Tag: Ministry for Romanians Abroad

  • Support for Romanians in Ukraine

    Support for Romanians in Ukraine

    On Thursday the Romanian Government adopted concrete measures to
    support the ethnic Romanian students and their teachers in the neighboring
    Ukraine. Therefore, the best one thousand students will receive from the
    Romanian state monthly scholarships amounting to 200 lei, that is around 50
    Euros. Also 300 teachers from the Romanian schools in Ukraine will be able to
    attend teacher training and development courses in the universities of Cluj
    (northwest), Suceava (northeast), Iasi (east) and Galati (center east).

    Those
    who can enroll in these courses are the teachers who hold diplomas allowing
    them to be teachers on the territory of Ukraine and who can provide documents
    proving that they have declared their Romanian identity. The candidates will be
    selected by the higher education institutions that organize the training
    courses, with the support of the associations, organizations and foundations of
    ethnic Romanians in Ukraine.

    These measures, initiated upon the proposal of the
    Ministry for Romanians Abroad, are meant to ensure the observance of the right
    to linguistic identity for the ethnic Romanians in Ukraine, through means that
    should provide tuition in their mother tongue, writes a communiqué of the
    aforementioned ministry. Bucharest is thus trying to mitigate the effects of
    the new Ukrainian education law, which was passed last autumn and which largely
    restricts the ethnic minorities’ right to education in their mother tongue.

    According
    to that law, children belonging to the ethnic minorities in Ukraine will be
    able to study in their language only in kindergarten and primary school.
    Starting with secondary school, they will have to study exclusively in
    Ukrainian. This month, the Romanian Foreign Minister Teodor Melescanu proposed
    to his Ukrainian counterpart Pavlo Klimkin that Romania and Ukraine draft a
    common document on the implementation of the Ukrainian education law.
    Previously, Minister Melescanu and his counterparts from Hungary, Bulgaria and
    Greece had signed a joint letter in which they expressed concern with and
    profound regret over the passing of the new education law in Ukraine.

    The
    Romanian education minister Liviu Pop traveled to Kiev to make a plea against
    this law. In a declaration voted unanimously in Romania’s Parliament, Bucharest
    officials called for the re-examination of the law and warned that they were
    following ‘very closely and with concern’ the developments generated by the
    provisions of this law. In turn, the Romanian President Klaus Iohannis decided
    to postpone his visit to Kiev. Analysts consider Bucharest’s concerns
    absolutely legitimate, given that almost half a million ethnic Romanians live
    in Ukraine, most of them in the eastern Romanian territories annexed in 1940,
    following an ultimatum, by the former Soviet Union. The territories were taken
    over by Ukraine as a successor state in 1991.

  • November 22, 2017 UPDATE

    November 22, 2017 UPDATE

    LANGUAGE – The Romanian Government passed on Wednesday a series of measures aimed at granting direct support to the Romanian ethnics who study in their mother tongue in the neighbouring Ukraine and also to the teachers who teach courses in the Romanian language. The measures, proposed by the Ministry for the Romanians Abroad, consolidate the legal framework that allows for educational support from Romania for the Romanian ethnics in Ukraine. The Ministry for the Romanians Abroad will continue dialogue with the Ukrainian side, in trying to promote and protect the minorities’ right to study in their own language. The purpose is to find solutions so that the Romanian ethnics’ right to linguistic identity be respected.




    EC — The European Commission has established that Romania took no effective action in response to the EU Council’s recommendation of June to correct its significant deviation from the adjustment path towards the medium-term budgetary objective, according to a EC release on Wednesday. In this context, the Commission proposes that the EU Council should adopt a revised recommendation to Romania, of an annual structural adjustment of at least 0.8% of the GDP in 2018. The European Commission recommends Bucharest to use any windfall gains for budget deficit reduction, while the budgetary consolidation measures should secure a lasting improvement in the general government structural balance, in a growth-friendly manner. Romania must report to the EU Council by April 2018 on the action taken in response to the EC’s recommendation.




    WAR CRIMES — Former Bosnian Serb army leader Ratko Mladic was sentenced to life in prison on Wednesday after being found guilty of genocide, for atrocities committed during the Bosnian war from 1992 to 1995.The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) convicted Mladic of crimes it labelled as some of the “most heinous” in human history. Mladic, aged 75, is responsible for the slaughter of 8,000 unarmed Bosnian Muslim men and boys in the town of Sebrenica and for his role in the conflict in the former Yugoslavia, during which 100,000 people were killed and another 2.2 million displaced. Mladic had pleaded not guilty to all charges. His legal team said he would appeal against the verdict.




    SMART CITIES – Romania is a good place for investors, but there are two things that scare business people off, namely, the unpredictable legal system and the bribes, Romanian President Klaus Iohannis said on Wednesday in Ploiesti, in the south. Taking part in the debate “Romania’s cities 100 years since the Great Union. A smart future for Ploiesti”, the head of state signalled again the fact that the government’s so-called fiscal reform created confusion likely to affect investors’ confidence. Iohannis also said that the concept of smart city means a more active involvement of the citizens in the local governing and the communitys life.




    PARLIAMENT — The no-confidence motion introduced by the right wing opposition against the ruling coalition in Bucharest will be debated and voted on in full Parliament session on Thursday, as decided by the two chambers on Wednesday. The motion calls for the resignation of the cabinet headed by the Social Democrat Mihai Tudose, who is accused of sparking confusion in the economic environment and the legal system, as well as of lowering the living standard of the population. In response, PM Tudose claimed that the fiscal reform will bring more money to the budget and the pension fund, while companies will benefit from simplified procedures.




    PARADE — About 3,500 Romanian and foreign soldiers take part in the December 1st parade in Bucharest for Romanias National Day, the Defense Ministry announced on Wednesday. 50 aircraft will fly over the city’s Triumphal Arch, with 300 vehicles being part of the parade. December 1st marks the moment, right after WWI, when Greater Romania was formed of formerly divided territories with a majority Romanian population. This date was proclaimed the national day after the 1989 regime change in Romania.




    FAIR – The 24th edition of the Gaudeamus – Book of Learning International Fair, organized by the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Corporation, opened on Wednesday in Bucharest. It features 300 participating companies and over 800 editorial and professional events. The honorary president of the fair is Matei Visniec, a French based writer and journalist from Romania while the honorary guest this year is the European Commission. The event marks 60 years from the signing of the Rome Treaties, three decades since the launch of the Erasmus program, and 10 years since Romania joined the EU.


    (Translated by Elena Enache)