Tag: military

  • June 3, 2022

    June 3, 2022

    UKRAINE 100 days have passed since the start of the Russian invasion in
    Ukraine. Since February 24, Russia has captured a sizeable part of its
    neighbouring country’s territory, but the Ukrainian army has put up a tougher
    resistance than most experts had expected. Russian forces now control around
    20% of the Ukrainian territory, the Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said
    in his midnight address, which has become a tradition since the start of the
    war. He added that the entire occupied territory is now a disaster area, and
    Moscow is fully responsible for this. Violent clashes continue, especially in eastern
    Ukraine, where Russia tries to capture Donbas. The fiercest battles are
    currently fought in the town of Severodonetsk, the most important one still
    controlled by the Ukrainian forces in Luhansk region. Russian forces have
    resorted to intensive shelling, including on civilian targets, having
    completely destroyed several Ukrainian cities, such as Mariupol, captured after
    3 months’ fighting, and Severodonetsk, where two-thirds of the homes are in
    ruins. Russia has suffered substantial losses, over 30,000 dead and thousands
    of pieces of equipment according to Ukraine, but it still retains superiority
    in the field. Moscow is also superior in terms of heavy weaponry, but as of
    recently Ukraine is receiving this type of weapons from its Western supporters.


    MILITARY Romanian troops and Allies from 5 European
    countries and the USA are taking part in a multinational exercise at the
    Smârdan NATO Centre in eastern Romania. As part of the exercise, today a drill
    is organised in which NATO military use land and air equipment. Taking part in
    the training operation, which started on May 24, are over 1,000 Romanian
    troops, joined by military personnel from France, Belgium, Bulgaria, Italy,
    Portugal and the US. The training session is designed to enhance
    inter-operability, so as to enable the Multinational Brigade South-East Command
    to manage forces deployed to NATO’s south-east region to protect the Alliance,
    the national defence ministry explains.


    AID The government of Romania will grant
    EUR 140 in aid next month to pensioners whose retirement benefits do not exceed
    EUR 400. The measure was approved on Thursday and is designed to help the most
    vulnerable pensioners cope with the recent price rises. The government is also
    working on an emergency order increasing the value of meal vouchers.


    JUBILEE Britain is celebrating these days the Platinum Jubilee of Queen
    Elizabeth II, the monarch with the longest reign in the history of the country.
    The Royal Family convene today for a religious service at St. Paul’s Cathedral,
    celebrating the Queen’s 70-year rule,
    however the sovereign will not be present after experiencing discomfort while
    watching Thursday’s parade at Buckingham Palace. On Thursday London hosted a
    large-scale military parade, with 70 aircraft, some of
    them used during WWII, flying over the crowds.


    FILM The 3rd edition of the Romanian Film
    Festival in Washington, the largest event promoting Romanian cinema in the USA,
    begins on June 3rd at Miracle Theatre. Organised by the Embassy of
    Romania to Washington and the Romanian Cultural Institute in New York, the festival
    is devoted to the 25 years since the signing of the Strategic Partnership
    between Romania and the USA. Screened as part of the event, under the heading Reinventing
    realism: the Romanian New Wave, are 12 feature films: Blue Moon,
    Berliner, The Windseeker, Poppy Field,
    Mikado, Unidentified, #dogpoopgirl, Luca,
    Man and Dog, Lebensdorf, Otto the Barbarian, and Miracle. The festival
    will come to an end on June 19. (AMP)

  • April 17, 2022 UPDATE

    April 17, 2022 UPDATE

    EASTER Catholic and
    Protestant Christians celebrate the Resurrection of Christ. At the Vatican,
    Pope Francis once again called for peace, describing Easter as the gift of hope
    during the Mass held in a basilica with thousands of believers. On Sunday, the
    service took place in San Pietro Square after 2 years of Covid-related
    restrictions. For Orthodox and Greek-Catholic believers, who celebrate Easter
    next weekend, it was Palm Sunday, commemorating the moment when Jesus Christ
    entered Jerusalem. In Romania, a mostly Orthodox country, nearly one and a half
    million people celebrated their name day on Sunday. President Klaus Iohannis
    wished happy and peaceful holidays to all those who celebrate Easter or Palm
    Sunday.


    UKRAINE As of midnight
    Russian vessels are no longer allowed to enter EU ports, Romanian ports
    included. The ban also covers ships that replaced the Russian flag with the
    colours of another state after February 24 when the war in Ukraine started, but
    not those which need assistance or shelter for safety reasons or those which
    have saved lives at the sea. In an interview to Sunday’s issue of the German
    magazine Bild am Sonntag, the head of the European Commission Ursula von der
    Leyen said the next stage of EU sanctions will target Russia’s oil and banking
    sectors, particularly the country’s largest bank, Sberbank. She added that
    Brussels was working on smart mechanisms to include Russian oil in the new list
    of sanctions, so as to reduce the financing for Vladimir Putin’s invasion army.
    EU member states are currently paying for Russian gas and oil via Sberbank and
    Gazprombank, which have so far been exempt from Europe’s sanctions, Reuters
    explains. The EU announced on Sunday that EUR 50 million would be earmarked for
    humanitarian aid to be sent to Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova. Some EUR 45
    million will go into humanitarian programmes in Ukraine, while the Republic of
    Moldova, where hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have taken refuge since the
    start of the war, is set to receive EUR 5 million.


    REFUGEES The number of Ukrainian nationals who reached
    Romania on Saturday was 12.4% higher than on the previous days, the Romanian
    border police announced. Since the start of the crisis, over 730,000 Ukrainian
    citizens have entered the country, most of them leaving Romania for other
    destinations.


    POLL The Church ranks first in a public confidence
    poll in Romania. The survey conducted by CURS at the end of March indicates
    that 67% of the respondents trust the Church, up 4% since January. The Army, on
    the other hand, has lost 8% in the same survey. The most significant increase
    in public confidence was reported for the National Bank of Romania, with 42% of
    the respondents saying they trust the central bank, as opposed to half this
    figure in January. The poll was commissioned by the National Liberal Party and
    has a +/- 1.9% margin of error.


    DIPLOMACY The Romanian Foreign Ministry celebrates 25 years
    since the Joint Statement on the Romania-Italy Strategic Partnership was
    signed. The genuine friendship between the 2 countries is facilitated by the
    presence of over 1 million Romanians in Italy, making up the largest foreign
    community in that country and also the largest Romanian community abroad, reads
    a news release issued by the institution.


    NORTH KOREA North Korea announced
    the successful test firing of a new type of tactical guided weapon aimed at boosting
    the country’s nuclear capabilities, which may indicate that Pyongyang is ready
    to resume nuclear testing. North Korea suspended nuclear testing in 2017, and
    the following year it blew up the tunnels in its underground nuclear test site,
    but recent satellite imagery indicates digging and construction activities have
    been resumed.



    INVICTUS A
    group of 20 Romanian military wounded in battle fields are taking part in the
    one-week long Invictus Games, hosted his year by The Hague in the Netherlands.
    They will compete in 7 sports, 6 of them individual competitions (hand archery,
    athletics, rowing, powerlifting, cycling
    and swimming) and a team sport (sitting volleyball). The
    Invictus Games promote respect and empathy for the sacrifice and traumas of
    wounded military, whose involvement in these activities is an opportunity for
    social reintegration and for regaining self-confidence, the Romanian Defence
    Ministry says. For Romanian troops, this year’s Invictus participation is the
    third, after the ones in Toronto, in 2017, and Sydney, one year later. (AMP)

  • Government sets up task force on Ukraine

    Government sets up task force on Ukraine


    Romania supports an immediate end to the military attack on Ukraine, to enable diplomatic efforts to be resumed, PM Nicolae Ciucă said. “What we see is an unprovoked aggression against a sovereign and independent state, a member of the United Nations. The Russian Federation has chosen armed force to fulfil revisionist political goals,ˮ Nicolae Ciucă added. He emphasised that Bucharest stays constantly in dialogue with its NATO allies and EU partners.



    Mr. Ciucă Thursday set up a government task force to handle the situation triggered by the military conflict in Ukraine. The main responsibilities of the group are to monitor the situation and to coordinate the measures taken by governmental agencies in order to make sure that all public services are operating.



    According to the PM, the relevant governmental agencies are prepared to take over possible refugee inflows. “We reiterate our solidarity with the Ukrainian nation, and we are ready to provide humanitarian aid to those in need. We are monitoring the situation of the Romanian nationals in Ukraine and we are prepared to provide consular assistance and support through the inter-institutional task group with the Foreign Ministry,” the head of the Romanian government added.



    Romanian authorities say Romania could receive 500,000 Ukrainian refugees. In a first stage, they will be hosted in camps located in 4 counties, namely Maramureş (north-west), Botoşani (north-east), Suceava (north-east) and Tulcea (south-east). But other counties as well, such as Braşov (centre), Galaţi (south-east) and Vaslui (east), voiced willingness to accommodate refugees.



    Meanwhile, many Ukrainian citizens, mostly of Romanian descent, have already reached Romania, trying to escape the war. Most of them come from border areas.



    On the other hand, PM Nicolae Ciucă emphasised that Romania benefits from the strongest security guarantees in its history. He pointed out that Romania, along with its fellow EU member states and with its NATO allies, especially in light of its strategic partnership with the US, is part of the most robust protection umbrella comprising the worlds democracies.



    “The security and safety of Romanian citizens are in no way affected,” Mr. Ciucă promised. He also said that the authorities have made sure that Romania has enough natural gas stocks to cover the demand during the cold season. “We are constantly monitoring and measuring natural gas imports and exports on all routes in the country, to make sure we can take any measure required to secure steady gas supplies,” the prime minister explained. (A.M.P.)


  • Romania’s foreign minister invited to Parliament

    Romania’s foreign minister invited to Parliament


    Romanias embassy in Kyiv is fully operational, the Romanian foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu announced.



    Invited by the foreign policy committees in the Senate and Chamber of Deputies to present the security developments in the Black Sea region, the minister said a procedure was put into place to bring back into the country the families of the diplomatic staff at the Romanian embassy in the capital Kyiv and the consulate general in the Black Sea port city of Odessa, in the south of Ukraine.



    The other 2 consular offices, located in Solotvino, in Transcarpathia, and in Cernăuţi, in northern Bukovina, both of them in the west of Ukraine, are not covered by this procedure, thanks to the higher security level in those regions, the minister explained.



    Aurescu added that all the embassies of EU member states in Kyiv apply the same logic, and it was important for Ukraines western partners to convey a coherent message.



    Last week, the Romanian foreign ministry announced raising the alert level for Ukraine. With the steady Russian military buildup at Ukraines border, the Romanian authorities firmly recommend that Romanian nationals avoid travelling to that country and pay close attention to regional developments. They also urge Romanian citizens in Ukraine to reconsider remaining there.



    Avoiding travels to the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea, annexed by Russia in 2014, to the regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, where pro-Russian secessionists play a major role, and to Ukraines borders with Russia and Belarus, is also highly recommended.



    The authorities also urge Romanian nationals, including journalists, to avoid large crowds, to stay up to date with information from reliable sources and to promptly adjust their plans to the security situation.



    Bucharest used all the official channels, from the presidency to the government and foreign ministry, to affirm its support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders. As a NATO and EU member state, Romania has joined in the sanctions against the Russian Federation.



    According to Romanian mass media, in the case of a Russian invasion in Ukraine, Bucharest is also taking into account the management of an inflow of refugees from that state.



    The Romanian community is Ukraine, totaling over 400,000 people, is mostly located in northern Bukovina, northern and southern Bassarabia and Hertsa County, all of them former Romanian territories annexed by the former USSR in 1940 and incorporated into Ukraine in 1991, after the fall of the Soviet Union. (A.M.P.)


  • February 13, 2022 UPDATE

    February 13, 2022 UPDATE

    UKRAINE Germany considers increasing its
    economic aid to Ukraine, but still refuses to supply it with weapons, DPA
    quotes a governmental source in Berlin as saying. The announcement comes ahead
    of a visit by chancellor Olaf Scholz to Kyiv on
    Monday and to Moscow on Tuesday, in the
    context of the Russian-Ukrainian standoff. Meanwhile, the US has started pulling out its OSCE
    staff from the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk, controlled by pro-Russian
    separatists, Reuters reports. The US and many of its allies are urging their citizens to leave Ukraine, warning that a
    Russian invasion may be imminent. The Romanian foreign ministry has raised the
    alert level for Ukraine and advises Romanian citizens to avoid travelling to
    that country. Romanian nationals currently in Ukraine are urged to notify their
    presence to Romania’s embassy or consular offices and to reconsider staying in
    that country. The foreign ministry also calls on Romanian citizens, including
    journalists, to avoid big crowds, to stay up to date with information from
    reliable sources and to adjust their plans to the security situation there.


    NATO Meanwhile, US Stryker
    armoured vehicles have reached the Mihail Kogălniceanu military base in
    southern Romania, where 1,000 US troops will also be relocated from Germany to
    strengthen NATO’s eastern flank. With the arrival of Task Force Cougar, the number of American troops in Romania
    reaches nearly 2,000. France
    has also voiced willingness to deploy troops to Romania. A NATO member since
    2004, Romania was already hosting 900 American, 250 Polish and 140 Italian
    troops. A unit of the US Air Forces in Europe (USAFE), comprising around 150
    troops and 8 F-16 Fighting Falcons, are conducting joint training missions with
    Romanian troops and aircraft for 2 weeks. A senior Pentagon official also announced the US decided to send an
    additional 3,000 troops to Poland as well.


    COVID-19 The number of new COVID-19
    cases continues to drop in Romania, with nearly 12,000 new cases reported on
    Sunday and 81 related deaths. Over 1,140 patients are currently in intensive care. The
    largest number of infections since the start of the pandemic, 40,018, was reported on February 1. The health minister Alexandru Rafila said the number of new reported
    cases remains high, although it is falling quickly, and once again pleaded for
    vaccination, especially among vulnerable categories. As for lifting the
    restrictions, the health minister did not specify a deadline, but stressed that
    relaxation will be as quick as the situation allows it. In turn,
    the head of the vaccination programme Valeriu Gheorghiţă said that in the
    future vaccination will be seasonal, just like for the flu, and the vaccine
    will be adjusted to the variant circulating at a particular time. He
    also said the vaccination rate in Romania stands at 50.5% of the adult
    population.



    PANDEMIC This weekend
    restrictions were eased off in Italy, Spain and Iceland, while France and Germany are planning to do the same in the
    coming weeks. Norway lifted the last protection measures in the country in
    spite of a rise in the number of Omicron cases. However, the protests initiated
    by truck drivers in Canada 2 weeks ago, and spreading to several other
    countries on Saturday, are still going on. European drivers headed to major
    capital cities to protest the compulsory vaccine and digital certificate. Protests
    were organised in the Netherlands, Switzerland, Australia and New Zealand. (A.M.P.)

  • February 13, 2022

    February 13, 2022

    UKRAINE In the context of the
    Russian-Ukrainian standoff, the Romanian foreign ministry has raised the alert
    level for Ukraine and advises Romanian citizens to avoid travelling to that
    country. The foreign ministry firmly recommends avoiding travels to Crimea, to
    the Donetsk and Luhansk regions and to Ukraine’s borders with Russia and
    Belarus. Romanian nationals currently in Ukraine are urged to notify their
    presence to Romania’s embassy or consular offices and to reconsider staying in
    that country. The foreign ministry also calls on Romanian citizens, including
    journalists, to avoid big crowds, to stay up to date with information from
    reliable sources and to adjust their plans to the security situation there. A
    growing number of countries, including the US, Britain and Germany, are urging
    their citizens to leave Ukraine, as Western powers warn that a Russian invasion
    may be imminent. Moscow has massed around 100,000 troops and military equipment
    along the Ukrainian border and started military exercises at the Black Sea and
    in Belarus, but denies any aggressive plans. The US president Joe Biden has
    once again warned the Russian leader Vladimir Putin, over the telephone, of the
    prospective consequences of an invasion.


    NATO Meanwhile, US Stryker armoured
    vehicles have reached the Mihail Kogălniceanu military base in southern Romania,
    where 1,000 US troops will also be relocated from Germany to strengthen NATO’s
    eastern flank. With the arrival of Task
    Force Cougar, the number of American troops in Romania reaches nearly
    2,000. France
    has also voiced willingness to deploy troops to Romania. A NATO member since
    2004, Romania was already hosting 900 American, 250 Polish and 140 Italian
    troops. A unit of the US Air Forces in Europe (USAFE), comprising around 150
    troops and 8 F-16 Fighting Falcons, are conducting joint training missions with
    Romanian troops and aircraft for 2 weeks. A senior Pentagon official also announced the US decided to send an
    additional 3,000 troops to Poland as well.


    COVID-19 The number of new COVID-19 cases
    continues to drop in Romania, with nearly 12,000 new cases reported on Sunday
    and 81 related deaths. Over 1,140 patients are currently in intensive care. The largest number
    of infections since the start of the pandemic,
    40,018, was reported on February 1. The health minister Alexandru Rafila said the number of new reported cases remains high,
    although it is falling quickly, and once again pleaded for vaccination,
    especially among vulnerable categories. As for lifting the restrictions, the
    health minister did not specify a deadline, but stressed that relaxation will
    be as quick as the situation allows it. In turn, the head of the
    vaccination programme Valeriu Gheorghiţă said that in the future vaccination
    will be seasonal, just like for the flu, and the vaccine will be adjusted to
    the variant circulating at a particular time. He also said the
    vaccination rate in Romania stands at 50.5% of the adult population.


    PANDEMIC This weekend restrictions were eased off in Italy, Spain and
    Iceland, while France and Germany are planning
    to do the same in the coming weeks. Norway lifted the last protection measures
    in the country in spite of a rise in the number of Omicron cases. However, the
    protests initiated by truck drivers in Canada 2 weeks ago, and spreading to
    several other countries on Saturday, are still going on. European drivers
    headed to major capital cities to protest the compulsory vaccine and digital
    certificate. Protests were organised in the Netherlands, Switzerland, Australia
    and New Zealand. (A.M.P.)

  • February 11, 2022 UPDATE

    February 11, 2022 UPDATE

    NATO Romania, as a NATO member country and strategic partner of the US,
    benefits from all the security guarantees that it needs, in the context of the
    most serious crisis since the fall of the Iron Curtain. The statement was made
    by Romania’s president Klaus Iohannis on Friday, during a visit he made
    together with the NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and the Alliance’s
    Deputy Secretary General, Mircea Geoana, at the military base in Mihail
    Kogalniceanu, south-eastern Romania. The officials met with military personnel
    from allied nations deployed to Romania. In his turn, Stoltenberg said
    the presence of NATO troops in Romania is important because it is a powerful
    demonstration of NATO unity. Around 1,000 American military were relocated to
    Romania, amid concerns raised by the Russian military build-up at the Ukrainian
    border. France has also voiced willingness to deploy troops to Romania. A NATO
    member since 2004, Romania was already hosting 900 American, 250 Polish and 140
    Italian troops. A unit of the US Air Forces
    in Europe (USAFE), comprising around 150 troops and 8 F-16 Fighting Falcons, will
    have joint training missions with troops and aircraft of the Romanian
    Air Forces for 2 weeks, as of Friday. According to a news release, the US
    aircraft will also conduct enhanced air policing missions, jointly with Romanian
    troops and with the Italian Air Forces unit deployed to Romania in December.


    CORONAVIRUS The number of new Covid-19 infections continues to drop in Romania.
    On Friday, the Group for Strategic Communication announced 22,737 new cases and
    132 deaths, five of which from an earlier date. The Romanian authorities
    consider easing the restrictions taken in the context of the pandemic, but in a
    gradual manner, as did the countries that have already overcome the peak of the
    current wave, the head of the Department for Emergencies, Raed Arafat, said.
    The number of new cases is dropping, and if we stay on this trend, we could be
    restriction free by Easter, Arafat said. In turn, the head of the immunization programme,
    Valeriu Gheorghita, said that in the future vaccination against Covid-19 will
    be seasonal, just like the flu vaccine, and adjusted to the strain in
    circulation at a particular moment. The vaccination rate among adults stands at
    50.5% in Romania at present, Valeriu Gheorghita said.


    MOLDOVA A number of bilateral documents were signed in Chisinau on
    Friday after a joint meeting of the Romanian and Moldovan governments,
    including an inter-government agreement under which Romania is to provide EUR
    100 million worth of non-reimbursable aid. The Romanian PM Nicolae Ciucă and
    his Moldovan counterpart Natalia Gavriliţa also signed a joint statement on
    strengthening cooperation in economy and investments. Other agreements concern
    the building, maintenance, repair and use of a cross-border bridge in Ungheni,
    and roaming and international call tariffs, cooperation in energy security,
    digitisation, research and innovation and defence, justice and home affairs. The
    Romanian PM emphasised that this is the most substantial openness ever seen in
    bilateral relations, and promised that Romania will remain a determined and
    vocal supporter of the Republic of Moldova’s EU accession efforts. In turn,
    Moldova’s PM Natalia Gavriliţa
    said her Cabinet has undertaken to provide a predictable and attractive
    environment for investments in the country, in line with European best
    practices.Nicolae Ciucă was received by the president of Moldova, Maia Sandu, to
    whom he conveyed Romania’s full support for the reforms she initiated in the
    judicial field in particular.


    TENNIS The Romanian tennis player Irina Begu (56 WTA) Friday defeated
    Tereza Martincova (42 WTA) of the Czech Republic, 6-4, 6-2, and qualified into
    the semis of the Sankt Petersburg tournament. Martincova had won (6-7, 6-4,
    6-4) her only previous match against Begu, in Tashkent in 2019. (A.M.P.)

  • February 10, 2022 UPDATE

    February 10, 2022 UPDATE

    MILITARY President Klaus Iohannis and NATO’s secretary general Jens Stoltenberg
    will visit the Mihail Kogălniceanu Air Base 57, the Romanian Presidency
    announced. The 2 officials will also discuss with the troops deployed to the
    military base and subsequently will have a joint press conference. Military
    equipment for the US Task Force (TF) Cougar has already reached Romania. TF
    Cougar will primarily consist of a
    Stryker squadron relocated from Germany to Romania to protect the region in the
    context of the Russia-Ukraine standoff. President Iohannis said
    after a visit to the Headquarters Multinational Brigade South-East on Thursday
    that the US and France deciding to strengthen their military presence in Romania
    is a ‘firm sign of the coherence and consistency of Euro-Atlantic solidarity’ and
    invited other Allied countries as well to consider contributing troops to the
    multinational structures in Romania.


    DRILLS Russia and Belarus Thursday began 10 days of military exercises near
    the border with Ukraine and Poland. According to the Russian defence ministry, the drills are aimed at the tasks of repelling
    external aggression while conducting a defensive operation, countering
    terrorism and protecting common interests.
    NATO is concerned that the Russian military build-up in Belarus is part of a
    plan to attack Ukraine. Moscow denies plans to invade Ukraine, and says it will
    pull out its troops from Belarus as soon as the drills are over. According to Radio
    Romania’s correspondent in Moscow, Russia relocated troops and equipment from
    as far as Siberia and the Far East, 10,000 km away, for the exercise in
    Belarus.


    GOVERNMENT The governments of Romania and the Republic of Moldova will hold their
    first joint meeting in Chişinău on Friday, with the Romanian PM Nicolae Ciucă scheduled
    to also have talks with president Maia Sandu and the Moldovan parliament
    speaker Igor Grosu. A joint action and solidarity plan for the energy sector
    will be put together within 6 months of signing a joint memorandum on energy
    security, which is scheduled for Friday, the Romanian government spokesman Dan
    Cărbunaru said. He added that a bill was passed on the mutual recognition of
    diplomas. Over 12,000 students and 2,000 pupils from Moldova are currently
    attending Romanian schools. The 2 governments are also to sign an agreement on
    Friday concerning the building, maintenance, repair and use of a cross-border
    bridge in Ungheni. Another agreement between the 2 states will concern roaming
    and international call tariffs.


    ECONOMY Romania’s economy went up by 6.3% in 2021, thanks to a
    sound domestic demand, but the pace will slow down to 4.2% this year, to reach
    4.5% in 2023, according to the winter economic forecast released by the
    European Commission on Thursday. Last autumn the EC estimated Romania’s GDP
    would grow by 7% in 2021, with rates of 5.1% and 5.2% forecast for 2022 and
    2023 respectively. The most recent data concerning confidence in the economy
    indicate positive, although moderated economic growth prospects, especially in services,
    retail, constructions and industry. Private consumption is also expected to
    recover in the second half of the year, when restrictions will be eased out and
    inflation will slow down. Meanwhile, the EC substantially adjusted its 2022
    inflation forecast for Romania, from 4% estimated in November to 5.3% this
    winter, after a 4.1% inflation rate in 2021.


    TENNIS The Romanian tennis player Irina Begu Thursday managed a
    spectacular win against Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic, 6-4, 6-0, which
    secured her a place in the quarter-finals of the WTA 500 tournament in Sankt
    Petersburg, Russia. Another Romanian, Jaqueline Cristian, lost to Aleksandra
    Sasnovich of Belarus, 6-2, 6-3, and left the competition. (A.M.P.)

  • February 7, 2022 UPDATE

    February 7, 2022 UPDATE

    COVID-19
    Bucharest extended the COVID-19 related state of alert in the country for
    another 30 days, beginning on Monday, February 7. Face covering remains compulsory
    both indoors and outdoors. In places with infection rates below 3 per
    thousand, cinema and theatre
    halls as well as restaurants may operate at 50% of their capacity, with the
    ceiling going down to 30% in places with infection rates above this level. An
    emergency order also extends the deadline for filling in the digital forms for
    entering the country, from 24 to 72 hours. Nearly 17,000 new
    Covid cases were reported in Romania on Monday, along with 81 related
    fatalities. In the capital Bucharest the incidence rate continues to rise,
    reaching 32.75 per thousand on Monday. The vaccination rate is close to 42% in
    urban communities and around 30% in the countryside. Only 8 million adults are
    fully vaccinated so far.


    RESIGNATION The president of USR party in opposition, Dacian Cioloş, Monday
    announced his resignation. The decision came after the party’s National Bureau
    convened on Monday rejected Cioloş’s plans to change the structure and
    operation of the party, with 14 votes against and 11 in favour. Dacian Cioloş, who
    had been elected to office in October, when the right-of-centre USR and PLUS
    parties had merged, warned his colleagues that he would step down unless his
    restructuring plan was implemented. USR vice-president Cătălin Drulă will take
    over as interim party president.


    DIPLOMACY The Romanian foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu said there was no danger of
    Romania being drawn into a military conflict with the Russian Federation.
    Romanian citizens need not worry that we will be dragged into a war close to
    our country, he said in an interview on a private television channel. There
    is at the moment a very powerful security umbrella, which provides all possible
    guarantees for the security and stability of Romania and its citizens, and this
    umbrella is the NATO membership, adding to which is the very strong strategic
    partnership with the US, minister Aurescu mentioned. If Russia attacks
    Ukraine, he added, responses will come both from NATO, which will consolidate
    its eastern flank, and from the EU, which will introduce a substantial set of
    economic and individual sanctions targeting the political decision-makers in
    Russia. In turn, the head of the Information and Public Relations Directorate
    with the Defence Ministry, brigadier general Constantin Spînu, said that the crisis in Ukraine is not a security
    situation that directly concerns Romania or any other NATO member state. Romanians and all other nations in the Euro-Atlantic
    space should not feel directly threatened, gen. Spînu said.


    AGRICULTURE Romania’s agriculture minister Adrian Chesnoiu rules out a
    possible food crisis in Romania and a food rationing scenario. He says the
    authorities are looking for solutions to support both citizens and farmers.
    Chesnoiu also says that authorities are considering the options of introducing
    ceilings on food prices or of stabilising and balancing prices.

    WASTE
    The number of border checkpoints where waste can be brought to Romania for
    recycling will be reduced to 15, and all shipments will have to be entered in
    an electronic register as soon as possible, the environment minister Tánczos
    Barna announced on Monday. The authorities want to make sure that waste is not
    misplaced or discarded in unauthorised places. Last year alone, more than 500
    offences related to waste imports were identified, and over 15,000 tonnes of
    mixed waste were prevented from entering the country, the interior minister Lucian
    Bode said in his turn.


    OLYMPICS Natalia Ushkina, Romania’s representative in
    the biathlon contest has ended the competition on the 57th place in the
    individual 15 km race at the winter Olympics in Beijing. In
    the giant slalom event, Maria Ioana Constantin also from Romania, has come out
    45th, while another Romanian, Raluca
    Strămăturaru, is ranking 30th after the first 2 legs of the luge event. At the current
    edition of the winter Olympic Games, Romania is being represented by 21
    athletes. (A.M.P., D.B.)

  • 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.)

  • January 27, 2022 UPDATE

    January 27, 2022 UPDATE

    LAWS – The Bucharest Government amended on Thursday, in its third meeting this year, the Road Traffic Law and introduced much tougher sanctions for aggressive drivers and for drivers who endanger traffic safety, such as the suspension of the driving license for 4 months for speeding. Also on Thursday, the Government approved the financing contract signed by Romania with the European Investment Bank, worth 305 million euros, for funding the Cluj Regional Hospital (north-west). Another law on the government’s agenda established a new state aid to reduce the excise duty on diesel fuel used in agriculture.



    COVID-19 — The Health Minister, Alexandru Rafila estimates a sharp increase in the number of Covid cases as of next week, going as high as 40,000 per day. He also said numbers could start to drop around February 10. According to Rafila, the healthcare system is under high pressure in some regions, with the county of Cluj having the highest hospital bed occupancy rate of 68%. When the rate exceeds 75%, school will go online. Thursday was the second day in a row with over new 30,000 cases. 71 deaths were also reported.



    VISIT— The Romanian Defense Minister, Vasile Dîncu, said on Thursday, fresh from a meeting in Bucharest with his French counterpart, Mrs. Florence Parly, that Romania is in a special partnership with France. He said that Romania can count on France’s firm support which was confirmed by the recent statement of President Emmanuel Macron, who announced that his country was ready to contribute NATO troops to Romania. Romania is concerned about recent developments in the region and hopes that dialogue and understanding between the sides in conflict will prevail – said Minister Vasile Dîncu. The French Defense Minister, Mrs. Florence Parly, says Romania is entitled to strengthen its security in the context of tensions in Ukraine. The French official gave assurances that France is willing to further contribute to the security of its European partners, as part of NATO missions, especially in Romania. The French official had meetings with President Klaus Iohannis and the Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca.



    MINISTER – The National Liberal Party (PNL), part of the ruling coalition, will propose Marcel Bolos for the position of Minister of Research, Innovation and Digitalisation. He was nominated on Thursday by the party’s Political Bureau. Bolos was a minister of European funds, is an economist and also a priest, after graduating, after the age of 40, from the Orthodox Theology Faculty. The minister seat remained vacant after the resignation of Liberal Florin Roman.



    UKRAINE — Russia says that the proposals of military transparency and arms control made by the US and NATO are insufficient for its security concerns. The first reaction to the answer sent Wednesday to Moscow came from the Russian Foreign Minister, Serghei Lavrov. While the document – delivered by the US in coordination with NATO does not address Russias “main concern” about the alliances expansion, Mr Lavrov said it “gives hope for the start of a serious conversation” on secondary questions. This is Russia’s clear stand, that the further NATO enlargement towards the East and the deployment of offensive weapons that threaten the Russian territory are inadmissible. On Wednesday the United States and NATO presented written answers to Russias request that NATO should withdraw its troops from Romania and Bulgaria and not accept Ukraine and Georgia among its allies. The US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that NATO is not abandoning its open door policy and proposed Moscow a diplomatic way to avoid war. NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg also believes that a political solution to the crisis is still possible if Russia makes efforts to deescalate tensions.



    HOLOCAUST – On Thursday, January 27, on the International Holocaust Remembrance Day or the International Day in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust, the Romanian Foreign Ministry officials paid tribute to the victims of the Holocaust, a tragic chapter in history and expressed solidarity with the survivors of the World War II atrocities. The Romanian Foreign Ministry officials have shown that Romania is one of the countries that has assumed its own past and is committed to keeping its memory alive for future generations, to protect the remaining survivors and to fight anti-Semitism and any manifestations of intolerance and discrimination. (EE)

  • Supreme Defence Council discusses security situation

    Supreme Defence Council discusses security situation




    As a member of the
    strongest political and military alliance in history, Romania benefits from all
    the security guarantees, president Klaus Iohannis pointed out at the end of the
    meeting of the Supreme Defence Council, which looked at the security situation
    at the Black Sea and on NATO’s eastern flank and at measures to develop the
    country’s response capacity to new security challenges.


    The current crisis
    created by Russia is not only about Ukraine, not only about regional security
    at the Black Sea and not even about European security alone, but rather about
    the security of the entire Euro-Atlantic area, Klaus Iohannis said. He emphasised
    that the escalation of tensions and Russia’s massive military build-up around
    Ukraine and in the Black Sea region affect security and stability at
    international level, making unity and solidarity within NATO and the EU all the
    more important.


    We have run a comprehensive
    analysis of the situation, including the military, economic and energy
    implications, as well as implications in terms of uncontrolled migration, the
    president explained. He mentioned that Romania’s border with Ukraine is over
    600 km long and the country must make sure it is prepared for any scenario-including
    the situation where Moscow refuses further diplomatic dialogue, which plays a
    critical role in defusing the crisis, Klaus Iohannis also said.


    He reiterated that NATO’s
    steps to strengthen its military presence on the eastern flank are a strictly defensive
    response to the growing security risks, threats and challenges in the region:


    Klaus Iohannis: Consolidating the Allied presence on NATO’s
    eastern flank, including in Romania, is very important to regional stability
    and to the security of the Alliance as a whole and of the citizens of the
    Allied states. Regardless of the current developments in the region, NATO must
    keep its defence and deterrence capacity at a high level, enabling it to
    efficiently meet the strictly defensive-and I repeat, strictly defensive-goals for
    which the Alliance was created in the first place.


    The Supreme Defence
    Council agreed on a number of important measures for the current security
    crisis, such as carrying on the efforts to enhance the NATO and US presence in
    Romania and the management of prospective refugee inflows. (A.M.P.)

  • Enhanced NATO presence on the eastern flank

    Enhanced NATO presence on the eastern flank

    The military tensions at the Russian-Ukrainian border are at the centre of talks between Western and Russian officials, in an attempt to find a peaceful solution. Russia presented the US and NATO with a list of demands related to security, but no progress has been made in this respect since the talks last week. Moscow denies planning to invade its neighboring country, but has massed almost 100,000 military close to the Ukrainian border. The Kremlin said through the voice of its spokesperson that the Americans threat to impose drastic sanctions against Russia is not helping.



    On Thursday, US President Joe Biden gave assurances that if any Russian troops enter Ukraines territory, the move would be considered an invasion, which, he said, would trigger severe and coordinated economic response. In his turn, the US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that the Western powers are united in front of the Russian threat, a unity that gives them the force which Russia is lacking and cannot match. In his turn, French President Emmanuel Macron voiced his availability to participate with troops, as part of NATO, to defend the East European countries whose security is threatened by Russia. Macron mentioned Romania, where an enhanced presence of the NATO troops is to be decided. He said: ˮWe have shown our readiness to move forward, within NATO, to engage in new missions and to take responsibility for enhanced advanced presence missions, especially in Romania.ˮ



    The Romanian President, Klaus Iohannis, hailed the announcements of his American and French counterparts as regards their availability to participate in enhancing military presence in Romania, if the security situation deteriorates. In his turn, the Romanian Foreign Minister Bogdan Aurescu said that the announcements of the American and French heads of state are very important and are proof of the two countries solidarity and strong commitment to Romania. Bogdan Aurescu also said these announcements are concrete results of efforts and diplomatic actions which the Romanian President, the Romanian diplomacy and other decision makers have made lately. According to Bogdan Aurescu, the American commitment is very important for the Euro-Atlantic security as a whole, which the Black Sea region is a part of. Aurescu emphasized the need to continue, in a coherent and unitary manner, the efforts to strengthen the allied deterrence and defense posture on the eastern flank. Against this background, he emphasized the fact that the unjustified threat with violence and the attempts to undermine the current parameters of European security are unacceptable. (EE)


  • Tension is mounting along Romania’s neighboring borders

    Tension is mounting along Romania’s neighboring borders


    The build-up of Russian forces
    along Ukrainians borders has been extremely carefully monitored as of late,
    amid fears that Moscow could prepare a sweeping attack, to be launched in January
    next year, most likely. Russia has already strengthened its presence in the
    region with tanks and almost 100,000 military. The military deployment is ongoing,
    and tension is mounting. What we failed to carry through in 2014, we’re now prepared
    to achieve, the White House leader warned his counterpart in Kremlin. The US
    president pointed to the likelihood of Russia invading Ukraine yet again, which
    is quite similar to the invasion that resulted in Russia illegally annexing
    Crimea. As part of a secured video conversation Joe Biden had with Vladimir
    Putin, the US President cautioned that, should Russia invade Ukraine for a second
    time around, the US and the European allies will respond with strong economic
    sanctions. Washington is set to supply Ukraine with more defensive equipment, while the allies’
    position along NATO ‘s eastern flank will be strengthened. On the other side,
    Vladimir Putin stated his army threatened nobody. Putin has also called for guarantees
    to be offered, whereby NATO would not expand to the East, that is to Ukraine. Moscow
    has accused NATO of the swift destruction of Europe’s security architecture, that
    including the anti-missile shield in Romania and Poland. Moscow also accused NATO
    of having deployed its military infrastructure as far as the Russian borders. As
    a guest on a Radio Romania International programme, Professor Alba Popescu of the
    National Defense University gave details on the geo-political context in the
    region.


    Dr Alba Popescu:

    In fact,
    the underlying cause is the localization of this region from a geographical
    perspective, the so-called Ponto-Baltic isthmus some of geography specialists
    say it is Europe’s real border. A strip of land between the Baltic Sea’s southern
    coast and the northern coast of the Black Sea, between the Moravian gate-way
    and the Caucasus Mountains, which, from a geopolitical perspective, make a buffer
    area lying between the power which for centuries has been controlling Eurasia’s
    centrality area and which now bears the name of the Russian Federation, and, on
    the other side, the dominant powers of Atlantic Europe. A space which,
    geographically, is dominated by the flatlands which make the Russian
    Federation’s western frontier. Hence the problem, since it is the federation’s
    most vulnerable frontier. Furthermore, it is a space of a tremendous
    geo-strategic value because it is a territory that can turn into a barrier or
    into a gateway capable of facilitating or, on the contrary, stemming the flows
    between Europe and Asia, between the northern and the southern part of the
    continent. So it is a space, which, in geopolitical and geostrategic terms, is
    called a pivotal space, a hub and a nexus, geoeconomically and geopolitically,
    so it is Eurasia’s most valuable space from a geostrategic perspective.


    In Moscow’s terms, if the
    confrontational drift is to be prevented, the imperious condition is that
    of the long-term security guarantees with a mandatory legal value, whereby, for
    the future, any expansion of NATO towards the east is ruled out, as well as the
    deployment along the Russian borders of weaponry capable of threatening Russia’s
    security. Moscow’s stance to that end is closely linked to Russia’s security
    ring. Here is Professor Alba Popescu once again, explaining all that.


    Dr Alba Popescu:

    The security ring is made of
    those state and aquatic massifs surrounding Russia, that terrestrial colossus which
    is ring-shaped, so to speak. The Russians believes that security ring to be a
    space where their influence is exerted by default, it is a space of a vital and
    strategic importance for them. So everything getting
    closer to their frontier is viewed as a direct threat. Therefore, that security
    ring is the red line. The states of the security ring include Ukraine, then
    there are also the trans-Caucasian states, Moldova, Belarus. All those states are part of the security ring. Consequently,
    whenever Russia detects an advancement or an attempt from those states to stray
    away from the Russian influence and place themselves under the Western influence,
    Russia would take action under such circumstances. And, as we have seen it
    before, it was quick to take action to that effect in the 1990s. After the empire
    was dismantled, it orchestrated all those conflicts, which are frozen and
    reactivated periodically, as we could see. We’ve seen that happening in Ukraine
    as well, we also saw it happening in Georgia, in Nagorno-Karabakh…So things are
    developing on a large scale in the region. And all that has to do with Russia’s
    impending objective, a strategic objective, with a by now historical tradition,
    that of dominance in the region, which, as early as Tsar Peter
    the 1st’s reign, has been one of the eastern power’s set targets and which
    today are materialized in the hybrid action the Russian Federation takes in the
    Ponto-Baltic region. In the Pontic region, where we are, and, of course, in the
    Baltic region, where the targets are different, the Baltic States, then there
    are also Poland and Sweden. So that’s what that type of behaviour is about, a
    type of behaviour which has become increasingly aggressive, actually.


    The
    conflict in Ukraine won’t be sorted out, as far as I’m concerned, says Alba
    Popescu. Russia does not have any interest whatsoever, neither to rekindle it, in
    the coming period, or to sort it out, one way or another, with Ukraine having
    to remain in that grey area, alongside the other states. According to NATO, the
    very idea is unacceptable, whereby Russia can have its own sphere of influence,
    says NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg. The very idea of bringing up such an issue
    prompts us to enhance our vigilance, such an idea is unacceptable, the idea
    whereby Russia could have its spheres of influence there. That might mean we must
    effectively admit that Russia can control what its neighbouring states can do, despite the fact that those states are sovereign states, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg went on to say.


    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)

  • National Day, celebrated in Romania and abroad

    National Day, celebrated in Romania and abroad

    On the 1st December 1918, in Alba Iulia,
    central Romania, Transylvania joined the Kingdom of Romania, and that day is
    now celebrated by all Romanians as National Day.


    More than a century later, Romanians everywhere marked
    their National Day amid restrictions entailed by the coronavirus pandemic. In his
    address, president Klaus Iohannis said the country’s main goals are democracy, a
    future within the EU and strengthening the rule of law, so as to produce prosperity
    for all citizens. We are celebrating National Day at a time of suffering and concern.
    The COVID-19 pandemic is still the painful reality of our times, said Klaus
    Iohannis, but he also sent a message of encouragement, respect and gratitude:


    Klaus Iohannis: The lesson of solidarity is more useful and timely than
    ever. History has proved, time and again, that united we can adapt to any trends
    and occurrences and that overcoming all challenges depends on our determination,
    as a nation. Just like in so many other critical moments in our past, we have today
    the necessary resources, the right instruments and the will to succeed. So I urge
    you all to look ahead with hope!


    In Bucharest, some 1,500 troops and over 100 vehicles
    took part in the traditional military parade at the Arch of Triumph, while
    around 30 military aircraft flew over the city. It was the second parade since
    the pandemic broke out, but the first that the public were able to attend.


    Thousands also attended the military parade in Alba
    Iulia, in which over 500 troops, accompanied by land and air combat equipment,
    took part. The ceremonies continued with folklore performances and a drone show.


    In Timișoara (west), National Day was celebrated with
    a military and religious ceremony, followed by a brief march by the Guard of
    Honour.


    On the National Day of Romania, we thank you for your
    friendship and for all the good things we have done and will do together in the
    future, the president of the neighbouring Republic of Moldova Maia Sandu said
    in a message.


    Celebrations were organised around the world, either
    by Romania’s diplomatic offices abroad or by Romanian communities. In Israel, National
    Day was marked in Tel Aviv by Romanian and Israeli officials, who praised the
    bilateral relations and the growing cooperation between the 2 countries.

    The Romanian
    Embassy in Italy organised a concert in the presence of over 600 Romanian and
    Italian politicians, diplomats, and other participants. Romania’s National Day reminds
    us, first and foremost, of the will of our forefathers, of our cultural,
    political and diplomatic elites, to fight for the ideal of national unity, the
    Ambassador of Romania to London, Laura Popescu, said in turn in a message to
    all Romanians. (tr. A.M. Popescu)