Tag: minors

  • March 19, 2023

    March 19, 2023

    VISIT The president of Romania Klaus Iohannis, currently
    on an official visit to the United Arab Emirates, has traveled today to Masdar
    City, a model of sustainable urban development with solutions centered around
    energy efficiency and environment protection. The Romanian official was presented
    solutions for transport and urban cooling and ventilation, building energy
    generation and optimum usage of natural light in schools and research
    institutions. The solutions tested in Masdar City may be an inspiration for
    other cities increasingly interested in sustainability, including in Romania. Contributions
    to these solutions come, among others, from Romanian researchers as well,
    affiliated to research institutes in Masdar City, the Romanian presidency said
    in a news release. President Iohannis will be in the UAE until Tuesday, at the
    invitation of his counterpart, Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan. The main
    goals of the visit include strengthening the political and diplomatic dialogue
    on topics of mutual interest, encouraging bilateral economic relations, which
    are already on a significant positive trend, and attracting investments in the
    Romanian economy through projects in fields like infrastructure, energy,
    climate change, cybersecurity and food security.


    REFUGEES The Romanian Border Police Inspectorate General
    announced that on Saturday as many as 86,342 people entered Romania using
    border checkpoints around the country. Of them, 8,510 were Ukrainian nationals.
    Since February 10, 2022, two weeks before the Russian invasion of their
    country, nearly 3.8 million Ukrainian citizens entered Romania. Most of them have travelled
    further on to western European countries, but around 100,000 of them have
    chosen to stay in Romania, according to the authorities in Bucharest.


    CHILDREN Border police prevented over 5,300 Romanian
    underage nationals from crossing the border out of the country in 2022, because
    their parents or the adults accompanying them were unable to produce the
    documents required for taking minors out of the country. The interior ministry
    announced on Sunday that the number is twice as big as in the previous year. Also,
    since the beginning of 2023, more than 800 Romanian minors have been stopped at
    the border because they lacked valid travel documents, the accompanying parent
    lacked the consent of the other parent or because the adults accompanying them,
    other than their parents, failed to present clear criminal records. Under the
    law, underage Romanian nationals can only leave the country based on a valid
    travel document, passport or identity card, provided that they are accompanied
    by an adult and have the consent of their parents.


    RUGBY Romania’s
    national rugby team takes on Spain today in a match for the 3rd
    place in Rugby Europe Championship 2023, the second-tier European competition
    after Six Nations. The match is played in Badajoz, Spain. The competition final,
    pitting Georgia against Portugal, is played tonight as well. In August Romania’s
    rugby team is scheduled to play test matches against Georgia and Italy, ahead
    of the World Cup in France, organised between September 8 and October 28. Romania will play in Group B, alongside Ireland, South Africa,
    Scotland and Tonga.


    HANDBALL Romania’s women’s handball champions, Rapid Bucharest, are
    playing today away from home against Slovenia’s Krim Ljubljana, in the first
    leg of the playoffs for the Champions’ League quarter-finals. The second leg
    takes place in Bucharest. This is Rapid’s first presence in the Champions’
    League, and the match against the Slovenian champions is also the team’s first
    march in European competitions with the Danish manager Kim Rasmussen, who
    replaced Carlos Viver (Spain). 150 Romanian fans will attend the game. If they
    qualify into the quarter-finals, Rapid will be facing Kristiansand (Norway). Romania’s
    vice-champions, CSM Bucharest, have already qualified into the quarter-finals,
    where they will take on the winner of the playoff between the French side Brest
    and the Danish team Esbjerg. (AMP)

  • Legal establishment projects targeting minors and families in Romania

    Legal establishment projects targeting minors and families in Romania

    The Brasov-based Tribunal for Minors and Family was
    established in 2004. It was Romania’s s first such judicial establishment. It
    was aimed as a pilot-project and was meant to stand as a model for identical
    projects that were supposed to be carried all over the country until 2007, at
    least in Romania’s major cities. It is just that, in 2022, the Tribunal for
    Minors and family in Brasov is still a singular court, specializing in dealing
    with civil and criminal cases where minors are involved.


    All along, there have been voices pleading for the
    dismantling of the Brasov-based court, on the grounds that its activity is
    untenable. Financial reasons for its dismantling have been mentioned, among
    other things, whereby the scope of the court was way too narrow as compared to
    the human and material resources required for its functioning. In a recent
    public discussion, hosted by PressHub.ro, the current president of the Tribunal,
    judge Gabriela Chihaia, brought up her own reasons against the dismantling of
    the aforementioned tribunal.


    First off, on the premises at the Brasov-based Tribunal
    for Minors and Family a special room was set up for the hearing of children. Through
    the care of an association titled Women Get Involved, through sponsorship and
    donations, the hearing of minors was made possible, for various cases they are
    involved in, in a much friendlier environment, with relaxing, lively-colored
    interior design and furniture. Children can experience traumas whose aftermath
    can be long-lasting in their lives, so an environment where they can feel
    relaxed is of utmost importance, when the hearing procedure is ongoing in
    court.

    Judge Gabriela Chihaia:


    ʺIn an environment that is different from the court
    room, which is austere, arid and where a certain set of procedures needs to be
    followed, with people having to stand up the moment the court enters the hall
    or when the petitioner and the respondent are appealed, with the culprit who
    can be deprived of freedom and kept in custody or can be be subject to house
    arrest or placed under judicial control or can be even free, being present in
    the court room, with the culprit’s family or friends who, in certain cases, can
    even be in the court room, or if the session we have is public or when, more
    often than not, we have a minor individual as an injured party and then the
    court session is closed to the public, being held outside the court room, in
    the halls of the tribunal or in the courtyard, it goes without saying that the
    minor individual having to face those people even at a mere visual level has
    but one more trauma to experience, in addition to the trauma which exists by default,
    once they are involved in a court case. So those special rooms enabled them to find
    it a great deal easier to speak before the court. We had minors who first
    played and who, even though they were more stressed out and more tense in the
    beginning, they relaxed afterwards and said their statement much easier than
    they would done that in a proper court room, that’s for sure.


    There is a second reason why, in Romania, more
    tribunals for minors and family should be set up: the number of cases involving
    minors is growing. In the specialized court in Brasov, they are being dealt
    with and ruled upon fairly rapidly, as compared to the general tribunal.

    The President of the Brasov-based Tribunal, judge Gabriela Chihaia once again.


    I think the number of such cases has
    been growing, at once being slightly on the wane, as compared, at least, to the
    Tribunal for Minors and Family. I began by job with
    this court beginning January 1st, 2019, and I can say that I noticed
    that the number of files where minor injured parties are involved, victims of
    sexual crimes, most often, has been growing. We’re not speaking about an
    exponential increase, though, yet we have such files all the time. With such a
    specialization, we can better get ourselves organized on such files. For example,
    for minor trafficking, a file dispatched to us as a first instance court or the
    file of a murder perpetrated by a minor or attempted murder, perpetrated by a
    minor or targeting a minor, we are very quick to deal with them, but our
    readiness in solving them has to do with the criminal procedure standards and
    practices because, concurrently, we need to comply with the deadlines
    stipulated by the legislation, we need to abide by the parties’ right to defend
    themselves, we need to enable all parties involved to make use of such rights in
    a proper manner. And yet, apart from deadlines, we fare very well as regards
    the deadline for solving the files proper.


    At long last, given the specificity of
    the Tribunal for Minors and Family, its employees have become specialists in
    the matter of minors, in civil, but also in criminal cases.

    Gabriela Chihaia:


    ʺA regular tribunal solves
    minors and family files together with the other files pertaining to a civil or
    a criminal matter. And yet, ruling in several matters, it is obvious the judges
    cannot specialize themselves in each of the aforementioned matters, given that each
    and every one of them claims a specificity of its own. That is why, taking into
    account that, throughout the years, emphasis has been laid on judges’ specialization,
    such a specialized court can only be a good point for the organizing abilities
    of the courts in our country, and implicitly, for the society we work for.


    The project of establishing, in Romania, of tribunals specializing
    in children and family-related issues has been nipped in the bud. However, such
    a project has never been abandoned altogether, because of the need for the minors’
    rights to be observed, also according to the international legislation and
    recommendations. For many people, the existence of one such single court is
    an error. (EN)