EU member countries is a major element in Romanias plan to improve bilateral relations with its traditional partners, Algeria included. According to Minister Meleşcanu, Romania and Algeria have reached an important stage of strengthening their relations, and this reflects in the firm political will to encourage dialogue and cooperation, particularly in the economic sector, in education, security and home affairs. Teodor Meleşcanu also reaffirmed Romanias interest in a close cooperation in fighting and preventing radicalisation.




    EASTER – For Orthodox Christians in Romania and around the world, Holy Week begins today, with special services performed every night of the week in churches to commemorate the last days in the life of Jesus Christ before being crucified. The most important masses are the ones on Maundy Thursday and Good Friday. By means of fasting and confessions, believers prepare for Easter, the greatest feast in Orthodox Christianity. Catholic Christians celebrated the first day of Easter yesterday.




    ACCIDENT – The Romanian Embassy in Hungary is closely monitoring the situation of the 8 Romanian citizens injured in an accident on the runway of the Budapest International Airport, and is prepared to provide consular assistance if so requested. Two buses taking the passengers of an aircraft that had arrived from Bucharest crashed on Sunday. Hungarian police are investigating the exact circumstances of the accident.




    MOLDOVA – An opinion poll is currently run in the Republic of Moldova, concerning a prospective union with Romania. The poll is scheduled to end on April 14 and will involve 500 operators who will go door to door to collect the answers. Electronic voting is also an option. On March 27 events were organized to mark 100 years since Bessarabia joined the Kingdom of Romania. In Bucharest, Parliament convened in a special session to honour the authors of that historic decision. Previously, in Chisinau, tens of thousands of citizens took part in a rally, asking for the Republic of Moldova to be reunited with Romania. A province with a Romanian-speaking majority that had been part of the Tsarist Empire, Bessarabia joined the Kingdom of Romania on March 27, 1918. The Soviet Union reannexed the province under an ultimatum in 1940, and some of its territory now constitutes the Republic of Moldova.




    HANDBALL – CSM Bucureşti won Romanias Cup in womens handball for the 3rd consecutive year. The Bucharest-based club defeated HCM Râmnicu Vâlcea 29-22. CSM Bucureşti, coached by the Swede Per Johansson, played its 4th consecutive Romanian Cup final, which they already won in 2016 and 2017.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • April 1, 2018 UPDATE

    April 1, 2018 UPDATE

    NATO — 14 years after Romania joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, the alliance continues to be the most important guarantee of the country’s defense and security and a permanent connection to a 28 states’ community sharing the same values and a firm commitment to freedom and democracy, reads a release of the Foreign Ministry in Bucharest on the occasion of the NATO Day celebrated on April 1st. On the same occasion Romanian President Klaus Iohannis conveyed a message in which he said that Romania sees in NATO its strongest security guarantee. PM Viorica Dancila also said that the authorities want to further prove that Romania is a credible and stabile ally in the Black Sea region. Dancila pointed out that Bucharest sticks to its commitment to allot 2% of the GDP to army equipping. To mark NATO Day a military ceremony was held at the Romanian Defence Ministry headquarters. Romania joined NATO in March 29, 2004. NATO Day in Romania is celebrated every year in the first Sunday of April.




    Religious celebrations — Roman Catholic and Protestant believers from Romania and the world over celebrated Easter on Sunday, April 1st. Pope Francis held the Easter service at the Vatican’s St. Peters Basilica and urged Catholics not to remain paralysed in the face of injustices around them. This year Orthodox and Greek Catholic believers celebrate Easter one week later, so on April 1st they marked Palm Sunday, the triumphal entry of Jesus Christ into Jerusalem. This religious celebration was marked in Bucharest and other cities across Romania though religious services and processions. Also on Sunday Holy Week began. The most solemn week of the Christian year, Holy Week is the week leading up to Easter and is the week during which Christians particularly remember the last days of Jesus’s life.




    eCall — The eCall system is operational across the EU as of Sunday, April 1st. eCall is activated automatically as soon as in-vehicle sensors and/or processors detect a serious crash. Once set off, the system dials the European emergency number 112, establishes a telephone link to the appropriate emergency call centre and sends details of the accident to the rescue services, including the time of incident, the accurate position of the crashed vehicle and the direction of travel. 112 eCall is not a black box. It does not record constantly the position of the vehicle, it records only a few data to determine the position and direction of the vehicle just before the crash and these data are only transmitted to emergency call centres if there is a serious crash. Also, eCall cannot be used to monitor motorists moves.




    Immunoglobulin — The first immunoglobulin vials requested through the EU Civil Protection Mechanism have reached Romania and will be distributed to patients, the Health Ministry officials announced. Actually 16 thousand vials from Austria will be sent to Romania by the end of May. The Health Ministry’s medicine distributor bought the immunoglobulin vials from foreign producers. Discontinuities in immunoglobulin supply were caused by the withdrawal from the Romanian market of the producers that ensured more than 80% of the needed amount.




    Weightlifting— Romanian athlete Nicolae Onica won two gold medals in the mens 94 kg category (clean and jerk, total) at the European Weightlifting Championships that ended on Sunday in Izvorani, Romania. Onica also won the silver medal in the snatch event. Romania hosted two other editions, in 1972 in Constanta and in 2009 in Bucharest. (Translated by Elena Enache)




  • April 1, 2018

    April 1, 2018

    Religious celebrations — Roman Catholic and Protestant believers from Romania and the world over are today celebrating Easter. Pope Francis held the Easter service at the Vatican’s St. Peters Basilica and urged Catholics not to remain paralysed in the face of injustices around them. This year Orthodox and Greek Catholic believers celebrate Easter one week later, so today they mark Palm Sunday, the triumphal entry of Jesus Christ into Jerusalem. To mark this religious celebration Bucharest and other cities across Romania are hosting religious processions. Also today Holy Week begins. The most solemn week of the Christian year, Holy Week is the week leading up to Easter and is the week during which Christians particularly remember the last days of Jesus’s life.




    NATO — Romanian President Klaus Iohannis has today conveyed a message on the occasion of the celebration of NATO Day in Romania. President Iohannis says in his message that Romania sees in NATO its strongest security guarantee. PM Viorica Dancila has also said, in a message occasioned by NATO Day that the authorities want to further prove that Romania is a credible and stabile ally in the Black Sea region. Dancila has pointed out that Bucharest sticks to its commitment to allot 2% of the GDP to army equipping. To mark NATO Day a military ceremony was held at the Romanian Defence Ministry headquarters. Romania joined NATO in March 29, 2004. NATO Day in Romania is celebrated every year in the first Sunday of April.




    Immunoglobulin — The first immunoglobulin vials requested through the EU Civil Protection Mechanism have reached Romania and will be distributed to patients, the Health Ministry officials announced. Actually 16 thousand vials from Austria will be sent to Romania by the end of May. The Health Ministry’s medicine distributor bought the immunoglobulin vials from foreign producers. Discontinuities in immunoglobulin supply were caused by the withdrawal from the Romanian market of the producers that ensured more than 80% of the needed amount.




    eCall — The eCall system is operational across the EU as of today. eCall is activated automatically as soon as in-vehicle sensors and/or processors detect a serious crash. Once set off, the system dials the European emergency number 112, establishes a telephone link to the appropriate emergency call centre and sends details of the accident to the rescue services, including the time of incident, the accurate position of the crashed vehicle and the direction of travel. 112 eCall is not a black box. It does not record constantly the position of the vehicle, it records only a few data to determine the position and direction of the vehicle just before the crash and these data are only transmitted to emergency call centres if there is a serious crash. Also, eCall cannot be used to monitor motorists moves.




    Weather — 29 counties in the north, center and west of Romania are under code yellow alert for strong wind and heavy rainfalls that is valid until Sunday night. The weather is getting colder all across Romania with temperatures dropping by 10 up to 12 degrees C as compared to the previous day. The wind speed will reach 45, 55 km per hour and around 75 km in the mountains and in the west, centre and south of the territory. Maximum temperatures range from 9 to 17 degrees Celsius. The noon reading in Bucharest was 10 degrees. ​




    Weightlifting— Romanian athlete Nicolae Onica on Saturday evening two gold medals in the mens 94 kg category (clean and jerk, total) at the European Weightlifting Championships held these days in Izvorani. Onica also won the silver medal in the snatch event. The European Senior Weightlifting Championships end today. Romania hosted two other editions, in 1972 in Constanta and in 2009 in Bucharest. (Translated by Elena Enache)


  • Easter Holidays in Romania

    Easter Holidays in Romania

    Bukovina is a
    region in northern Romania comprising the counties of Suceava and Botoşani. It
    has always been a tourist hotspot, especially during religious celebrations.
    The churches of Bukovina were built during the reign of great Romanian rulers
    and ahead of religious celebrations people have always dressed in the region’s
    traditional wear, therefore Bukovina is a place where each and every tourist
    can have a wonderful time. A special attraction of the area is the Egg Museum
    in Vama, which displays more than 7 thousand painted eggs. Almost 3,500 come
    from 82 countries from all 5 continents. Letiţia Orşinschi teaches textile and
    decorative art and is a member of the Traditional Arts Academy in Romania. Next
    she will tell us more about egg painting:

    In the past, the people of Bukovina used to paint the eggs in a simple manner,
    with a single dominant motif, using toneless, earthy colors which can still be found
    today on traditional costumes and cloths. The museum also exhibits eggs that
    belonged to my family, which are 50 up to 100 years old. These eggs were
    painted with the yolk and white inside, but, as they were not covered with
    varnish, the white evaporated through the eggshell pores and the yolk
    coagulated inside. These eggs used to be kept in a traditional house,
    especially on stormy days. The eggs blessed during the Easter Mass used to be
    placed in the window casement to protect the people inside from the evil
    outside. According to tradition, these eggs were said to protect young girls
    from the evil eye and to help them have a good, successful marriage. Today the
    technique of painting eggs has been taken to another level. In the past, the
    intensity of the colors used for painting eggs was indicative of the status of
    that respective woman from Bukovina. A light red indicated a young, unmarried
    woman, brownish garnet was for married women, while black was for widows. In
    Bukovina you will also find the wax-melting technique used for painting eggs.


    Another
    point of attraction during the Easter holidays is the region of Maramureş, in
    the north. Dan Carpov, from the Tourist Information Office in Maramureş County,
    has more details:


    Traditions have
    been well preserved in Maramureş and on Easter tourists always have quite an
    experience. Although modernity mingles with tradition, the people of Maramureş
    won’t give up their traditional costumes, irrespective of the part of Maramureş
    county you may choose to visit. Eastern traditions have been preserved
    everywhere in Maramureş, that is why we refresh and improve our offer
    continuously, in order to always live up to tourists’ expectations. Our tourist
    attractions have been included in an already-famous tourist circuit, and
    Mocăniţa, the narrow-gauge steam train, is on top of tourists’ preferences.
    Actually Maramureş is the only county of Romania with 8 tourist sites included
    in the UNESCO heritage list and we have already developed a tourist package that
    covers these 8 sites. We also provide trips to the area’s old wooden churches.
    Interest in mountain tourism has been on the rise lately, and tourists are very
    happy with the region’s cycling route that measures 80 kms.


    Claudia Andron,
    the president of Turist, Bistrita-Nasaud County’s Tourism Promotion
    Association, has another proposal
    for Easter: a visit to the wine cellars
    in the region:


    The scenery is very beautiful and there are
    many rural guesthouses where you can see for yourselves how people in
    Bistrita-Nasaud spend Easter. There are many very beautiful churches where you
    can take part in the Easter mass. We have fine customs and traditions, such as
    the Sprinkling of the Girls, a custom that is observed on the second day of
    Easter. I really recommend that you spend Easter in Bistrita Nasaud. You will
    not regret it. Not only is it beautiful, but it is also a special experience.
    Take the Wine Road, for instance.
    Around 1600, the Saxons brought the first vine branches to our county, and
    during the communist regime they were very well preserved. Unfortunately, after
    1989 they disappeared until a couple of years ago, when a bunch of local
    producers, who were in love with farming, sought to rekindle the tradition of
    vine growing in Bistrita Nasaud. We have several very beautiful wine cellars,
    ready to receive groups of tourists for wine-tasting sessions any time of the
    year.


    Located in
    Transylvania, Sovata is a balneal resort that started gaining European
    recognition as early as 1850, especially for the treatment of stomach diseases.
    Kacso Marta is the representative of a hotel compound in the resort, and gave
    us details on Easter offer of the compound she represents:


    The Easter
    offer at a four-star hotel includes accommodation for three nights in a double
    room, breakfast and buffet dinner included. We have also prepared a festive
    lunch for Easter on April 8. Access to the SPA center is unlimited, while for
    children we have prepared all sorts of entertainment programs. The package per
    person costs 960 Lei, that is 207 Euro, in a double room.


    Forget about the
    sea, forget about the beach, come to a camp in Straja. That is how the resort
    of Straja in southwestern Romania is promoted by the manager of a three star
    villa, Mihai Dumitrascu:


    Straja is best
    known as a winter resort, yet in recent years it has also developed as a summer
    resort, since it lies close to the most important tourist sites in Hunedoara
    County: The Hunyads’ Castle, the Prislop Monastery, the Sickness Cave and the
    Retezat massif. Easter is the recommended time for a visit to Straja. We have
    an excellent value-for-money package which includes a visit to the Straja
    Hermitage and the Way of the Cross, Eastern Europe’s biggest such hermitage. We
    can offer four or five night packages for the price of 595 Lei, that is 127
    Euro, which covers half-board and the festive dinner on Easter.


    Lucian Taranu is
    the owner of a guesthouse in Poiana Galdei, in Apuseni’s Trascau Mountains. He
    has invited us to places that have never been spoiled by the hustle and bustle
    of city life.


    A secluded area, where beauty, joy and
    quiet are at home. If you take the trouble to come over, to the Garda Valley,
    crossing over a bridge we built ourselves, you’re sure to find heaven on earth.
    Also, the food here is fine, made of produce we grow ourselves in our gardens.
    We can bake the bread together, you can taste from the famous drink prepared by
    inn-keeper Lenuta, known as Forest Joy. If you stay for a week with us, you can
    also enjoy the caves, the lakes, the gorges, the waterfalls and the mountain
    rivers in the area.


    Easter holiday
    offers in hotels across Romania are very generous. However, the best version is
    the one including accommodation in rural guesthouses, where you can have the
    chance to be much closer to traditions and customs in each region across
    Romania. And at that, you’re sure to have a complete experience.








  • After the Easter Holiday

    After the Easter Holiday

    In 2017, Christians around the world celebrated Easter on the same day, on April the 16th, Christianity’s biggest and oldest celebration. “Christ is risen!”, “He is risen, indeed!”, is how the majority Orthodox Romanians received the news of Christ’s resurrection. Many of them attended the religious services held in churches and monasteries across the country and in Orthodox churches abroad.



    Respecting centuries-old traditions and customs, Romanians sat at the Easter table on Sunday, the first day of Easter, alongside their families, enjoying specific dishes: red-painted eggs, lamb steak, pound cake and Easter cake, as well as lamb organs terrine and wine. On Monday, on the second day of Easter, many visited their friends and relatives or went out for a walk in the park.



    Most Romanians this year preferred to stay at home for the Easter holiday and, according to an IRES poll, they spent around 110 euros for the traditional Easter meal. More than 100,000 Romanians spent Easter in the mountain resorts in the Prahova Valley, Bukovina and Maramures, areas with traditions and customs. The seaside was almost empty, as only 900 Romanians spent Easter there.



    Romanians spent more than 7 million euros on tourist services in Romania, according to employees associations in the travel industry, although prices rose by 2 to 5% compared with 2015. Rural guesthouses were the most popular forms of accommodation.



    Spending Easter in the countryside was a popular choice, offering peace and quiet for people living in busy cities and a way to go back to traditions. Some Romanians spent their Easter holiday abroad. The most popular foreign destinations were the Bulgarian Black Sea coast, followed by the Greek coast and Tenerife, in Spain.



    Holiday plans were somewhat upset by the unseasonably cold weather. Snow, rain and strong winds were reported in many areas around the country.



    In Bucharest, the city hall cancelled an outdoor concert and cut short an Easter fair in the centre of the city. The fair sold authentic Romanian products, including objects made of wood, glass and ceramic, musical instruments, traditional costumes and food. The fair also had an area for children, with train rides, a merry-go-round and workshops where artists and actors helped the children express their creativity.



    Many Romanians living and working abroad returned to their home country for the Easter holiday to be with their loved ones. Those who stayed in their new countries still celebrated Easter in the Romanian fashion with traditional products sent by their loved ones in Romania.(Translated by C. Mateescu, edited by D. Vijeu)

  • April 16, 2017 UPDATE

    April 16, 2017 UPDATE


    EASTER – Christians around the world, including in Romania, which is a predominantly Orthodox country, celebrated Easter on Sunday. At midnight, they received the holy light and sang Christ is Risen. This year, Easter, which symbolizes the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, is celebrated by all Christian denominations on the same days, which is quite rare, given that western churches celebrate it in keeping with the Gregorian calendar, while eastern churches use the Julian calendar. In the orthodox churches, on Sunday believers attended a mass known as the second Resurrection. Romanias President Klaus Iohannis conveyed a message to all Romanians, saying that the spirit of the Easter holiday should give them confidence and optimism for the future. At the Vatican, during his traditional Urbi et Orbi papal address and blessing, Pope Francis implored God to bring peace in the Middle East and Syria.



    REFERENDUM – According to partial results, more than 55% of the Turks voted in favour of the proposed amendments to their Constitution. They said YES to changing the countrys governing system from a parliamentary into a presidential one. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been the main promoter of the reform, which he says its necessary in order to ensure stability, economic growth and security. Opponents, however, argue that these changes will lead to authoritarianism, in a country in which 40,000 people were arrested and 120,000 fired after the failed coup of July 2016. Changing the Constitution will allow Recep Tayyip Erdogan to stay in power for another two 5-year terms, that is by 2029. The office of prime-minister will be abolished and the president will appoint the Cabinet and the vice-presidents, whose number is not certain. Also, he will be able to declare a stage of emergency, without having to ask for the Cabinets approval and will also be in charge of drafting the state budget.



    ATTACK – At least 126 people, including 68 children, died in Rashideen, Syria, on Saturday, in a suicide bomb attack on buses that were carrying people evacuated from two besieged government-held towns, according to an updated toll made public by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. “The suicide bomber was driving a van supposedly carrying aid supplies and detonated near the busses”, the Observatory said. The attack is one of the bloodiest recorded in Syria in 6 years of conflict. The revolt against Bashar al-Assads regime, which started in March 2011, has turned into a devastating war, which has claimed more than 320,000 lives.



    NORTH-KOREA – President Donald Trumps National Security Adviser, General H.R. McMaster, said on Sunday that Pyongyangs latest missile test was a provocation and the US was working together with its allies, including China, to settle the North-Korean nuclear issue. In an interview on ABC, McMaster said that North Koreas consistently antagonistic behaviour “is a situation that just cant continue”. On Sunday, the North- Korean army unsuccessfully tried to launch a missile from a shooting range on the countrys east coast. According to the US Army, the missile exploded within seconds after its launch. The test, which came in violation of the UN resolutions, was attempted just one day after Pyongyang had warned Washington it was not afraid of a potential conflict. In another move, the US vice-president Mike Pence arrived in South Korea on Sunday, the first leg of a 10-day Asian tour, focusing on talks about Pyongyangs weapons programmes. The tension has escalated in the region against raising concern that North Korea might soon conduct the 6th nuclear test.



    MEASLES – 700 new cases of measles have been reported in Romania in the past week. According to the Romanian Microbiology Society, the epidemics, which broke out last year, is the result of the severe drop in the vaccination rate against this virus. So far, 21 people have died, and the number of the sick has grown to 4800. In order to prevent the measles from spreading even further, authorities continue the vaccination of children aged 9 months to 9 years.



    TENNIS – The pair made up of the Romanian tennis player Monica Niculescu and the Taiwanese Su-Wei Shieh on Sunday won the match against the Swiss pair Timea Bacsinszky/Martina Hingis in the doubles final of the WTA tournament in Biel Bienne, Switzerland, with 250,000 dollars in prize money. This is the eighth doubles title for the Romanian tennis player, after the ones won in Budapest in 2009, Hobart in 2012, Shenzhen and Hobart in 2014, Shenzhen, Washington and New Haven in 2016. This has been the first doubles finals for Monica Niculescu this year, after the one in the singles in January, in the Hobart tournament.



    HANDBALL – The Romanian womens handball champion CSM Bucharest on Saturday qualified for the Champions Leagues Final Four. On Saturday they defeated the Hungarian side Ferencvaros 27-26. In the Final 4 in Budapest, on May 6-7, CSM Bucharest will take on Buducnost Podgorica of Montenegro, Vardar Skopje of Macedonia and the Hungarian squad Gyor. These are the same three teams that CSM played against in 2016, when it won the trophy for the first time.




  • April 16, 2017

    April 16, 2017


    EASTER – Christians around the world, including in Romania, which is a predominantly Orthodox country, celebrate Easter. At midnight, they received the holy light and sang Christ is Risen. This year, Easter, which symbolizes the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, is celebrated by all Christian denominations on the same days, which is quite rare, given that western churches celebrate it in keeping with the Gregorian calendar, while eastern churches use the Julian calendar. Orthodox believers today attend a mass known as the second Resurrection. The Resurrection of Christ is the very foundation of Christian faith and the celebration of this event symbolizes the victory of Christs merciful love over sin, hell and death.



    REFERENDUM – Some 55 million Turks are expected to cast their vote today in a constitutional referendum. The outcome of the referendum might give the president Recep Tayyip Erdogan enhanced power and trigger the most radical change in modern Turkeys political system. The president and his supporters say that amendments must be made to the current Constitution, written by generals after the coup of 1980. The opponents, however, argue that these changes will lead to authoritarianism, in a country in which 40,000 people were arrested and 120,000 fired after the failed coup of July 2016. If the amendments are endorsed by the population, the office of prime-minister will be abolished and the president will appoint the Cabinet and the vice-presidents, whose number is not certain. Also, he will be able to declare a stage of emergency, without having to ask for the Cabinets approval and will also be in charge of drafting the state budget. Changing the Constitution would also allow Recep Tayyip Erdogan to stay in power for another two 5-year terms. Polls show that 50-51% of the voters will say yes to amending the Constitution.



    ATTACK – At least 112 people died in Rashideen, Syria, on Saturday, in a suicide bomb attack on buses that were carrying people evacuated from two besieged government-held towns, according to an updated toll made public by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. “The suicide bomber was driving a van supposedly carrying aid supplies and detonated near the buses”, the Observatory said. The attack has not been claimed yet. The revolt against Bashar al-Assads regime, which started in March 2011, has in six years turned into a devastating war, which has claimed 320,000 lives.



    NORTH-KOREA – The North- Korean army have today unsuccessfully tried to launch a missile from a shooting range on the countrys east coast, according to South-Korean and US officials. The attempt came just one day after the military parade held in Pyongyang to mark the birthday of the states founder, during which what looked like new ballistic missiles were presented. According to the US Pacific Command, the missile exploded within seconds after launch. In another move, the US vice-president Mike Pence has today arrived in South Korea, as part of a 10-day Asian tour. According to his advisers, the tour is proof of the USs commitment to it allies with regard to the growing tension relating to Pyongyangs military programmes. The tension has escalated in the region against raising concern that North Korea might soon conduct the 6th nuclear test.



    MEASLES – 700 new cases of measles have been reported in Romania in the past week. According to the Romanian Microbiology Society, the epidemics, which broke out last year, is the result of the severe drop in the rate of vaccination against this virus. So far, 21 people have died, and the number of the sick has risen to 4800. In order to prevent the measles from spreading even further, authorities continue the vaccination of children aged 9 months to 9 years.



    HANDBALL – The Romanian womens handball champion CSM Bucharest on Saturday qualified for the Champions Leagues Final Four. On Saturday they defeated the Hungarian side Ferencvaros 27-26. In the Final Four in Budapest, on May 6-7, CSM Bucharest will take on Buducnost Podgorica of Montenegro, Vardar Skopje of Macedonia and the Hungarian squad Gyor. These are the same three teams that CSM played against in 2016, when it won the trophy for the first time.



    TENNIS – The pair made up of the Romanian tennis player Monica Niculescu and the Taiwanese Su-Wei Hsieh is today taking on the Swiss pair Timea Bacsinszky/Martina Hingis in the doubles final of the WTA tournament in Biel Bienne, Switzerland, with 250,000 dollars in prize money. In the semifinals, the pair defeated Viktorija Golubic of Switzerland and Kristyna Pliskova of the Czech Republic, 6-2, 6-4. This will be the first doubles finals for Monica Niculescu in 2017, after the one in the singles in January, in the Hobart tournament.




  • April 15, 2017 UPDATE

    April 15, 2017 UPDATE


    EASTER – On Sunday, Christians around the world, including in Romania, a country with a predominantly Orthodox population celebrate Easter, the most important Christian festival and holiday. On Saturday, the Patriarch of Jerusalem gave holy light to believers gathered in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, during a special ceremony, which is held every year at the holy tomb. A delegation of the Romanian Orthodox Church has brought the holy light to the country, on a special plane. The holy light symbolizes and recalls the Resurrection of Christ. For 40 days, until the Ascension, Christians use the greeting Christ is Risen, the response to which is Indeed, He is Risen.



    SURVEY – 75% of the Romanians say that they usually spend the Easter holidays at home. For this years Easter they have allocated some 110 Euro for food, according to a survey conducted by the Romanian Evaluation and Strategy Institute, published on Friday. 83% of the interviewees say they normally attend the Resurrection mass. Also, according to 92% of the respondents, traditional celebrations are important or very important. Two thirds of them say that there are Easter customs specific to the area they live in, the most common of which are church going (31%), egg painting (20%) and sacrificing lambs (7%). The research was conducted on a sample of 1.084 people, aged over 18.



    BORDER TRAFFIC – Some 1.4 million people have crossed the Romanian borders this week, ahead of the Easter celebrations. The border police has reported that, on average, 175,000 people crossed the border checkpoints every day, which is 40% more than usual. The traffic is no longer that heavy as it has been until recently, due to the enforcement of a new European regulation that tightens control on the borders of the Schengen area and of the EU and ahead of the Easter holidays, when lots of Romanians that work abroad have returned home to spend Easter with their families.



    CORRUPTION – The former Romanian deputy Sebastian Ghita will remain in police custody in Serbia for two months, as a preventive measure until extradition formalities are ready. Ghita was spotted and detained by the Serbian police in Belgrade on Thursday night, after four months since his disappearance. When asked to show his IDs, he presented a false document allegedly issued by an EU state. Sebastian Ghita went missing on December 21st 2016 and a national warrant was issued on his name, for breaking the terms of the judicial restrictions imposed on him pending trial. On January 10th a European search warrant was issued on his name and he was also put on the Interpol list. Ghita is being tried in two cases of corruption and prosecuted in another two.



    MEASLES – 700 new cases of measles have been reported in the past week in Romania. Authorities have warned that the most exposed to getting sick are those who have not been vaccinated. Since the start of the epidemics in September last year, 21 people have died, and the number of the sick has risen to 4800. In order to prevent the measles from spreading even further, authorities continue the vaccination of children aged 9 months to 9 years.



    REFERENDUM – A referendum will be held throughout Turkey on April 16th on whether to amend the Turkish Constitution. According to the BBC, amending the Constitution is something that president Recep Tayyip Erdogan has long been wishing for. Those who oppose the new draft constitution are afraid that too much power will be thus placed in the hands of just one person. Two opinion polls made public on Thursday show that 50-51% of the voters will say YES at the referendum. Reuters reports that the voting on April 16th will decide on the biggest change in Turkeys governing system since the establishment of the modern republic, a century ago, as the parliamentary system might be replaced by an executive presidency.



    BASEBALL – The Romanian Black Sea port of Constanta on Saturday played host to a unique event, a baseball game between the US soldiers from the Mihail Kogalniceanu base and Romanias national team. The game was won by the hosts, 7-2. The US Ambassador to Romania Hans Klemm watched the game. Baseball has been played in Romania for 27 years and this year it has been declared an Olympic sport. The match marked 70 years since the first African American athlete, Jachie Robinson, was accepted as member of the Major League Baseball. He thus became a symbol of equality, justice and fairplay.




  • April 15, 2017

    April 15, 2017


    HOLY SATURDAY – Today is Holy Saturday for Christians around the world, including in Romania, a country with a predominantly Orthodox population. The Holy Light mass is being held in Jerusalem, a unique Orthodox ritual, during which the Greek Patriarch of Jerusalem enters the Holy Tomb with 33 candles, which are lit by the holy light. Then the Patriarch exists the tomb and gives light to the believers in the church. A delegation of the Romanian Orthodox Church will bring the light to the country tonight, on a special plane. At midnight, Orthodox and Catholic believers will celebrate the Resurrection of Christ. In his Easter message, the Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church Daniel calls on Romanians to promote peace and joy, to help the sick, the orphans, the poor and all those who feel alone and sad.



    EASTER – 75% of the Romanians say that they usually spend the Easter holidays at home. For this years Easter they have allocated some 110 Euro for food, according to a survey conducted by the Romanian Evaluation and Strategy Institute, published on Friday. 83% of the interviewees say they normally attend the Resurrection mass. Also, according to 92% of the respondents, traditional celebrations are important or very important. Two thirds of them say that there are Easter customs specific to the area they live in, the most common of which are church going (31%), egg painting (20%) and sacrificing lambs (7%). The research was conducted on a sample of 1.084 people, aged over 18.



    BORDER TRAFFIC – Some 1.4 million people have crossed the Romanian borders this week, ahead of the Easter celebrations. The border police has reported that, on average, 175,000 people crossed the border checkpoints every day, which is 40% more than usual. The traffic is no longer that heavy as it has been until recently, due to the enforcement of a new European regulation that tightens control on the borders of the Schengen area and of the EU and ahead of the Easter holidays, when lots of Romanians that work abroad have returned home to spend Easter with their families.



    CORRUPTION – The former Romanian deputy Sebastian Ghita will remain in police custody in Serbia for two months, as a preventive measure until extradition formalities are ready. Ghita was spotted and detained by the Serbian police in Belgrade on Thursday night, after four months since his disappearance. When asked to show his IDs, he presented a false document allegedly issued by an EU state. Sebastian Ghita went missing on December 21st 2016 and a national warrant was issued on his name, for breaking the terms of the judicial restrictions imposed on him pending trial. On January 10th a European search warrant was issued on his name and he was also put on the Interpol list. Ghita is being tried in two cases of corruption and prosecuted in another two.



    MEASLES – 700 new cases of measles have been reported in the past week in Romania. Authorities have warned that the most exposed to getting sick are those who have not been vaccinated. Since the start of the epidemics in September last year, 21 people have died, and the number of the sick has risen to 4800. In order to prevent the measles from spreading even further, authorities continue the vaccination of children aged 9 months to 9 years.



    REFERENDUM – Today is the last day of the campaign for the referendum on changing the Turkish Constitution, as a result of which the executive powers of the President would grow significantly. According to the BBC, amending the Constitution is something that president Recep Tayyip Erdogan has wished for a long time. Those who oppose this move are afraid that too much power will be thus placed in the hands of just one person. One day before the referendum, the Turkish population is divided. Two opinion polls show that 50-51% will probably say YES at the referendum. Reuters reports that the voting on April 16th will decide on the biggest change in Turkeys governing system since the establishment of the modern republic, a century ago, as the parliamentary system might be replaced by an executive presidency.



    BASEBALL – The Romanian Black Sea port of Constanta is today playing host to a unique event, a baseball game between the US soldiers from the Mihail Kogalniceanu base and Romanias national team. Baseball has been played in Romania for 27 years and this year it has been declared an Olympic sport. This match marks 70 years since the first African American athlete was accepted as member of the Major League Baseball. Thus Jackie Robinson became a symbol of equality, justice and fairplay. According to the Adviser for press and culture with the US Embassy in Bucharest Ronald Hawkins Jr, the audience will enjoy a typically American celebration atmosphere, with lots of refreshments, music, joy and many surprises.



    HANDBALL – Romanias womens handball champion CSM Bucharest is today taking on the Hungarian side Ferencvaros, in a decisive match for the qualification into the final four of the most important European competition. In the first match, the Romanian squad defeated the Hungarian squad 30-25. in 2016, CSM Bucharest won the Champions League playing the final against another Hungarian team, Gyor.




  • The Week in Review: April 9-15

    The Week in Review: April 9-15

    The private pensions scandal -
    measures and penalties


    The Financial Supervisory
    Authority in Romania on Thursday levelled penalties against NN, the country’s
    biggest private pensions fund for spreading information meant to destabilise
    the pensions system. On Wednesday, NN sent an email to all its clients warning
    about possible measures to nationalise private pensions funds. The leader of
    the Social Democratic Party and speaker of the Chamber of Deputies Liviu
    Dragnea said Parliament would soon take steps to sack the entire management of
    the Financial Supervisory Authority. The Finance Ministry has categorically
    denied plans to nationalise the private pensions funds.



    The Serbian police detain former
    Romanian MP Sebastian Ghita in Belgrade


    The former Romanian MP and
    businessman Sebastian Ghita, who was on an international most wanted fugitives
    list, was tracked and detained by the Serbian police on Thursday night in
    Belgrade four months after his disappearance. The Romanian authorities are now taking
    the necessary action to obtain his extradition. When asked for identification
    by the police, he presented false EU ID. Sebastian Ghita disappeared on the 21st
    of December 2016 and was first named on the country’s most wanted fugitives
    list for breaking the conditions of his bail. On the 10th of
    January, a Supreme Court panel issued a European arrest warrant for Ghita, who
    was then also named on an international most wanted fugitives list through
    Interpol. Ghita is facing trial in two corruption cases and is under criminal
    investigation in two others.



    The unitary pay law is yet to
    be submitted to Parliament


    The submission of the
    much-awaited unitary pay law for public sector employees to Parliament for
    debate and approval has been postponed. The leader of the ruling Social
    Democratic Party and Chamber of Deputies speaker Liviu Dragnea said the bill
    will also remain available for public input this week. The bill provides for an
    increase in monthly incomes by more than 50% over the following five years. The
    planned increases are estimated at more than 7 billion euros in total. Prime
    minister Sorin Grindeanu says the talks with trade unions and the institutions
    targeted by the bill will continue in Parliament to speed up the passing of the
    law. The law, which is supposed to come into force on the 1st of
    July, covers all public institutions with the exception of the National Bank of
    Romania and the Financial Supervisory Authority. The army and police staff are
    the first to benefit from the pay rises. The other categories of public sector
    employees will see their salaries grow as of January next year. The president
    will have the biggest salary in the public system, accounting for 12 minimum
    wages per month. The salaries of the highest dignitaries will drop, while those
    of parliamentarians, judges and prosecutors will go up.



    Vaccination bill is made public


    The Romanian healthcare ministry
    on Tuesday published its new vaccination bill. This provides for the creation of
    county vaccination commissions able to step in if parents refuse the compulsory
    immunisation scheme. Healthcare minister Florian Bodog says a chapter
    containing penalties will also be introduced into the bill after public and
    parliamentary debate. He says his ministry will assume responsibility for the
    treatment of the possible side effects of vaccination. According to the
    ministry, 21 persons have died in Romania from measles. Since last September,
    around 4,000 cases have been reported, according to the National Centre for the
    Communicable Disease Surveillance and Control. To contain the spread of
    measles, medical authorities continue a campaign to vaccinate children aged
    between 9 months and 9 years.



    Government adopts country’s
    decentralisation strategy


    The government adopted the
    country’s decentralisation strategy on Wednesday. Deputy Prime Minister Sevil
    Shhaideh says all ministries will carry out impact studies in the next three
    months and that the sectoral laws regulating the decentralisation process will
    be adopted within the next 7 months at the latest. The areas covered by the
    process are agriculture, culture, tourism, the environment, healthcare,
    education and extracurricular activities, youth and sport. The general goal of
    the strategy is the transfer of new responsibilities, with the exception of
    those relating to inspection and control, to local authorities, namely mayors
    and local and county councils. Many of these responsibilities are currently
    held by the ministries’ decentralised directorates.



    Crowding at border check
    points in Romania



    Traffic is busy at Romania’s border crossing
    points following the implementation, on the 7th of April, of a new
    European regulation tightening border control ahead of the Easter holidays.
    Waiting time at the border varies from one to six hours. The busiest
    checkpoints are in the west of the country. The authorities are trying to
    strike a balance between citizen security and traffic flow and recommend the
    use of all border checkpoints. To support Romanian citizens travelling abroad
    during the Easter holidays, the foreign ministry has made available a travel
    guide containing useful recommendations, information about the most frequented
    tourist destinations at this time of the year, as well as information that can
    help Romanian citizens avoid possible unpleasant situations that may appear
    during their stay abroad.