Tag: independence

  • Republic of Moldova, 33 years of independence

    Republic of Moldova, 33 years of independence

    In 1991, after the failure of the conservative forces to seize power in Moscow, the Moldovan Parliament met on August 27 to decide the fate of the Republic of Moldova. Tens of thousands of citizens, who had gathered in the Great National Assembly in the center of Chişinău, asked the Parliament to vote for independence. And Parliament voted with an absolute majority for the Declaration of Independence. Neighboring Romania, to which the Republic of Moldova was linked by history and language, was the first to recognize its statehood. On Tuesday, the Republic of Moldova marked 33 years of independence in a complicated moment for it and for the entire European continent, generated by the Russian aggression in Ukraine.

     

    President Maia Sandu, whose Covid infection prevented her from physically participating in the events, sent a congratulatory message to her fellow citizens. ‘There is always the option to give up. The decisions we make can prevent us from advancing. We could have given up. The path we are choosing can be hard. We could have cared less. We could have given up and lost our courage. Every decision we make keeps us still or pushes us forward. We are what we choose day by day. We choose to stand up, no matter how hard it is. We choose to work for our future. We persevere for our children. We choose hope and life. We believe in the power of our nation’ readds the message sent by Maia Sandu.

     

    The presidents of the Baltic states, which, like the Republic of Moldova, broke up the vassal relations to Moscow in the early 90s and chose independence, participated in the ceremonies in Chişinău. They signed a joint statement reiterating their support for the accession of the Republic of Moldova to the European Union. The three welcomed the commitment of the Republic of Moldova to the implementation of reforms, the consolidation of democratic institutions and economic growth.

     

    The highest officials in Bucharest also conveyed messages on the occasion, given that Romania remains the main political and economic sponsor of the small neighboring state. Romania, President Klaus Iohannis wrote on the X network, will continue to offer the Republic of Moldova strategic support at all levels. “I convey congratulations to the citizens of the Republic of Moldova on the occasion of Independence Day! You are part of the great European family, and the continuation of the current efforts will turn the accession to the European Union into an accomplished objective,” Klaus Iohannis emphasized.

     

    The Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu also sent a congratulatory message, on Tuesday, to all the citizens of the Republic of Moldova, on the anniversary of Independence Day. Romania, he assured his counterpart from Chişinău, Dorin Recean, will be in the future, just as before, in the front line of efforts to consolidate the European path, the stability and democratic development of the neighboring country. “The place of the Republic of Moldova is in the European Union. I am convinced that, at the referendum on October 20, 2024, the citizens of the Republic of Moldova will bluntly reaffirm this truth”, said Marcel Ciolacu. Citizens will be asked if they support amending the Constitution in relation to the accession of the Republic of Moldova to the European Union. (LS)

  • August 28, 2024

    August 28, 2024

     

    ELECTIONS In its meeting today, the government of Romania is to set the calendar for the presidential election scheduled this autumn, on November 24 and December 8. The ballot will be held in parallel with the parliamentary election, which will be organized on December 1. The campaign for the parliamentary election begins on November 1 and ends on November 30, in the morning. In the country, polling stations will be open between 7 am and 9 pm, while Romanians living abroad will be able to vote between 7 am on November 30 and 9 pm on December 1. This is the first time that all the 4 types of elections (local, parliamentary, presidential, and the election for the European Parliament) are held in Romania in the same year.

     

    OECD Romania has today received a positive review in the competition sector as part of its OECD accession process. According to Romania’s Competition Council, the review was issued after an assessment that took place between 2018 and 2022. During the review, the Council had to demonstrate that its work meets the requirements of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. Recommendations have also been made, and the stage of their implementation will be presented next year. Accession to the OECD is a priority for Romania, and is the country’s 3rd strategic goal after the NATO and EU accession.

     

    DEFICIT Romania’s budget deficit exceeds 4% of GDP after the first 7 months of the year, according to finance ministry data. In January – July, the government had total revenues of over EUR 66 bln, up 15% compared to the first 7 months of 2023. Budget expenditure however increased by over 23%, to more than EUR 80 bln. This year’s budget law is based on a 5% deficit level. Meanwhile, the minister for EU investments and projects Adrian Câciu announced that Romania has so far received EUR 23.84 bln under the cohesion policy in 2014-2020, reaching a 99.1% absorption rate.

     

    INDEPENDENCE The Republic of Moldova Tuesday celebrated 33 years since the proclamation of its independence from the former Soviet Union. Attending the ceremonies, the presidents of Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia signed a joint statement of support for the country’s EU accession. In his message on this occasion, president Klaus Iohannis promised Romania will continue to provide strategic support to Moldova in all areas. In turn, PM Marcel Ciolacu reassured his Moldovan counterpart, Dorin Recean, that Romania will remain in the front line of the efforts to consolidate Moldova’s EU accession efforts, its stability and democratic development.

     

    WEATHER Thunderstorms were reported last night in several parts of the country. Weather experts have issued scores of extreme weather warnings. In Iaşi, in the north-east, the wind brought several trees down and damaged vehicles, while entire streets in the city were flooded. Also in the north-east, in Botoşani County, firefighters were called to put out a fire after lightning struck a tree. Tens of streets and basements were also flooded in Cluj-Napoca (north-west).

     

    PARALYMPICS Paris is hosting tonight the opening ceremony for the Summer Paralympic Games, which will end on September 8. From Champs-Elysées to the world-famed Place de la Concorde, hundreds of dancers and performers will stage a show called “Paradox”, which according to the organisers is designed to make people think about their uniqueness. Romania is represented by 6 athletes at this year’s Paralympic Games, in 3 events: para judo (Alexandru Bologa and Daniel Vargoczki), para cycling (Eduard Novak and Theodor Matican) şi para table tennis (Camelia Ciripan and Bobi Simion). The first to compete are Camelia Ciripan and Bobi Simion, on Thursday afternoon, in the mixed doubles event, against the Japanese pair Yuri Tomono and Koyo Iwabuchi. (AMP)

  • August 27, 2024 UPDATE

    August 27, 2024 UPDATE

     

    INDEPENDENCE President Maia Sandu on Tuesday conveyed a message congratulating the citizens of the Republic of Moldova on the 33rd anniversary of the proclamation of the country’s independence. ”Moldova is our home and we choose a future of peace and prosperity. We are writing our history. Many Happy Returns, Moldova!” Sandu said, quoted by Moldpres. In Bucharest, the Romanian president Klaus Iohannis says that Romania will continue to provide strategic support to Moldova in all areas. ‘I congratulate the citizens of the Republic of Moldova on their Independence Day! You are part of the great European family and carrying on the present efforts will turn the EU accession into an accomplished goal,’ the Romanian head of state posted on X. In Chişinău, the presidents of the 3 Baltic states—Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania—signed a joint declaration reiterating their support for Moldova’s EU accession. They attended the ceremonies occasioned by Moldova’s Independence Day, invited by president Maia Sandu, who did not take part in the celebration as she tested positive for coronavirus.

     

    PENSIONS As of October 1st the pension tax threshold in Romania is be raised from EUR 400 at present to EUR 600, the labour minister Simona Bucura-Oprescu announced on Monday night. She said the decision was made after a new round of talks she had with Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu. So, on October 1st, taxes will account for 10% of the amount exceeding RON 3,000. The minister’s statement comes after the PM announced that he had instructed the finance minister to analyse whether a new tax threshold was needed after the implementation of the new pension regulations. The finance ministry is expected to conduct another review so that pensioners may not incur loses or have food vouchers withdrawn. Pensions below EUR 400 are presently tax exempt, but a 10% tax is levied on pensions exceeding this sum.

     

    UNEMPLOYMENT In Romania, the unemployment rate was 3.09% at the end of July 2024, 0.03% more than in the previous month, the National Employment Agency announced. The number of unemployed people in rural communities is 3 times larger than in cities. Most unemployed people are aged 40 – 49, followed by people over 55 years of age.

     

    DROUGHT Two rivers in Argeş County (southern Romania) have completely dried up. In more than 600 settlements in Romania, water supply is restricted, and in hundreds of villages not connected to centralised networks wells are dried up because of the extensive drought and extreme heat. The Romanian Waters National Agency also says that on 42 of the 120 monitored sections, the Danube water flow is below the minimum level required to meet water needs. Fortunately, the Cernavodă Nuclear Power Plant in the south-east of the country has no problems in terms of water supply.

     

    REAL ESTATE Home prices in Romania have risen by an average 12% this year compared to 2023, according to a recent real estate market survey. The city of Braşov has grown above expectations and is getting closer to Cluj Napoca, which sees the highest home prices in the country. The national average price is EUR 1,611 per square metre. Timişoara (west) remains the most affordable of the big cities, as compared to the salary level. On the other hand, rent has not grown as fast this year as it did in 2023.

     

    TENNIS Romanian tennis player Gabriela Ruse has qualified for the second round of the US Open, the year’s last Grand Slam tournament, after a two-setter against Julia Grabher of Austria. Ruse will be up next against Barbora Krejcikova of the Czech Republic, winner of this year’s Wimbledon tournament. The other Romanians in the singles contest, Ana Bogdan and Jaqueline Cristian, have been knocked out in the first round after losing to Arantxa Rus of the Netherlands and 12th-seeded Daria Kasatkina of Russia, respectively. (AMP)

  • Romania supports the territorial integrity of Ukraine

    Romania supports the territorial integrity of Ukraine

    After
    Russia’s withdrawal last month from an agreement allowing Ukraine to export its
    agricultural production, which is crucial for the world food security, the
    repeated Russian bombardments against Ukraine’s maritime and river ports have
    led to the destruction of over 270 thousand tons of grain, authorities in Kyiv have
    announced.




    Only
    the bombing of the Danube port of Ismail on Tuesday night for instance wiped
    out 13 thousand tons of cereals, the Ukrainian Minister of Infrastructure,
    Oleksandr Kubrakov has said. Several grain terminals and private storehouses
    have been destroyed along with parts of the transport infrastructure. I am
    terrified by Russia’s ongoing attacks over the port of Ismail. The Russian
    troops have been harming Ukrainian civilians and targeting the critical
    infrastructure for the grain transport constantly and deliberately. These are
    war crimes. Romania and the international community will bring to court all
    those involved the head of the Romanian diplomacy, Luminita Odobescu, said on a
    social network.




    Bucharest
    will continue to support Ukraine in its brave fight to completely recover its
    territorial integrity says the Romanian official, who had an online
    intervention on Wednesday during the third Summit of the Crimea International
    Platform, which, according to the Ukrainian authorities, brought together
    representatives of over 60 countries and international organizations. 18
    months have passed since the onset of the invasion, Minister Odobescu went on
    to say, but the Russian aggression didn’t start with the war it commenced on
    February 24th 2022, but with the illegal annexation of the Crimean
    Peninsula back in 2014 The latest reckless attacks against the Ukrainian
    ports on the Danube, very close to the Romanian border, have again shown
    Russia’s desire to step up this conflict Odobescu says. We will stand with the
    Ukrainian people and its sovereign right to freely decide its future without
    interventions from outside, the Romanian Minister went on to say. Donetsk is
    Ukraine, Kherson is Ukraine, Luhansk is Ukraine, Zaporizhzhia is Ukraine,
    Crimea is Ukraine.




    Romania
    will continue to support the independence, sovereignty and territorial
    integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders Odobescu says
    adding that Bucharest has stood with the neighboring country since the first
    day of the war and will continue to do so until the ‘final victory’. The
    Romanian official has also mentioned cases of human rights violation in the
    Ukrainian territories occupied by the Russian forces, describing these actions
    as war crimes.




    (bill)

  • May 10, 2023

    May 10, 2023

    EDUCATION Trade
    unions in Romanian public education organise a protest rally in Bucharest today, as a way to sound
    the alarm on the problems facing the Romanian education sector. The unions demand pay raises in the sector, as well as an
    annual increase in investments in order to improve the relevant infrastructure
    and equipment. Unionists also warn that a poll
    is under way among education staff, with respect to an all-out strike starting
    on May 22. Meanwhile, new draft
    education laws are being discussed in the Chamber of Deputies for a first vote,
    after the specialist committee introduced a number of amendments to the
    original bills, including a national plan to curb violence in schools.


    VISIT The PM of the Republic of Korea, Han
    Duck-Soo, is on a visit to Bucharest today, and is scheduled to have meetings
    with president Klaus Iohannis and with PM Nicolae Ciucă. The 2 prime ministers
    are to sign a Memorandum of Understanding between the Romanian Maritime Port
    Authority and the Busan Port Authority. The Korean official is also scheduled
    to have a meeting with the Chamber of Deputies speaker, Marcel Ciolacu.


    DEFENCE The Romanian chief of defence,
    general Daniel Petrescu, is taking part today and tomorrow in the meetings of
    the NATO Military Committee and the EU Military Committee, respectively. Defence
    chiefs from the 31 Allied states, with the Swedish chief of defence as a guest,
    will look at the dynamics of the war in Ukraine. Talks will focus on analysing
    the implementation of measures aimed at strengthening NATO’s defence and deterrence
    posture, ahead of the decisions to be made at the NATO Summit in Vilnius. The
    participants will also look at ways to continue supporting Ukraine. Another
    major topic of the meeting is the analysis of member and partner states’
    participation in EU missions and operations.


    INDEPENDENCE Romania celebrates its
    National Independence Day today. On May 10, 1877, Prince Carol I, who would
    subsequently become the first king of Romania, signed the country’s
    Proclamation of Independence from the Ottoman Empire. The document had been
    read in Parliament the day before by the foreign minister Mihail Kogălniceanu, and
    endorsed by Parliament’s two chambers. The occasion is celebrated in Bucharest
    with a ceremony at the Heroes Monument in front of the National Defence
    University, while military and religious ceremonies are also held in cities
    across the country.


    EUROPE In a message on Europe Day, celebrated on May
    9, president Klaus Iohannis said Romania is a mature and responsible member
    state, with a solid and credible European profile, recognised and appreciated
    by our partners. In turn, PM Nicolae Ciucă said Romania is part of the
    solution to the security challenges that the EU is facing, and that now is the
    time for Romania to be acknowledged as a full Schengen member.




    TRANSPORT The European Commission for
    Transport, Adina Vălean, is in Romania today and tomorrow, to hand over to
    Romanian beneficiaries 2 grants for military mobility, in Constanta, in the presence of the
    Romanian transport minister Sorin Grindeanu, the European Commission announced.
    The two projects concern the design and building of the Ungheni bridge and
    upgrading the railway infrastructure in the port of Constanţa, a critical
    element of the EU – Ukraine solidarity lanes. (AMP)

  • The Romanian Prime Minister visits Chisinau

    The Romanian Prime Minister visits Chisinau

    Founded on Romania’s eastern territories
    annexed by the Stalinist Soviet Union after an ultimatum in 1940, the Republic
    of Moldova proclaimed its independence from Moscow on August 27th
    1991 after the abortive neo-Bolshevik coup against the reforming political
    leader Mikhail Gorbachev. On that very day, Romania became the first country to
    recognize the new independent republic. Since then, Bucharest has been the most
    enthusiastic and staunchest supporter of the Republic of Moldova’s
    independence, territorial integrity and EU aspirations.




    On Thursday, Romanian president Klaus
    Iohannis announced in Brussels that the neighboring republic would receive
    additional support form the European Union. He also proposed that the
    pro-Russian entities in the Republic of Moldova be subjected to European sanctions.




    Also during his visit to Chisinau on
    Thursday, Romania’s Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca reiterated Romania’s
    unflinching support for the Republic of Moldova. The Republic of Moldova has bravely
    embarked on a European journey, and Romania who understands very well the
    stages of this journey, has expressed its full readiness to support its
    endeavor – the head of the government in Bucharest says.




    During the meeting he had
    with Maia Sandu, the pro-West President of the republic, Ciuca says that
    Romania is making efforts inside the EU to maintain the governmental, economic
    and social stability of the Republic of Moldova.


    In turn, Sandu voiced
    gratitude for all the support the Republic of Moldova receives from Romania.




    We have overcome all the
    winter difficulties and this is also thanks to you. We have to carry on the
    country’s stability and provide safety to our citizens. In another development
    we are trying to increase the resilience of our economy so that we can raise
    the living standards in the Republic of Moldova and you have supported us in
    all these dimensions, Maia Sandu says.




    According to President
    Sandu, the Republic of Moldova has a busy agenda in the process of European
    integration. This week will see the European Council’s proceedings and we know
    that Romania is there fighting for the interests of the Republic of Moldova,
    including for the following steps in the process of its European integration,
    Sandu says.




    Prime Minister Ciuca’s
    visit comes after the one paid to Bucharest by his Moldovan counterpart Dorin
    Recean on March 1st. At that time Ciuca hailed what he called the
    excellent level of the bilateral relations and the remarkable dynamics of the
    dialogue between Bucharest and Chisinau. According to the Prime Minister,
    Romania has strengthened its statute as the first trade partner of the Republic
    of Moldova. The bilateral trade, he recalled, went up to 1.2 billion dollars to
    reach 3.6 billion dollars in 2022.


    (bill)

  • January 20, 2023

    January 20, 2023

    ECONOMY This year Romania’s economy is
    also going to be influenced by global uncertainties caused by inflation, the
    escalation of the war in Ukraine, the energy crisis and disrupted supply
    chains. This is one of the conclusions of a report on financial stability
    released by Romania’s Central Bank (BNR). The BNR report also speaks about a
    systemic risk related to delayed reforms and European funds absorption. In
    another development, the BNR urges people to show caution on taking mortgage
    loans because of the risk caused by the growing inflation rate.






    DRUGS Romania has obtained from Brussels a temporary
    suspension for a period of three months in the exports of some drugs from the
    category of anti-flu antibiotics. According to the authorities in Bucharest,
    the measure is aimed at ensuring the continuity of drug supplies to the
    Romanian patients in full season of respiratory infections. Authorities have
    given assurances that the export of medicines manufactured by Romanian
    producers is not being affected.






    REFUGEES According to sources with the Romanian Border Police, 7,229,
    Ukrainian nationals entered Romania on Thursday. According to a press release
    issued on Friday, since February 10th last year, two weeks before
    the Russian invasion, 3,355,594 Ukrainian nationals have entered Romania. Most
    of these only transited the country but 100 thousand decided to remain here,
    the authorities in Bucharest have announced.








    WEF
    While attending the 53rd annual World Economic Forum in Davos,
    Switzerland, Romania’s Foreign Minister, Bogdan Aurescu, held talks with
    representatives of the business world. According to a communiqué issued by the
    Foreign Ministry, during the talks the Romanian official held with Ian Edwards,
    CEO of Canadian company SNC Lavalin and with William Young, chairman of the
    Board of Directors of the aforementioned company, high on the agenda was the
    participation of SNC Lavalin in Romania’s civil nuclear projects, more
    specifically in the process of streamlining Unit 1 and the construction of
    Units 3 and 4 of the nuclear power plant in Cernavoda, south-eastern Romania.
    Minister Aurescu has reiterated the key role, the development of the civil
    nuclear sector has in the national strategy for energy security particularly in
    the present geo-political context when energy independence has become of utmost
    importance. Aurescu has also held talks with Miguel Stilwell d’Andrade, CEO of
    Portuguese group Energias de Portugal, where he underlined the importance of
    boosting investment in developing Romania’s green energy resources.










    (bill)

  • Romania’s assistance for the Republic of Moldova continues

    Romania’s assistance for the Republic of Moldova continues


    Romania will continue to support the neighbouring Republic of Moldova to overcome the crises it is presently facing, the head of the Romanian diplomacy Bogdan Aurescu said in Chisinau on Monday during the visit he paid upon the invitation of his counterpart, Nicu Popescu.


    According to Radio Chişinău, the sides have underlined the importance of developing the interconnectivity of the two countries power grids, of easing crossborder traffic including through the construction of bridges over the Prut River.


    Talks also focused on the implementation of an agreement on non-reimbursable financial assistance of 100 million euros offered by Romania to its neighbour. Projects over more than 25 million have already been homologated


    Also high on the agenda was the process of making the support platform for the Republic of Moldova, initiated by Minister Aurescu jointly with his German and French counterparts, operational. The two officials have also tackled the European roadmap for the Republic of Moldova and Romanias concrete support for this objective, including through opening EU accession negotiations.


    In another development, Minister Aurescu says that he doesnt have information on the risk of a Russian invasion of this country through northern Ukraine as they are now speculating in Chisinau.


    He says that Romania will be taking all necessary measures if need be, but at the moment he doesnt believe the neighbouring country is at risk, as the war Russia is presently waging in Ukraine has reached a deadlock.


    The Republic of Moldova loves Romania for the assistance it provided in difficult times as well as for its strong support in the process of the countrys EU accession, the Moldovan pro-western Prime Minister Maia Sandu recently said around Romanias national day on December 1st.


    She described Romania as “the shoulder you can rely on in times of need, mentioning the countrys main contributions and investments, such as in kindergartens, school busses, scholarships, diesel fuel, vaccine, humanitarian aid, support for modernizing the villages, for improving communication with the loved ones by eliminating the roaming fees, the support given to Moldovan culture and the construction of bridges between the two countries.


    Romania is also loved for the electricity it provides, which brings light to Moldova at a time when Russian missiles are spreading darkness as well as for the Romanian language, which is also the language we grew up with,” the Prime Minister, who also got the Romanian citizenship, went on to say. Created on part of the Romanian eastern territories annexed by the Stalinist Soviet Union following an ultimatum in 1940, the Republic of Moldova proclaimed its independence on august 27th 1991, in the wake of the abortive new-Bolshevik coup against the last Soviet leader, the reformist Michael Gorbachev. On the same day, Romania became the first country in the world to recognize Moldovas independence.


    (bill)


  • Romania’s independence from Russian oil

    Romania’s independence from Russian oil

    Romania no longer relies on Russia’s oil, and the ban
    on imports from that country, which took effect on Monday, will not affect us
    because oil companies have identified alternative resources and are no longer
    buying crude from Moscow. The announcement was made by the energy minister
    Virgil Popescu at a press conference, in which he reiterated that Bucharest has
    enough oil and natural gas reserves to see this winter through. Moreover, the
    minister said, ever since last week oil companies and refineries in Romania
    have only processed non-Russian oil.


    Virgil Popescu: Romania has no natural gas supply problems,
    and you may have noticed that it is gradually becoming a regional natural gas
    hub. Gas is being taken via Romania to Moldova, to Ukraine and to Hungary. In
    other words, Romania is on its own path, on the European path, it is a natural
    gas producer and a future natural gas exporter and will ensure both Romania’s
    and the entire region’s energy security. We have no gas supply problems this
    winter as well. And Romanians must know that we have no problems in terms of
    the oil reserves, of fuels, of natural gas and of electricity.


    In turn, the general manager of the Transgaz
    Natural Gas Transport Corporation, Ioan Sterian, vowed that there is
    substantial domestic gas output and that Romanians have no reasons to fear they
    will be left without resources this winter.


    On the other hand, the shortage of firewood for
    household heating was discussed on Monday in the Chamber of Deputies. The
    environment minister, Tánczos Barna, was invited to Question Time by the AUR
    party in opposition, to speak about the problems caused by the cap on firewood
    prices, and to explain why the legal framework is unchanged although the ruling
    coalition promised they would amend a previous government order. Tánczos Barna said
    the government’s priority was to protect citizens, but admitted that the
    effects of the emergency order were not as desired. According to Tánczos Barna,
    the Romsilva National Forestry Corporation and private owners made available
    this year over one million cubic metres of firewood more than in 2021. He also
    added that the price of firewood varies from one region to another, which is
    why it was capped at EUR 80 per cubic metre, and Romsilva also took measures
    to ensure firewood for next year as well.


    Tánczos Barna: We have put together an investment plan under
    which we will create 178 new firewood storage facilities and will upgrade the 240
    existing centres, operated by Romsilva. In the next 2-3 years we will have an
    investment budget of over EUR 60 million.


    The
    AUR leader George Simion said the
    minister failed to meet the requests for the emergency order to be amended so
    that all citizens may benefit from firewood irrespective of where they live.


    And USR party, also in opposition, accused the
    environment minister of lacking the courage to take the right measures for
    citizens, although the country has all the necessary experts and resources. (AMP)

  • November 18, 2022

    November 18, 2022

    ENERGY Romania will secure its energy independence in 2027 and will even become a provider of security in the region, including for
    the neighbouring Republic of Moldova and Ukraine, said the president of the
    National Energy Regulatory Authority, Dumitru Chiriţă.
    He added that over the past few years Bucharest invested EUR 3 bln in natural
    gas and electricity transport and distribution systems. On the other hand,
    investments in production operations only amounted to EUR 30 mln, but this will
    change as massive funding will be channelled in this sector. According to the Authority, new production
    units will be operational in 3-4 years’ time, with a combined output of over 10,000
    MW, and investors are quite interested in the projects, some of which are
    funded from loans and others from private sources.


    BUDGET The
    government of Romania Thursday approved this year’s second public budget
    adjustment, with approx. EUR 100 million in additional funding. According to
    the government, the budget adjustment covers compulsory spending, operating
    expenses and social assistance expenses. According to the finance minister
    Adrian Câciu, the budget deficit is reduced from 5.84% to 5.74%. A majority of
    funds will be earmarked for the finance, labour, agriculture and economy
    ministries. Also, under the new budget, the energy, transport, public
    healthcare and interior ministries are set to lose part of their funding.


    DEFENCE The
    Romanian defence minister Angel Tîlvăr took part this week in a meeting of
    South Eastern European defence ministers, held in Sofia under the Bulgarian
    presidency of the initiative. The participants analysed the progress in the
    projects organised by this initiative and approved a number of documents
    concerning the planning of SEDM operations. Angel Tîlvăr reiterated Romania’s
    commitment to contribute even more actively to the implementation of the
    initiative’s projects. On the sidelines of the meeting in Sofia, the Romanian
    official had bilateral meetings with his Moldovan, Bulgarian and Georgian
    counterparts.


    UKRAINE
    Over 10 million Ukrainians were left without electricity, especially in the
    Kyiv region, the Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced. Several
    Ukrainian cities, including the capital, were hit by Russian attacks on
    Thursday, concurrently with the first snow in a country affected by blackouts,
    where temperatures may drop to negative 10°C, AFP reports. The resumed shelling
    targeting Ukraine’s energy infrastructure constantly deprives millions of
    Ukrainians of electricity and water supplies.


    MISSILE The
    missile launched by North Korea on Friday had enough range to hit the US, and a
    range capability of 15,000 km, said Japan’s defence minister Yasukazu Hamada,
    quoted by Reuters. The intercontinental ballistic missile reached an altitude
    of 6,000 km and landed roughly 200 km west of a Japanese island. Over the past
    2 months North Korea has tested over 50 missiles, most of them in the
    short-range class. Medium and long-range missiles are a direct threat to the US,
    as they are designed to carry nuclear warheads to the US mainland, the BBC says.


    FOOTBALL
    Romania’s national football team lost 2-1 a friendly game played last night in
    Cluj-Napoca against Slovenia. On Saturday, Romania is to play another friendly
    against the Republic of Moldova, in Chişinău. Romania has failed to qualify to
    the Qatar World Cup and is training for the Euro 2024. The national team will
    play in Group I against Switzerland, Israel, Kosovo, Belarus and Andorra. Meanwhile,
    Romania’s Under-20 football team was defeated by Italy, 2-1, in a friendly
    match hosted by the Romanian city of Arad. (AMP)

  • August 24, 2022 UPDATE

    August 24, 2022 UPDATE

    Ukraine — The “unjustified, unprovoked and illegal” Russian aggression “must stop!” the Romanian President Klaus Iohannis said on the occasion of Ukraines Independence Day, marked on Wednesday. “I reiterate Romanias strong support for and solidarity with Ukraine and with the brave Ukrainian people who are bravely defending their country,” the presidents message writes. A similar message was conveyed by the Foreign Minister, Bogdan Aurescu, who showed that from the very first days after the start of “the worst crisis in Europe in recent decades”, Romania acted to provide assistance to the authorities in Kyiv, and the Romanian citizens “did everything in their power to help Ukraine and the Ukrainian refugees who fled the horrors of war”. In turn, the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky promised that all Ukrainian territories conquered by the Russian troops would be recovered and that Ukraine would fight “to the end” without “any kind of concession or compromise” with Russia. In Washington, President Joe Biden marked Ukraines Independence Day by approving a new military assistance package worth nearly three billion dollars, that will allow Kyiv to acquire air defense systems, artillery and ammunition systems, unmanned air combat and radar systems to ensure that it can continue to defend itself in the long term, according to the press release of the US president.



    Justice laws — The Romanian Government on Wednesday approved the draft justice laws, and their adoption in Parliament will fulfill the main objective within the Cooperation and Verification Mechanism, said the justice minister Cătălin Predoiu. He explained that, in the process of their elaboration, several fundamental principles were followed, such as the independence of judges and prosecutors and the separation of careers taking into account the constitutional functions of each of these professions, the accountability of the Judiciary in relation to its own results and its own functionality, strengthening the coherence of certain provisions and increasing the efficiency of the judiciary by assuming responsibilities. “I think that our judicial system has reached maturity and is able to recognize its own vulnerabilities and address them”, minister Predoiu said. On the other hand, the former Justice Minister, Stelian Ion, a member of the Save Romania Union – USR, in opposition, criticized the justice laws in the Predoiu version, which, according to him, reinforce the political influence and consolidate the power of the anti-reformist network in the judiciary. The draft law for the modification of the Justice Laws was launched for public debate two years ago, a period in which it sparked off numerous debates and criticisms by magistrates associations and civil society.



    Forum — The biggest fear of the Romanian authorities is that the young people who study abroad will not return home, said the Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă in the opening of the 2nd edition of the Forum of the Romanian Students Abroad. “We really want you to return home and work together and assume the responsibility of the country project. (…) we want you to realize that we always need everything that your contribution and vision can mean, because only together can we develop Romania”, the prime minister told the students gathered in Bucharest. The Forum of the Romanian Students Abroad takes place at the Parliament Palace until August 29. The more than 150 students from abroad and from Romania will have the opportunity to debate the relevant problems facing Romanian society and, under the guidance of 11 specialized moderators, they will draft a document through which they will come up with solutions in the fields of education and youth, healthcare, justice, work and economy, European affairs and energy, and the environment. The final proposals will form a Resolution, which will be forwarded to the competent Romanian ministries and authorities. The forum is organized by student and youth associations from Romania and abroad in partnership with the Department for Sustainable Development.



    Protests — The trade unionists from the Romanian police and penitentiaries protested again, on Wednesday, in front of the government headquarters, against the measure proposed by the draft Emergency Ordinance launched for debates last week by the Labor Minister, which provides for the payment of only one fourth of the salary arrears. They remind the authorities that it has been two years since their wages were frozen, a period during which the real cumulative inflation rate exceeded 25%. The trade unionists claim that the government and the coalition have turned their backs on the economic and social demands that concern the police, the contractual employees, military retirees and the entire family of state employees in the ‘Defense, Public Order and National Security’ domains. (LS)

  • August 22, 2022

    August 22, 2022

    CONTRACT A major funding
    contract for the railway network part of the Romania’s National Recovery and
    Resilience Plan (PNRR), a project of roughly 1.75 billion euros has been
    signed. The contract provides for streamlining the Caransebes-Timisoara-Arad
    railway with a total length of 162 kilometers. According to Transport Minister
    Sorin Grindeanu this is a major step towards the modernization of the railway
    network in western Romania, which is part of the European transport corridor
    Orient/East Mediterranean. PNRR funds are going to be used to double and
    streamline the aforementioned railway in order to allow trains to run at 160
    kilometers per hour. The project also provides for the modernization and
    building of railway stations in certain urban areas, building pedestrian
    walkways and adjusting platforms to European standards.








    TALKS Romanian Prime
    Minister, Nicolae Ciuca, Energy Minister, Virgil Popescu, and representatives
    of the National Energy Regulatory Authority have convened to assess further support
    schemes for the population against the background of the latest electricity
    price hikes. These are to be applied after March 31st, until when
    household and non-household consumers are benefitting from subsidized gas and
    electricity depending on their consumption. The government wants to invest in
    new energy infrastructure projects aimed at exploiting local resources. In
    another development, the executive in Bucharest might endorse this week an
    emergency ordinance providing for another pay rise for state employees.
    According to Finance Minister Adrian Caciu, the rise has already been applied
    in the country’s education and medical sectors and will soon be applied in the
    other sectors of the economy.






    WEATHER
    Meteorologists have again issued yellow and orange alerts for unstable weather
    and heavy rain in almost the entire Romanian territory. Until Tuesday night most
    of the regions are to see thunderstorms, heavy downpours, gale force winds and
    in some areas hail. The heat index will remain high in south-eastern
    Romania.


    PROGRAMME The
    Environment Fund Administration (EFA) in Romania is expected to launch next
    week a programme for scrapping vehicles older than 15 years. Under the
    aforementioned programme owners can get 600 Euros without the obligation of
    buying a new vehicle. Half of the sum will be covered from the EFA funds and
    the rest from local budgets. Through its National Plan of Recovery and
    Resilience, Romania pledges to get rid of 250 thousand old polluting vehicles
    by 2026.






    TENNIS Romanian
    tennis player Irina Begu on Sunday qualified for the round of 16 of the WTA 250
    tournament in Cleveland USA, which has over 250 thousand dollars in
    prize-money. The Romanian secured a two-set win against US challenger Peyton
    Sterns and she will be up next against the winner of the game pitching Sofia
    Kenin of the USA against other qualified player. Another Romanian in the
    competition, Sorana Cirstea will be playing fourth-seeded Elise Mertens of
    Belgium.






    UKRAINE The invading Russian
    army has again shelled objectives in several regions of Ukraine. The southern
    city of Mykolaiv has been struck by several S-300 missiles and the region of
    Odessa has been attacked with rockets fired from vessels in the Black Sea. The
    city of Nikopol close to the nuclear power plant in Zaporizhzhia has been hit
    by scores of artillery shells amid growing fears of a potential nuclear
    disaster in the region. US president Joe Biden on Sunday held talks with French
    president Emmanuel Macron, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and German
    chancellor Olaf Scholz about the safety of Ukraine’s nuclear power plants and
    the support they can provide to this country. In Kyiv, president Zelensky has cautioned
    against potential large-scale attacks by Russian troops around Ukraine’s
    Independence Day, which marks the country’s breaking ties with the former USSR.
    The event takes place on August 24, six months from the onset of the Russian
    invasion. In another development, another two ships loaded with Ukrainian grain
    bound for Istanbul have been authorized to leave the Ukrainian Black Sea ports
    under the UN-brokered agreement signed by Ukraine, Turkey and Russia.






    (bill)

  • 10 May in Romanian history

    10 May in Romanian history


    10th
    of May has a threefold significance in the history of Romania,
    marking three important moments: the country’s independence from
    the Ottoman Empire, the arrival of Carol of Hohenzollern
    Sigmaringen in Bucharest and his enthronement.





    10th
    May is National Independence Day. The Russian-Turkish war that broke
    out in April 1877 was an ideal opportunity for Romania to shake off
    its official status as a vassal state to the Ottoman Empire. Although
    the country’s independence was proclaimed in Parliament, it also
    needed to be won on the battlefield. The Romanian troops under the
    command of Carol I had a decisive contribution to the Russian-Turkish
    war, and the proclamation of Romania’s independence was one of the
    most important moments in this king’s reign. The Congress of Berlin
    of 1878 confirmed Romania’s absolute independence from the Ottoman
    Empire.





    In
    a statement issued on 10th
    May, Romanian president Klaus Iohannis said the sacrifices of our
    forerunners were the foundation of European Romania: It is now our
    duty to support and defend the values and principles we share with
    our
    Euro-Atlantic partners, said
    Iohannis. He added that the development of Romania’s culture,
    industry, transport and infrastructure, as well as international
    relations were the immediate and direct gain of the independence. He
    said that event is all the more important today as we are witnessing
    a rebirth of the imperialist mentality on behalf of which a state is
    subjected to barbarian aggression. President Iohannis emphasised that
    freedom, every nation’s right to choose and forge its own destiny
    and the protection of life and dignity are fundamental elements of
    the democratic community we are part of. Prime minister Nicolae Ciucă
    also issued a statement on 10th
    of May, saying that during these complicated times, membership of
    NATO and the European Union puts Romania under full protection of its
    irreversible pro-European choice, as consolidated by the
    trans-Atlantic partnership.





    10th
    of May was also Romanian Monarchy Day. From 1866 until 1947, when the
    communists came to power, 10th
    of May was Romania’s national day, marking the start of the
    48-year-long reign of Carol I, the first of Romania’s four kings.
    With the approval of the French emperor Napoleon III and Prussian
    king William I, prince Carol set off to Romania, arriving in
    Bucharest on 10th
    May 1866. On 10th
    May 1881, Parliament voted that the country become a kingdom, with
    Carol becoming Romania’s first king. The celebration of 10th
    of May was first banned in 1917 by the occupying German
    administration, and later by the communists after the forced
    abdication of King Michael in 1947. (CM)

  • 30 years of diplomatic relations with Ukraine

    30 years of diplomatic relations with Ukraine

    February 1 marks the
    celebration of 30 years since Romania and Ukraine established diplomatic
    relations. The ex-Soviet republic proclaimed its independence in 1991, with
    formal diplomatic relations between the two countries initiated the next year. Romania
    was also the first EU member state to ratify the EU-Ukraine Association Agreement in
    2014.


    In this context, but also amid
    disquieting security developments in the Black Sea region, the president of
    Romania Klaus Iohannis had a telephone conversation with his Ukrainian
    counterpart, Volodymyr Zelensky.


    During
    the talks, the Romanian official dwelled extensively on possible solutions to
    issues related to the rights of the Romanian minority in Ukraine, and
    especially on protecting their linguistic identity. He reiterated Bucharest’s firm
    support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and to its EU and
    NATO accession efforts.


    The
    Romanian president also emphasised his support for the non-recognition of the
    illegal annexation of Crimea, and commended Ukraine’s responsible conduct to
    avoid the escalation of tensions.


    In turn,
    the Ukrainian official thanked Romania for its vocal and active support
    both at EU and at NATO level.


    The Romanian and Ukrainian
    foreign ministries also exchanged messages of congratulations. Romania’s
    foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu stressed the importance of the relation with
    Ukraine and reiterated Romania’s commitment to developing bilateral relations,
    in the spirit of European values and in line with the European and
    Euro-Atlantic agenda of the ex-Soviet republic. He also voiced hopes that the
    open and solid dialogue between the two countries, which he has constantly
    promoted and supported, will lead to quick and sustainable solutions to the
    identity issues faced by the ethnic Romanian community in Ukraine. He also highlighted
    the commitment to stepping up cross-border cooperation in areas of mutual
    interest.


    The Romanian foreign
    ministry also reiterated Romania’s support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and
    territorial integrity and for its right to decide freely on its foreign and
    security policy. At the same time, the Romanian authorities voiced confidence
    that the Ukrainian people’s democratic aspirations will be a driving force for
    the reform process in Kyiv.


    The
    situation remains tense at Ukraine’s border with Russia, where Moscow massed
    over 100,000 troops and military equipment and,
    according to analysts, is preparing an invasion. Russia denies this, but it did
    ask NATO to pull out its troops from Romania and Bulgaria, as part of its
    security plans. Moreover, Russia’s president Vladimir Putin warned
    that Ukraine’s NATO accession may trigger a war between Moscow and the
    North-Atlantic Alliance. (A.M.P.)

  • Geopolitics in the inter-war years in Romania

    Geopolitics in the inter-war years in Romania


    Europa is a continent of cultures and nations created
    by the Greek and Latin world and by Christianity afterwards. It is the most
    widely-accepted definition of Europe as it was laid out by most of those who
    wrote about Europe, in a bid to decipher its secrets. In time, the
    aforementioned cultural values made it possible for the geographical distances
    to shrink. Nations lying quite afar from one another or even at the farther end
    of the map discovered themselves mutually and even came closer to one another,
    whenever historical circumstances allowed it. Even though they were part of the
    same Eastern European Soviet Bloc for 45 years, Romania and Estonia belong to
    different geo-cultural areas, to South-eastern and Northern Europe,
    respectively. Between 1500 and 1878, Romania was under the influence of the
    Ottoman Empire. In turn, Estonia, between 1560 and 1710 was part of Poland and
    Sweden, and part of Tsarist Russia, between 1710 and 1918.


    Throughout the years, Romanians’ contacts with the
    Estonians were scarce, and that for a good reason. Very few people travelled
    from one place to another before the emergence of the railroad in the 19th
    century. The privilege of traveling was for a limited number of professional
    categories. They were the merchants, the diplomats and the military. To that
    end, the mutual knowledge of the nations was superficial or existed hardly at
    all. A century of Romanian – Estonian diplomatic relations has been marked as of
    late. Doru Liciu is Head of the Foreign Affairs Ministry’s diplomatic archives.

    Dr Doru Liciu:


    As early as the mid-19th
    century, Romanian travellers reached Estonia, while Estonian travellers reached
    the Romanian Principalities, via various organizations belonging to the former
    Russian empire. Once the Russian Empire was dismantled, Estonia proclaimed its
    independence in 1918, an undertaking Romania acknowledged immediately
    afterwards. In 1921, the diplomatic relations were decided, between the two
    countries. Contacts between the two countries dated from the previous
    historical period, even earlier, from World War One, when part of the Russian
    troops that fought in Romania were made of soldiers and officers coming from
    the Baltic countries.


    There was indeed a Romanian personality who, even
    before World War One, had strong ties with Estonia. He was Mari Ion Pelivan
    (1876 – 1954), a legal adviser, a columnist and a Bessarabian deputy with a
    seat in the Parliament of then Greater Romania. Pelivan would graduate from the
    University of Tartu’s Law School in 1903. The post-World War One period, known
    as the Inter-war period in Romania, brought the two nations closer to one
    another.


    However, the most significant binding element for the two
    nations was the then Soviet Union’s aggressive presence. The newly-instated
    communist power in Moscow never ceased to claim territories that were once part
    of Tsarist Russia, but which the Soviet Union had relinquished, in the wake of
    Lenin’s decision whereby each nation on the Russian territory should have the
    right to decide their own fate. Estonia,
    just like the two other Baltic countries, Lithuania and Latvia, was at that
    time building bridges with everybody. One such bridge linked Estonia to
    Bucharest.

    Doru Liciu:


    Subsequently, the two embassies were
    opened and both were functioning, in the inter-war period, in the capitals of
    the two countries. For quite a long time, services as part of the Romanian
    embassy in Estonia were provided by a resident minister in Warsaw, and from
    there, the most relevant pieces of information about Estonia were conveyed.
    Later, embassies were opened, in Tallin but also in Bucharest.


    Through the famous Molotov-Ribbentrop pact or the
    Hitler-Stalin pact signed on August 23, 1939, Eastern Europe was divided
    between Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia. Ob June 16, then the USSR issued
    Estonia an ultimatum, demanding its consent for the Soviet army to be deployed
    there, and for a Pro-Soviet government to be instated. The Estonian government
    rejected the proposal and the following day, June 17, the USSR occupied the
    country and instated the communist regime. On August 16, 1940, Estonia was
    annexed to the USSR. In the same vein, nine days later, on June 26 and June 27,
    1940, the Soviet Union issued two ultimatums to Romania, demanding the
    retrocession of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina. Regimes of terror reigned
    supreme in those countries for the following 45 years. 1940 is the year when
    the Romanian-Estonian relations ceased.

    Doru Liciu:


    Unfortunately,
    the aftermath of all that was just as we know it, the Baltic States were
    brutally occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940, the same year when Romania had
    to cede part of its historical territory, which until 1812 had no connection
    whatsoever with, and was in no way part of then the Russian Empire. During the
    Soviet regime, there was no state-level contact, Estonia, as a republic, became
    part and parcel of the Soviet Union. We all know that from Estonia,
    intellectuals would come to Romania, as well as traditional ensembles, fine
    artists who had their works on display in the country. Likewise, in
    Estonia, rather seldom, but somewhat regularly, Romanians were present, coming
    from various walks of life.


    Once the communist regime was toppled in 1989 and once
    Estonia gained its independence in 1991, Romania resumed it relations with
    Estonia. Bilateral relations were enhanced especially when both states
    gained their NATO and EU accession.

    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)