Tag: fire

  • The February 16, 1933, railway workers’ strikes in Bucharest

    The February 16, 1933, railway workers’ strikes in Bucharest

    A deep economic crisis hit the whole world between
    1929-1933. Also known as the Great economic Crash, the crisis, among other
    things, translated into violence, an increasingly poor living standard, strikes
    and protest rallies. Romania was also marred by this crisis, having its dismal share
    of the aftermath and the ensuing social unrest. Strikes and protest rallies
    flared up countrywide, especially in the industrial regions. Illustrative of such
    a situation was the 1929 miners’ strike in Lupeni. Back then workers were
    protesting against the so-called sacrifice curbs, meaning salary cuts and price
    hikes. During the aforementioned four-year span, another strong protest
    movement was the strike staged over January-February 1933 by the railway
    workers employed by Bucharest’s Grivita Repair workshops. However, the strike
    was equally politicized by the communist regime that held Romania under its
    grip between 1945 and 1989.


    If we take some time to examine documents of that
    time, we can detect two stages in the unfolding of events. The first stage was
    the legitimate strike staged by the railway workers’ unions, who negotiated
    some of the claims employers even complied with. Over January 31st
    and February 2nd, 1922, the Grivita trade unions obtained an increase
    in wages as well as other benefits, for their members. The second stage unfolded
    after the communist and Comintern-controlled unions were a lot more focused on their political claims. We
    recall the Comintern used any form of social unrest to cause instability.


    Negotiations were brought to a standstill
    for a couple of days, while immediately afterwards, on the morning of February
    16, 1933, the government took forceful action against the 4,000 workers who had
    barricaded themselves on the premises of the repair workshops. The gendarmes’
    intervention claimed the lives of seven workers, while 15 others were wounded. 160 workers were arrested.


    The communist regime that was instated in Romania after
    1945 had been constantly using that strike as a propaganda tool and for the particular
    reason whereby communist leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej had been employed by
    Grivita, where he was one of the instigators and where he was imprisoned. Notwithstanding,
    after 1989, archive research and the interviewing of the very few surviving
    witnesses have revealed a different kind of reality. In 1998, Radio Romania’s Oral
    History Centre interviewed engineer Constantin
    Negrea, who in 1927 was a young employee with the Romanian Railway Repair Workshops.
    Negrea reminisced the 1931 protest rallies he joined himself with the 800
    workers, and which claimed the lives of two people.

    Constantin Negrea:


    In 1931, certain
    problems occurred. We had been threatened with the sacrifice curb. And we, on
    January 29, 1931, we staged a protest rally against the implementation of the
    sacrifice curb. We were deprived of our dues, bit by bit. And then, we took to the
    streets after 4 pm, heading towards the Grant Bridge, to the Repair workshops,
    we wanted to get there. We also had a couple of sergeants in tow, they were
    accompanying us. We were shouting we did not want the sacrifice curb. When
    we hit the Grant Bridge, we got shot at! One man, Craciun, died, he was a carpenter,
    and a Jew, Schwartz, who came from
    Oradea to get married. So there were two people dead!


    Two years later, the 1933 strikes began with staging
    protest rallies, just like their predecessors, yet they changed the tactics, so
    their voice could be better heard.


    Instead of moving about and shouting in the street we
    didn’t want the sacrifice curb, we replaced that with the activation of the siren
    every thirty minutes, many times. We replaced taking to the streets in protest
    rallies. We began to organize ourselves in union groups and everyone knew on
    the day of 15 we were supposed to rally, all of us, even though the frost was
    so harsh. We intended to get out in the repair workshops’ courtyard where there
    was some kind of a little park set up on the premises. Constructions works for
    the park were not completed, so a couple of sand loads had been unloaded, and
    there was a sand bank there. Well, several cauldrons were brought there, 5,
    maybe 6, where we warmed ourselves lighting a fire. After that, a plank
    barricade was erected at the back entrance of the Locomotives Division, it was
    an entrance there and there also was a roof.


    Despite strikers’ radicalism, among
    them there were people who were talking sense and the fears they voiced turned out
    to be real, in the long run.


    Evening set in and,
    logically, the people there, there was a one Mogos who worked at the plant and there
    was another one, they stepped aside, they kind of dodged, and said: We get
    fired and we won’t be able to earn our keep anymore! They were older, more sensible,
    more well-advised, quite unlike us, who were younger. The last time we rallied
    was around 5 pm, at five past I’d already made for the siren, and in ten
    minutes I walked back to the gates. At 5.45am sharp, live rounds were fired. They
    shot on sight and six people died, that’s how many were shot dead.


    The dead and the communist
    organizers, who were sentenced to prison, saw their worst when the strike of
    February 1933 ended. The events in Grivita that happened 90 years ago were the events
    of a generation that firmly opposed the deterioration of their lives. Sadly,
    the February 1933 strikes were partially hijacked by the radical communists, the advocates of
    a criminal regime.(EN)


    .

  • The Colectiv fire – 7 years on

    The Colectiv fire – 7 years on


    On October 30 2015, during a rock concert at the Colectiv night club in Bucharest, a fire broke out caused by fireworks that were not properly handled. The fired expanded quickly and 64 young people were killed during or in the aftermath of the tragic accident. They were commemorated at the site of the club on Sunday and three NGOs held a march between the club and the Prosecutor Generals Office to warn that the investigation did not go far enough and that not all those guilty are paying for their actions.



    The representatives of the NGOs and the victims families say attempts were made to distract the public from the fact that the state of hospitals and the decisions made by the authorities were responsible for more victims than the fire itself. They also say that the problem of the healthcare system, of the beds and hospitals for fire victims and of infections acquired by patients in hospital care is far from being solved. Moreover, public spaces, including schools, are still allowed to remain open despite not ensuring protection against fire and emergency situations. Healthcare minister Alexandru Rafila said including cases of hospital-acquired infections when assessing the activity of hospital managers will help shed more light on the situation of the healthcare system. He said such infections occur not only in Romania, but admitted that their frequency here is much higher compared with other countries.



    It took six years and a half for the courts to issue final sentences in the Colectiv case and for those responsible for the biggest peace-time tragedy in Romania to end up behind bars. Cristian Popescu Piedone, the former mayor of Bucharests sector 4 and who in the meantime had been elected mayor of sector 5, was sentenced to 4 years in prison for abuse of office. The club owners received between 6 and 11 years and 8 months. On trial in this case were also the two members of the fire service of the Bucharest Inspectorate for Emergency Situations who made checks at the nightclub but who did not take the legal measures with respect to fire protection. They were sentenced to 8 years and 8 months in prison. The firework technicians on trial were sentenced to 6 years and 10 months each. The final sentences were generally shorter than those issued in the courts of first instance. The Court of Appeal ruled that some of those convicted should pay damages of tens of millions of euros to the survivors and the victims families.



    There was also a political consequence in the immediate aftermath of the fire: the large street protests under the slogan Corruption Kills held at the time led to the resignation of the then government. This was, however, not enough to move things decisively onto the path of normality that implies efficiency and honesty in the administration. (CM)


  • July 17, 2022 UPDATE

    July 17, 2022 UPDATE

    COVID-19 Over 2,160 new SARS-CoV-2 were registered in Romania in the past
    24 hours after 96 hundred tests had been conducted, the Health Ministry
    announced on Sunday. A related fatality was also reported. 19 hundred people
    are being treated in hospitals across the country out of whom 108 in ICUs.
    Since the beginning of the pandemic in Romania, 65,800 people have been killed
    by the virus.








    UKRAINE EU Foreign Ministers are going to hold
    talks on Monday on applying tougher sanctions on Russia after Moscow has been
    accused of having deployed rocket launchers to the region of Zaporizhzhia, in southern
    Ukraine. The ministers will have to discuss a European Commission proposal to
    ban gold purchases from Russia to bring the EU sanctions in line with their G7
    partners. Another proposal deals with the inclusion of more Russian officials on
    the EU’s black list. Among other things, the head of the Romanian diplomacy,
    Bogdan Aurescu, is expected to be presenting the latest measures taken by the
    authorities in Bucharest to facilitate Ukraine’s grain exports. Among these
    measures, there is the opening of new checkpoints at the common border,
    completing works on the broad gauge railway in the Danube port of Galati,
    eastern Romania, as well allowing the Ukrainian ships to use the channels of
    Chilia and Bastroe. According to sources from the United States, between 100
    and 150 civilians have been killed by Russian military strikes in Ukraine in
    the past two weeks.






    CRASH A large cargo plane Antonov An-12 crashed in northern Greece on
    Saturday night killing all eight crew on board, the Greek public television has
    announced. According to the same sources, the plane was being operated by a
    Ukrainian air company. Citizens in the area have been advised to keep windows
    closed and refrain from using air conditioning as the plane was carrying 12
    tons of toxic military products. The plane took off from the Serbian city of
    Nis and was bound for Amman in Jordan. Witness reports suggested the Antonov
    An-12 plane caught fire while still in the air.


    IRRIGATIONS The Ministry of Agriculture in
    Romania has earmarked 1.5 billion Euros for streamlining the country’s
    infrastructure of irrigations and drainage. The funds are to be made available until
    the year 2027. The Ministry has launched the project for public debates as it
    is aimed at adjusting the agriculture to the latest climate changes and curbing
    their effects over farm production and the environment. Under the law, the
    number of new irrigation networks is to increase from 89 to 150. The surface
    covered by the new irrigation network is also expected to increase from 1.8 million
    to 2.6 million hectares.






    WEATHER The heatwave that continues to intensify
    in southern Europe has caused large bushfires on the Croatian coast and in
    Crete. Wildfires have also been affecting Spain and firefighters have been
    deployed to Extremadura, the west of the country. 3 thousand people have been
    evacuated from the southern region of Malaga. Emergency services are fighting
    the fires affecting the French region of Gironde. Temperatures are on the rise
    and wildfires have destroyed several forest areas in Morocco and are presently
    threatening residential areas in south-western Turkey.




    (bill)

  • July 15, 2022 UPDATE

    July 15, 2022 UPDATE

    CONFERENCE The
    Republic of Moldova doesn’t have to be and won’t be alone in its efforts to
    implement the reforms it needs, Romania’s Foreign Minister Bogdan Aurescu said
    on Friday at the end of the second edition of the Ministerial Conference of the
    Support Platform for the Republic of Moldova. According to the head of the
    Romanian diplomacy this platform is ‘a permanent instrument’ and is useful for
    Chisinau’s efforts to join the European Union. Financial assistance pledges of
    up to 600 million euros have been issued during the conference for the support
    of this ex-soviet republic with a Romanian-speaking majority. The event in
    Bucharest brought together delegations from 33 countries, members of the EU,
    G7, the European Free Trade Association, international bodies, financial
    institutions and UN agencies. German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock has
    announced a financial assistance package for this state of up to 77 million
    euros. ‘It is important to know that we are not alone and that we can count on
    you. Moldova is a small country and the magnitude of the events are beyond its
    capabilities to cope with them’ Moldovan president Maia Sandu said.








    ORDINANCE On Friday, the government in Bucharest
    passed the final amendments to tax legislation. Some changes are set to come
    into effect on August 1, while others on January 1 next year. After
    consultations with social partners, with employers’ associations, trade unions,
    and local elected representatives, the Finance Ministry made several changes to
    the initial bill. They accepted the proposal by hospitality industry employers
    for companies to choose between specific taxes and tax on profits. According to
    the changes, VAT would go up from 5 to 9% for restaurants, hotels, and catering
    firms, while VAT for soft drinks would go up from 9 to 19%. Starting on August
    1, tax incentives in construction and the food industry are granted for
    salaries of up to 10,000 lei, about 2,000 Euro, and not up to 30,000 lei, about
    6,000 Euro, as it is at present. Also next month, excises will go up for
    alcohol and tobacco products. The tax on dividends goes up from 5 to 8 percent.
    At the same time, people with salaries of up to 4,550 lei, about 900 Euro,
    young people below 26, and people providing child care would get deductions.




    COVID Over 4,100 new Covid-19
    infections have been reported in the past 24 hours in Romania. Most of the
    cases are in Bucharest and its surroundings. 1,700 people are being treated in
    hospitals out of whom 101 in ICU. 3 related fatalities have been reported in
    the past 24 hours. 65,805 fatalities have been registered in Romania since the
    beginning of the pandemic.








    FIREFIGHTERS A second contingent of 28
    Romanian firefighters has left for Greece to replace their colleagues who in
    the past two weeks have assisted the local authorities in monitoring and
    extinguishing forest fires in areas north of Athens. Several fire engines, a
    tanker as well as command and control vehicles have been deployed to the
    affected areas. In the past 15 days, firefighters from Romania have
    participated in various missions in the regions of Schimatari and Porto
    Germeno. Last year Romania also helped Greece in its fight against devastating
    forest fires.




    (bill)

  • Sentences in the Colectiv case

    Sentences in the Colectiv case

    October 30, 2015 was the day marking a great national tragedy occurring in times of peace. The fire that broke out that Friday evening in a Bucharest club, where young people had come for a rock concert, took the lives of 65 people, who died on the spot and later in hospital. More than 150 of those who were in the club suffered serious injuries. After 6 and a half years, the court established who the culprits were and gave sentences. The former mayor of Bucharests Sector 4, where the tragedy occurred, Cristian Popescu Piedone, who was the mayor of the neighboring sector 5 at the time the sentence was pronounced, received 4-year imprisonment for abuse of office, diminished by half from the one received in the first instance. In his case, the judges eliminated the aggravated form of his abuse of office crime, which would have brought him in a bigger sentence.



    The three owners of the club have also had their sentences reduced, depending on the guilt assessed by the magistrates, and they received between 6 years and 11 years and 8 months. Also judged in this case were the two firefighters from the Bucharest Inspectorate for Emergency Situations who checked the Colectiv Club without taking the legal measures required by the non-observance of the fire safety regulations. They received definitive sentences of 8 years and 8 months each.



    The pyrotechnic specialists tried in this case will serve 6 years and 10 months each, but their sentences were also reduced. The three officials from the City Hall were acquitted, after they had initially received between 3-year suspended sentences and 8-year determinate sentences. Neither them, nor Popescu Piedone nor the firefighters will pay damages to the victims of the Colectiv tragedy. The Court of Appeal ordered that some of the convicts should pay damages of tens of millions of euros to the families of the victims and the survivors.



    We have all the conditions for treating burns, the then health minister said in the days following the fire. That was a haphazard, if not irresponsible, statement. In fact, the facilities of Romanian hospitals were far from complying with the standards that could ensure real chances of survival for victims with severe burns.



    Moreover, that was the moment that revealed to the public the scale of another phenomenon that the press and public health experts had been talking about for some time: hospital-acquired infections. After admitting its chronic inability to intervene in such a situation, the Romanian state accepted the gestures of solidarity of some EU countries. Some of the Colectiv fire victims were sent for treatment abroad, but for some it was too late. Romania still does not have a burn center, which is a major deficiency according to the PM Nicolae Ciuca.



    Fires resulting in deaths also occurred after the Colectiv fire, many of them even in hospitals. The corruption, incompetence and administrative negligence, denounced then, in 2015, through extensive street protests that resulted in the resignation of the then government, are still sabotaging the normal functioning of public systems in general, not just of the medical one. (LS)

  • Sentences in the Colectiv case

    Sentences in the Colectiv case

    October 30, 2015 was the day marking a great national tragedy occurring in times of peace. The fire that broke out that Friday evening in a Bucharest club, where young people had come for a rock concert, took the lives of 65 people, who died on the spot and later in hospital. More than 150 of those who were in the club suffered serious injuries. After 6 and a half years, the court established who the culprits were and gave sentences. The former mayor of Bucharests Sector 4, where the tragedy occurred, Cristian Popescu Piedone, who was the mayor of the neighboring sector 5 at the time the sentence was pronounced, received 4-year imprisonment for abuse of office, diminished by half from the one received in the first instance. In his case, the judges eliminated the aggravated form of his abuse of office crime, which would have brought him in a bigger sentence.



    The three owners of the club have also had their sentences reduced, depending on the guilt assessed by the magistrates, and they received between 6 years and 11 years and 8 months. Also judged in this case were the two firefighters from the Bucharest Inspectorate for Emergency Situations who checked the Colectiv Club without taking the legal measures required by the non-observance of the fire safety regulations. They received definitive sentences of 8 years and 8 months each.



    The pyrotechnic specialists tried in this case will serve 6 years and 10 months each, but their sentences were also reduced. The three officials from the City Hall were acquitted, after they had initially received between 3-year suspended sentences and 8-year determinate sentences. Neither them, nor Popescu Piedone nor the firefighters will pay damages to the victims of the Colectiv tragedy. The Court of Appeal ordered that some of the convicts should pay damages of tens of millions of euros to the families of the victims and the survivors.



    We have all the conditions for treating burns, the then health minister said in the days following the fire. That was a haphazard, if not irresponsible, statement. In fact, the facilities of Romanian hospitals were far from complying with the standards that could ensure real chances of survival for victims with severe burns.



    Moreover, that was the moment that revealed to the public the scale of another phenomenon that the press and public health experts had been talking about for some time: hospital-acquired infections. After admitting its chronic inability to intervene in such a situation, the Romanian state accepted the gestures of solidarity of some EU countries. Some of the Colectiv fire victims were sent for treatment abroad, but for some it was too late. Romania still does not have a burn center, which is a major deficiency according to the PM Nicolae Ciuca.



    Fires resulting in deaths also occurred after the Colectiv fire, many of them even in hospitals. The corruption, incompetence and administrative negligence, denounced then, in 2015, through extensive street protests that resulted in the resignation of the then government, are still sabotaging the normal functioning of public systems in general, not just of the medical one. (LS)

  • May 12, 2022 UPDATE

    May 12, 2022 UPDATE

    NATO The
    president of Romania Klaus Iohannis hailed Finland’s announcement regarding its
    intention to join NATO, and says Bucharest supported the decision. Romania is
    a firm supporter of NATO’s open door policy and stands ready to support Finland
    in the process of NATO accession. Together we are stronger! Iohannis posted on
    Twitter on Thursday. The president of Finland Sauli Niinistö and PM Sanna Marin Thursday spoke in favour of the
    country’s joining NATO without delay, with the candidacy to be announced on
    Sunday, AFP reports. As a member of NATO, Finland would strengthen the Alliance
    as a whole, the two officials said in a joint press release. Finland’s
    accession will be a threat to Russia, the Kremlin said in response. Three in
    four Finnish citizens support the accession. A neutral state during the Cold
    War, Finland joined the EU and NATO’s Partnership for Peace programme, but
    remained outside the alliance. The decision to join NATO comes against the
    background of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Finland shares a 1,300-km border
    with Russia.


    RULING The Bucharest Court of Appeals Thursday passed
    its final ruling on the Colectiv case, after several successive
    postponements. The former Bucharest District 4 Mayor Cristian Popescu-Piedone, currently
    the mayor of District 5 of the capital city, was sentenced to 4 years in prison
    for abuse of office. The club owners also received prison sentences ranging
    between 6 and 11 years, while the 2 firefighters with the Bucharest
    Inspectorate for Emergency Situations who inspected the Colectiv nightclub and
    disregarded the workplace security legislation were sentenced to 8 years and 8
    months in prison, and 2 pyrotechnics workers will also serve 6 years and 10 months
    each. The manager of the fireworks company received a suspended sentence. The
    October 2015 fire in Colectiv killed 64 people and injured many others. It
    was the most serious accident in Romania since 1989. The tragedy forced the
    government at the time to step down.


    INFLATION The Romanian Central Bank has updated its
    inflation forecast to 12.5% for end-2022 and 6.7% for end-2023, governor Mugur
    Isarescu announced on Thursday. In February, the Central Bank estimated
    inflation would stand at 9.6% at the end of 2022 and at 3.2% at the end of
    2023. Inflationist pressure triggered by production costs is expected to go
    down gradually. However, its effects will continue to be felt for around 12
    months. Romania sees the highest annual inflation rate in the last 18 years,
    nearly 14%, with the steepest price rises reported for natural gas (85%).


    POLL One in two Romanians has considered moving to
    another country after the start of the war in Ukraine, and the first options
    would be Germany, France and Britain, according to data made public by a
    recruitment platform. 12% of respondents are waiting to see how things unfold
    and 11% believe the war will not affect us. Another 26% say they will not leave
    the country irrespective of what happens next. The main reasons for moving
    abroad are the wish to change the scenery and the country where they work
    (38%), personal and family safety (24%), better incomes (21%), more
    opportunities for professional development (14%) and the wish to work in a
    safer environment, unaffected by war (4%).


    UKRAINE A first Russian soldier will be on trial in
    Ukraine for killing a civilian in the Sumy region. International teams of
    prosecutors and investigators continue to probe into war crimes committed by
    the Russian army, with more than 10,000 such cases pending. According to Radio
    Romania’s special correspondent, investigators say the 21-year old Russian
    soldier killed a Ukrainian civilian who was walking his bike along the sidewalk.
    The soldier and other Russian troops were in a stolen car, after their unit had
    been destroyed by the Ukrainian forces. The prosecutor general of Ukraine, Iryna
    Venediktova, said there was enough evidence of his involvement in violation of
    the laws and customs of war, including premeditated murder, and that he was
    facing 10 to 15 years or life in prison. Experts from Poland, Lithuania and
    France help the teams of investigators, and the cases documented so far point
    to people being killed with no reason. Clashes continued on Thursday in the
    north-east and south-east of Ukraine, with both sides announcing local-scale
    advances.


    NATURAL GAS The Romanian Senate passed amendments to the Offshore
    Act, which green lights gas exploitation in the Black Sea. The ruling
    coalition, which tabled the bill, says this is a much more balanced version of
    the one endorsed four years ago. Tax changes have now been introduced in favour
    of the companies concerned, and dependence on Russian gas would be
    significantly reduced in a few years’ time. According to estimates, around 80
    billion cubic metres of gas are in the Neptune Deep perimeter alone. The
    national state-owned company Romgaz-the largest gas producer in Romania-and the
    Austrian company OMV will extract gas from the Black Sea in the coming years. (A.M.P.)

  • Final sentence postponed in the Colectiv File

    Final sentence postponed in the Colectiv File

    The Bucharest Court of Appeal postponed, on Monday, for another two months, ruling the final sentence in the file of one of the big peacetime tragedies in the history of Romania – the fire at the Bucharest club Colectiv, when 65 people died and over 200 were injured. On the evening of October 30, 2015, the rock band “Goodbye to Gravity” took the stage of the Colectiv club improvised in a former disused factory to perform in front of hundreds of young people. Shortly after the concert began, the fireworks included in the band’s show lit the sponge that lined the overcrowded hall, which had just one single escape door. The fire lasted 153 seconds, enough for some spectators to die on the spot, for others to be severely affected by flames and smoke while stampeding for the exit. Some of the injured were transported for medical care abroad, others, who remained in the country, died due to burns or nosocomial infections.



    The then prime minister resigned, as well as the mayor of Bucharest’s Sector 4 in which the Colectiv club was located. There were street protests under the slogan “corruption kills!”, a criminal case was opened, arrests were made. At the end of a protracted trial, the court of first instance — the Bucharest Tribunal — ruled, in December 2019, sentences of up to 13 years in prison, as well as the payment of damages of over 50 million lei (the equivalent of 10 million Euros). Then the trial entered the appeal phase. At the last term, the defendants lawyers asked for milder sentences or even acquittal, claiming that the prosecutors and judges of the Bucharest Tribunal made wrong decisions, and that anyone could be blamed for the death of the 65 people, mostly entities, not people. On the other hand, prosecutors demanded maximum, enforceable sentences for the former mayor of sector 4, Cristian Popescu Piedone, some city hall officials, the owners of the Colectiv club, firefighters, pyrotechnicians and representatives of the fireworks company hired for the pyrotechnic show that generated the tragedy.



    One of the pyrotechnicians said he would not understand what he did wrong even if he had to stay behind bars for 20 years. The owners of the Colectiv club declared that they did not make any profit out of the show, but it was only their love for music that made them start the business. A mother who lost her only daughter in the fire asked for punishments multiplied by the number of victims. Another woman, whose son died, said she also felt sorry for the families of the defendants.



    Liviu Popescu, a survivor of the Colectiv fire, concluded that, since 2015, nothing has changed in society: “Basically, after Colectiv, what happened? The clubs that did not have a fire permit before, are now operating on the owners’ own responsibility and, practically, the Colectiv fire can be repeated any time, unfortunately.”



    The debates in the Colectiv file ended late last year, but the judges postponed the final verdict for January 3, 2022. On Monday, the eagerly awaited verdict was again postponed for March 3.(LS)

  • Colectiv trial continues

    Colectiv trial continues

    More than 6 years after the fire that killed 65 people
    and injured severely another 150, the penalties in the Colectiv case may be
    reduced.


    Three judges from the Bucharest Court of Appeals have
    changed in part the legal qualification of the offences, more specifically they
    removed the aggravating circumstances from consideration with respect to the
    offence of abuse in office for some of the defendants, including the former
    mayor of Bucharest’s sector where the nightclub was located, Cristian
    Popescu-Piedone. Removing the word aggravated from the definition of the
    offence leads to milder sentences.


    This is an important decision, and is the last step
    ahead of a final ruling in the trial. In December 2019, the Bucharest Court of
    Justice had issued the first rulings on the case. At that time, Piedone was
    sentenced to 8 years and 6 months in prison, for abuse of office related to the
    issuing of the operation licenses for the Colectiv nightclub.


    Prison sentences were also ordered for the three
    owners of the club, two City Hall employees in charge with supervising fire
    protection, the owners of the company that provided fireworks and the
    pyrotechnicians.


    The defendants were also ordered to pay, jointly with
    the City Hall and the Bucharest-Ilfov Inspectorate for Emergency Situations a
    combined 50 million euros to the victims of the fire.


    Both the defendants, and the prosecutors appealed the
    ruling, and the case was referred to the Bucharest Court of Appeals.


    The survivors and the victims’ families have released
    an open letter challenging the decision to change the legal qualification of
    the offences, arguing that it leads to milder penalties, which would thus
    become small and insignificant, out of proportion compared to the gravity
    of the offences and their consequences, a fact that would cast shadow on the
    entire judicial process in Romania.


    On 30th October, 6 years after the tragedy for
    which no one has been held liable so far, the survivors and victims’ families
    protested in silence against the postponement of a final ruling on the case. They
    lit candles and placed photos of the victims, as well as photos of some
    politicians deemed responsible for the tragedy, in front of the Court of Appeals
    building. Some of the participants lied down next to the photos of the
    deceased, covering themselves in white sheets.


    Moreover, the survivors who needed specialised care
    and who are still under treatment warn that even today in-hospital infections
    are not properly reported and monitored. Romania still lacks centres for the
    treatment and recovery of patients with severe burns. The families and friends
    of those who died 6 years ago, as well as civil society representatives,
    complain that little has changed in the Romanian healthcare system, and the
    investigation and trial are going round in circles. The next court date is set
    for 17th November, when the membership of the panel of judges for
    the next stages of the trial is to be discussed. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Criminal charges after Piatra Neamț tragedy

    Criminal charges after Piatra Neamț tragedy

    The General Prosecutor’s Office
    brought formal charges against 10 people, 6 of them successive interim managers
    of the hospital in Piatra Neamţ (north-eastern Romania) which burned down last
    year, killing 10 Covid patients.


    The tragedy took place at the
    intensive care unit of the Emergency County Hospital, where 17 patients had
    been admitted in 2 wards. An anaesthetist who went into one of the burning wards
    trying to rescue patients suffered severe burns and had to be transferred to
    Brussels.


    The charges include manslaughter,
    bodily harm out of negligence, aggravated destruction out of negligence, and
    failure to observe workplace security and protection rules.


    Agerpres news agency reports that 2
    nurses have been accused of leaving an open fire source unattended, while the
    head of the intensive care unit is accused of having failed to take measures to
    ensure ventilation. The ICU chief is also accused of having forged a memo
    regarding the care provided to patients, jointly with another physician.


    Legal action was also brought
    against the hospital itself. Prosecutors argue that after the pandemic was
    declared and the hospital was turned into a COVID support unit, the hospital
    management failed to organise hospital activity properly. Specifically, the
    management did not review workplace health and security risks after the amount
    of oxygen administered to patients in that unit was increased, and implicitly
    the oxygen concentration in the 2 wards rose. The defendants also failed to
    introduce prevention measures to ensure workplace security under the new
    circumstances.


    The investigation revealed that the 2
    nurses on duty at the time, who were attending patients under oxygen therapy, left
    a lit candle unattended. This was the original source of the fire that burned
    the intensive care unit.


    Similar tragedies have also taken
    place this year in Bucharest and Constanța (south-east). (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Another tragedy hits Romanian hospitals

    Another tragedy hits Romanian hospitals

    In the early hours of Friday, Romania was shaken by some
    terrible news: a fire broke out at the intensive care unit of the Infectious
    Diseases Hospital in Constanţa, the biggest city on the Romanian Black Sea
    coast. The initial death toll among the ten Covid patients who were being
    treated there was 9, but this was later revised down to 7. Which doesn’t make
    this incident any less tragic.




    After a fire last November at the Piatra Neamț
    hospital, when ten patients died and the doctor on duty who tried to save them
    suffered 2nd and 3rd degree burns on 80% of his body, the
    government launched an inquiry that revealed malfunctions with the signalling
    and electric installations. The inquiry, which also looked at most of the
    national healthcare system, identified 2,000 deviations from fire security
    regulations. It found that over a quarter of Romanian hospitals lacked fire
    fighting water tanks, two thirds of ICUs did not comply with the minimum
    required distance between beds and that half of ICUs had a staff shortage for
    on duty service.




    Just a few months after Piatra Neamț, another fire
    broke out at the flagship Matei Balș Institute in Bucharest, killing over 20
    people. We can already talk about a phenomenon of hospital fires. According to
    a report published in the media, fires broke out at 10 hospitals in the last
    year, amid growing pressure on very old infrastructure and a growing number of
    Covid patients needing hospital treatment.




    After the latest disaster on Friday, experts were sent
    in at the site to establish the causes of the fire. At the same time, the Constanţa
    Prefecture launched an administrative inquiry into how the fire protection and
    security measures were respected. The intensive care unit, which was completely
    destroyed by the fire, was taken over by the County Emergency Hospital,
    including the staff.




    Neighbouring Hungary offered to help take over some of
    the patients from Romania, if needed. However, the Romanian medical system as a
    whole is in need of a major overhaul. Prime minister Florin Cîțu spoke about
    the need to address all the mistakes made in the last 30 years, and president
    Klaus Iohannis said the Romanian state failed in its fundamental mission to
    protect its citizens. (CM)

  • October 1, 2021 UPDATE

    October 1, 2021 UPDATE

    Fire – A strong fire broke out on Friday at the ICU of the Infectious Diseases Hospital in Constanţa (southeastern Romania), resulting in 7 deaths. The entire hospital was evacuated, and the patients were transferred to other health units in the county. A criminal investigation into negligence and man slaughter has been opened in this case. Dysfunctions and irregularities regarding the fire alert system had been identified in this hospital during two previous controls, says the Interior Minister Lucian Bode. Sanctions were imposed, but the problems were not remedied. The Romanian PM Florin Cîţu asked for the dismissal of the manager of the Constanţa Infectious Diseases Hospital and dismissed the president of the National Authority for Quality Management in Healthcare. This is the 10th fire in less than 12 months to take place in one of Romania’s hospitals, many of which are COVID units. Similar tragedies occurred at the end of last year, at the County Hospital in Piatra Neamţ (northeast), and at the beginning of this year at the Matei Balș Institute in Bucharest. Both incidents resulted in deaths and injuries among patients treated for Covid 19 in intensive care. Controls launched at Romanian hospital units showed that some of them do not have a fire safety certificate.



    Aachen – The President of Romania, Klaus Iohannis, stated on Friday, in Aachen, during a debate, that the European Union must go through a deep integration and that he does not believe in eliminating countries from the bloc, as he likens the EU to a family. President Iohannis also said at the accession of candidate countries from the Western Balkans should be accelerated. Iohannis spoke of Romanias neighbors – Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova – as ‘states that want to move things together with us.’ The Romanian head of state is present in Germany in the context in which, on Saturday, he receives the International Charlemagne Prize of Aachen – For the Unity of Europe.



    Covid Ro — The Romanian authorities announced, on Friday, almost 10,900 new cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection out of over 67,000 thousand tests. 169 COVID-associated deaths were also reported, most in unvaccinated people. All deaths were in patients with other health conditions. The number of hospitalized people also continued to increase. At present there are over 12,500 hospitalized people, 5,500 more than one week ago. 1,391 people are in intensive care.



    Measures – The National Committee for Emergency Situations has decided that it is mandatory to wear a protective mask in all indoor and outdoor public spaces when the infection rate for a period of 14 days exceeds 6 per thousand inhabitants. Regardless of the aggregate incidence rate, the Health and Education Ministries can allow the physical participation of all children in classes. On the other hand, shops will close at 10 p.m. on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays if the Covid-19 incidence exceeds the threshold of 6 per thousand inhabitants and at the same hour in the rest of the week, if the infection rate in the respective locality is higher than 7.5 per thousand, the National Committee for Emergency Situations has also decided. Restaurants, performance halls and gyms will not close when the incidence reaches 6 per thousand inhabitants, but they will be able to operate at only 50% of their maximum capacity. Access will be allowed only to vaccinated people or people who have recovered from the disease. The rule also applies to private events, such as weddings or baptisms.



    Pandemic – The Romanian Committee for Emergency Situations has updated the list of countries and territories of high epidemiological risk. Romania has joined the red zone, along with the Republic of Moldova, Bulgaria, Armenia, Belarus and Greenland. Following the drop in the incidence rates, Austria, Switzerland, Gibraltar, Iran, the Maldives and the Bahamas are now in the yellow zone. The green zone now includes, among other countries, the Netherlands, Germany and France. Those vaccinated against COVID-19 would not be quarantined if they come from yellow or red list areas. The committee has decided to exempt from the quarantine measure the drivers of goods and passenger vehicles if they provide a negative RT-PCR test result. The new list takes effect on October 3.



    UK – As of October 1, EU citizens will need a passport to enter the UK, showing that they came to work, study or as tourists. Identity cards are no longer accepted as valid travel documents following Brexit. Nearly six million EU citizens, who were in the UK on 31 December 2020, were eligible to apply for residency and over 90% of them have received it. In their case, the identity card will continue to be accepted as a travel document until January 1, 2026. The new immigration system introduced this year means much more border controls, because the EU citizens no longer enjoy freedom of movement. According to the British newspaper “The Guardian”, in the first six months of the year, 7,249 European citizens were stopped at the Great Britain’s bordres and 60% of them were from Romania.



    Football — Romania’s football champions, CFR Cluj (northwest) ended in a draw 1-all the match played on Thursday, on home turf, against the Danish team Randers FC, in Group D of the Europa Conference League. In the other match of the group, the Dutch team AZ Alkmaar defeated Jablonec, from the Czech Republic, at home, 1-0. CFR ranks last in the group and will play the next match against Alkmaar, in Cluj, on October 21. CFR Cluj is the only representative of Romania in the continental competitions. (LS)

  • August 7, 2021 UPDATE

    August 7, 2021 UPDATE


    Attack. The Romanian foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu welcomed Fridays joint declaration from the G7 foreign ministers and the EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell with respect to the recent drone attack on the Mercer Street oil tanker off the coast of Oman. Two crew members were killed, a Romanian and a Briton. The signatories of the declaration condemned the attack, which they say was deliberate, targeted and a violation of international law. They also say that Iran threatens global peace and security and that all available information points to Iran as being behind the attack. Tehran denies any involvement.



    Covid-19. Romania added France and Iceland to the red list of countries with high epidemiological risk, while Turkey and Montenegro were moved to the yellow list from Sunday. Travellers to Romania from yellow list countries will not be asked to isolate if they are fully vaccinated or present a negative PCR test result no older than 72 hours. Arrivals from red list countries are asked to isolate unless they are vaccinated, with the exception of children under 3 and those aged between 3 and 16 if they present a negative Covid test result. On Saturday, Romania reported 255 new Covid cases from 30,000 tests and 8 related-fatalities. 540 Covid patients are receiving hospital treatment, including 73 in intensive care. Also on Saturday, as part of a pilot project carried out at Sibiu Airport, in central Romania, dogs trained to detect Covid-19 sniffed out three of the 150 passengers on board a flight from Spain.



    Aid. Two Romanian Air Force aircraft will provide assistance to North Macedonia, which has been battling forest fires for several days. According to the Romanian defence ministry, 15 crew members are operating the two planes, a C-27 J Spartan aircraft reconfigured for fire-fighting and a C-Hercules aircraft providing logistical support. This is the second international mission involving these Romanian planes, after July 2018 in Greece.



    Fires. The Romanian foreign ministry is advising Romanian citizens travelling to Greece, which is a popular tourist destination for many, to find out in advance about the weather situation in that country, where temperatures of up to 46 degrees Celsius were forecast for Saturday. At least two people were killed, homes were destroyed and thousands of people evacuated because of the fires raging in Greece. Smoke from the fire ripping through Athens suburbs causes poor air quality in the Greek capital. Fire is also wreaking havoc in the island of Evia and the Peloponnese. Ukraine, Cyprus, Israel, France, Switzerland, Sweden and Croatia have sent assistance, while Romania deployed 112 firefighters and 23 special vehicles to help Greece put out the fires. In Turkey, emergency services continued on Saturday to battle the worst fires in that country in over a decade. At least 8 people died and 100,000 hectares of forest and farmland were destroyed.



    Tokyo Games. Romanias Cătălin Chirilă finished 11th in the mens canoe single 1,000 m at the Tokyo Olympic Games. A many-time winner of international competitions, Chirilă finished fifth together with Victor Mihalachi in the mens canoe double 1,000 m at an earlier event. Romania won 34 medals in kayak and canoe competitions in the history of Olympic Games, namely ten gold, ten silver and 14 bronze, but no Romania has won a single Olympic medal in these events in the last 21 years, ever since the Sydney Games. (CM)


  • August 7, 2021

    August 7, 2021

    Covid-19. Romania added France and
    Iceland to the red list of country with high epidemiological risk, while Turkey
    and Montenegro were moved to the yellow list from Sunday. Travellers to Romania
    from yellow list countries will not be asked to isolate if they are fully
    vaccinated or present a negative PCR test result no older than 72 hours. Arrivals
    from red list countries are asked to isolate unless they are vaccinated, with
    the exception of children under 3 and those aged between 3 and 16 if they
    present a negative Covid test result. On Saturday, Romania reported 255 new
    Covid cases and 8 related-fatalities.








    Moldova. The prime minister and the
    new government of the Republic of Moldova were sworn in on Friday before the
    country’s pro-European president Maia Sandu after receiving Parliament’s vote
    of investiture. Maia Sandu said she placed all her trust in the professionalism
    and abilities of the cabinet led by Natalia Gavriliţă, whom she assured of all
    her support. The governing programme featured priorities in a number of areas,
    the fight against corruption and protecting public interest. Internationally,
    the new government wants to continue efforts to secure Moldova’s accession to
    the European Union. The political class in Bucharest gave assurances that it
    will continue to work with the neighbouring, majority-Romanian speaking state.






    Attack. The Romanian foreign
    minister Bogdan Aurescu welcomed Friday’s joint declaration from the G7 foreign
    ministers and the EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell with respect to the
    recent drone attack on the Mercer Street oil tanker off the coast of Oman. Two crew
    members were killed, a Romanian and a Briton. The signatories of the deceleration
    condemned the attack, which they say was deliberate, targeted and a violation
    of international law. They also say that Iran threatens global peace and
    security and that all available information points to Iran as being behind the
    attack. Tehran denies any involvement.






    Aid. Two Romanian Air
    Force aircraft will provide assistance to North Macedonia, which has been
    battling forest fires for several days. According to the Romanian defence
    ministry, 15 crew members are operating the two planes, a C-27 J Spartan
    aircraft reconfigured for fire-fighting and a C-Hercules aircraft providing
    logistical support. This is the second international mission involving these
    Romanian planes, after July 2018 in Greece.






    Fire. The Romanian foreign
    ministry is advising Romanian citizens travelling to Greece, which is popular
    tourist destination for many, to find out in advance about the weather situation in that
    country, where temperatures of up to 46 degrees Celsius were forecast for
    Saturday. Homes and vegetation burnt and thousands were evacuated in Greece,
    which has been battling with wildfire. Several storage facilities and factories
    long the motorway between Athens and Thessaloniki caught fire and explosions
    occurred. International aid arrived after another night of fires ripping
    through northern Athens, Evia island and the Peloponnese. 112 Romanian
    firefighters and 23 special vehicles were deployed to Greece for ten days to
    take part in efforts to put out the fires. They are coordinated by their Greek
    counterparts, and firefighters from France, Switzerland, Cyprus and Sweden are
    also arriving.




    Afghanistan. The UK has advised its citizen
    to immediately leave Afghanistan due to the worsening security situation. After
    the pull out of US-led foreign troops from Afghanistan after almost two
    decades, the resurgent Taliban Islamists launched a new major offensive. They seized
    vast rural territories, border crossing points and provincial capital and
    assassinated the spokesman of the government in Kabul. Romania also withdrew from Afghanistan in June. Of its 32,000 soldiers who took
    parts in various missions there, 27 were killed and over 200 wounded. (CM)







  • August 5, 2021 UPDATE

    August 5, 2021 UPDATE

    Covid-19 Romania.
    Secretary of state with the Romanian Interior Ministry, Raed Arafat, reiterated
    the need for the population to get the Covid vaccine and keep wearing facemasks to
    reduce the risk of infection with the novel coronavirus. In an interview on Radio
    Romania, he explained that there is a real threat of daily cases rising, but that
    everyone can help contain the spread of the virus. He pointed out that no further
    restrictions are being considered, but that if Romania passes 2 cases per 1,000
    inhabitants, the rules in force before August 1 would be re-instated, and if it
    passes 3 cases per 1,000 inhabitants, then measures will be further tightened.
    Meanwhile, the number of new cases is growing. 244 new infections from 28,000
    tests and two deaths were reported on Thursday. 72 Covid patients are receiving
    intensive care treatment. Romania was moved to the green list of countries for
    entering the UK, which means travellers from Romania will no longer have to
    isolate, whether they are vaccinated or not. However, they must still present a
    negative PCR test taken before entering the UK and take another test two days after arrival.
    The measure will come into effect on Sunday.




    Government.
    The government approved in a meeting on Thursday the
    extension of the state of alert in Romania for a further thirty days from 11th
    August. According to prime minister Florin Cîţu, this will not be accompanied by new restrictions. Also
    on Thursday, the
    government approved a decision to donate Covid vaccine to Tunisia, Egypt,
    Albania and Vietnam, said prime minister Florin Cîţu.
    He said Romania will also provide assistance to Greece to help extinguish its
    wildfires, by deploying a team of firefighters.


    Exercise. More than 350 army divers from Romania, Azerbaijan,
    Bulgaria, Georgia, the US and Ukraine are participating in a multinational
    training exercise off the Romanian Black Sea Coast. The Eurasian Partnership
    MCM Dive exercise, which will last 4 days, is led by the Romanian Navy’s 39 Diving
    Centre. The Romanian Navy also participates in the drill with the Vice Admiral
    Constantin Bălescu minesweeper, the Captain Commander Alexandru Cătuneanu
    Hydrographic Survey Vessel and with an autonomous underwater vehicle. Ukraine
    participates with the Oleksandr Okhrimenko salvage ship. The exercise is
    designed to improve operational and tactical interoperability among the
    participating units.






    Fires.
    The heat wave persists in several European countries, which have been fighting
    vegetation fires for a number of days. The authorities are on alert in Greece,
    where flames threatened the capital Athens on Wednesday. In Turkey, the damage
    is huge, and a thermal plant threatened by flames has been evacuated. Forest
    fires are also spreading in Bulgaria, where two forest rangers have died and a
    third has been injured. Italy, Albania and North Macedonia are also struggling with wildfires. The European Commission promised to send planes, helicopters and
    firefighters to Italy, Greece, Albania and North Macedonia to help these
    countries fight the fires.














    Olympics. Five
    Romanian wrestlers are competing in the Tokyo Olympics: Alin
    Alexuc-Ciurariu in Greco-Roman wrestling and four wrestlers in freestyle: Alina
    Vuc, Andreea Beatrice Ana, Kriszta Tunde Incze and Albert Saritov, who won a
    bronze medal at the Rio Games. First-time Olympian Andreea Beatrice Ana was
    defeated today by two-time world champion and European champion Vanesa Kaladzinskaya
    of Belarus by technical superiority. Romania so far won four medals at the Tokyo
    Games, one gold and three silver. (CM)