Tag: inspection

  • Home stretch in Romania’s Schengen accession?

    Home stretch in Romania’s Schengen accession?

    A major foreign policy goal, Romania’s accession to
    the passport-free travel area has been on Bucharest’s to do list for quite a while now. Confident that once the technical
    criteria have been met, the accession would be a mere formality, Romania did
    its homework well and on time, so in March 2011, when the move had been
    scheduled originally, it had checked all the boxes.


    But the country’s Schengen accession has been
    postponed repeatedly since then, because of the opposition of several
    countries, which explained their decision by making the accession conditional
    on the Cooperation and Verification Mechanism, in spite of the accession
    recommendation coming from the European Commission.


    The topic is now back to the forefront, and Romania’s
    chances of finally getting a positive decision on this seem better than ever. Germany,
    one of Europe’s strongest voices, made it quite clear, both through chancellor Olaf
    Scholz, and the political groups in the European Parliament, where only 2 MEPs
    from the far-right group Identity and Democracy spoke against Romania’s and
    Bulgaria’s accession.


    At the recent debate in the European Parliament, the
    Czech presidency of the EU Council voiced hopes that in the December meeting it
    would secure unanimity for the accession of the 2 countries. Romania has
    already proved what had to be proved, including in practical terms, with its
    management of the aftermath of Russia’s invasion in Ukraine.


    A proof that things are moving in the right direction
    is the visit made these days by an EC expert team, checking the 2 countries’ readiness
    to join the Schengen area. The European inspectors are monitoring border
    checks, the asylum and migrant return policies, and the extent to which the
    staff is trained in line with Schengen regulations.


    The Schengen accession was also the topic of a meeting
    between the PM Nicolae Ciucă and the Romanian MEPs in the ruling coalition
    (comprising the National Liberal Party, the Social Democratic Party and the
    Democratic Union of Ethnic Hungarians). They assured the PM of the support of
    the main groups in the European Parliament for next week’s resolution
    concerning the issue.


    Meanwhile, the interior minister Lucian Bode called on
    politicians to declare a truce and to work together to ensure Romania’s
    admission to Europe’s unrestricted travel area as of January 1. He made these
    statements in Buzău, southern Romania, at the opening of a new unit of the
    Multinational Schengen Training Centre, where thousands of experts have already
    been trained.


    In the context of accession preparations, the PM of
    the Netherlands, Mark Rutte, is also expected to visit Romania on Wednesday and
    to meet with president Klaus Iohannis. In recent years, the Netherlands has
    been the only country to oppose Romania’s Schengen accession. (AMP)

  • Ciolos Cabinet Faces New Crisis

    Ciolos Cabinet Faces New Crisis

    In the last five years the Romanian Intelligence Service submitted some 100 notifications regarding irregularities in the Romanian public healthcare system, including the issue of in-hospital infections. Health Minister Patriciu Achimas Cadariu is the first to fall victim in the huge public scandal related to the use of diluted disinfectants in hospitals. A journalists investigation had previously revealed that disinfectants had a concentration up to ten times lower than what is admitted as standard.



    Six months after taking office, Achimas-Cadariu chose to resign as Health Minister, unhappy with how the Government chose to manage the crisis. On Saturday, Prime Minister Dacian Ciolos called on the Health Ministry to resume its investigation, and to double-check the concentration and effectiveness of all the products used for disinfection in every hospital in the country.



    Non-compliant samples had already been identified in 50 hospitals, and have now been resubmitted for testing. The Prosecutor Generals Office has launched a separate investigation, searching the headquarters of HexiPharma, the company distributing the disinfectants. Prime Minister Ciolos wants to change the legislation and take measures that should expose the many serious issues facing the health care system.



    Dacian Ciolos: “I want to use the next 6 months to also take other structural measures which, even though they cannot thoroughly reform the healthcare system, will at least reveal the problems of the system. And I want to assure everybody that I will not hide anything from anybody, I will not lose sight of anything. I intend to set up a team of professionals who know the system well, some from within the system and others outside it, so as to have a better and clearer understanding of what can be done in 6 months. And Im determined to do that.



    On the one hand, on short term, the authorities need to make Romanians regain confidence in the healthcare system. On the other hand, they need to take measures to upgrade the obsolete hospital infrastructure by building new hospitals with the help of European funds. Management irregularities should also be addressed, which requires the reconsidering of the way management contracts in public hospitals are observed as well as the regulations subordinating hospital units to central and local authorities.



    According to the PM Dacian Cioloş, in the last 7 years Romania has had at least 10 successive health ministers and none of them was able to reform the system so as to prevent such large-scale scandals.