Tag: Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe

  • October 13, 2017 (update)

    October 13, 2017 (update)

    GOVERNMENT RESHUFFLE – On Thursday,
    three Romanian ministers announced their resignation during the meeting of the
    National Executive Committee of the Social Democratic Party, the main party in
    the ruling coalition in Romania. The three are the Deputy Prime Minister and
    Regional Development Minister Sevil Shhaideh, the Minister Delegate for
    European Funds Rovana Plumb and the Transport Minister Razvan Cuc. The
    executive committee will convene again on Friday, to discuss potential
    replacements. Prime Minister Mihai Tudose, the one who promoted the idea of a
    government reshuffle, has held talks over the past days with both president
    Klaus Iohannis and the Social Democrat leader Liviu Dragnea. Tudose has stated
    that the targeted ministers are those with legal problems and those who have not
    been efficient. Both Shhaideh and Plumb are being prosecuted for corruption
    offences. The minister in charge with liaising with Parliament, Viorel Ilie,
    member of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats in Romania, the junior partner
    in the ruling coalition, is in a similar situation. Party representatives
    announced on Thursday that the party was not interested in replacing him.






    PACE – On Thursday, the Parliamentary Assembly of the
    Council of Europe adopted a resolution which reads that Ukraine was wrong in
    passing the new Education Law and will therefore have to implement the
    recommendations that are to be formulated by the Venice Commission. The
    statement was made by Korodi Attila, member of the Romanian Delegation to the
    European body. He has also stated that Ukraine must observe the European
    standards, in particular the European Charter for Regional or Minority
    Languages and the Framework Convention for the Protection of National
    Minorities. The reason for the debate held at the Parliamentary Assembly,
    proposed by the Romanian delegation with support from another five national
    delegations, was the new Education Law adopted in Ukraine, which drastically
    restricts access to mother tongue education for ethnic minorities. On
    Wednesday, the Ukrainian President Petro Poroskeno had promised that the Kiev
    authorities would introduce all the recommendations made by the Venice Commission
    into the law and would observe the European Charter for Regional or Minority
    Languages. Nearly half a million ethnic Romanians live in the neighbouring
    country, mainly in the Romanian territories annexed by the USSR in 1940,
    further to an ultimatum, and taken over by Ukraine as a successor state in
    1991.






    BREXIT – The European Council is the only place where
    Romania will present its stand on Brexit, said on Thursday the Minister
    Delegate for European Affairs Victor Negrescu. According to him, no Romanian
    official has presented a formal stand regarding the Brexit negotiations.
    Minister Negrescu also stated that the main goal of the Bucharest authorities
    with regard to these negotiations was to ensure the rights of the over 300,000
    Romanians living in the United Kingdom. The clarification was made against the
    background of the British daily The Times saying that Romania, France
    and Germany have called for the blocking of new negotiations chapters, until an
    agreement is reached on the rights of
    foreign citizens in Great Britain.




    AUTOMOTIVE– President
    Klaus Iohannis and PM Mihai Tudose took part on Thursday in the launch of the
    new Ford Ecosport model, at the Ford plant in Craiova, southern Romania. The
    head of state said that, by attending the event, he wanted to convey a strong
    message of support for the automotive industry in Romania, which is growing
    increasingly competitive and has a better and better image in the European
    market. Since it took over the plant in 2008, Ford has invested over one billion
    euros in the production unit in Romania. More than 2,800 people are employed by
    Ford Craiova. The biggest carmaker in Romania is Automobile Dacia, based in
    Pitesti, in the south, taken over by the French group Renault in 1999. Over
    13,500 people are working for this company, which has a turnover of over 4.3
    billion euros.






    SPAIN– Spain
    celebrated its National Day on Thursday, amid tensions between the separatist
    authorities of Catalonia and the central government in Madrid. PM Mariano Rajoy
    gave the regional Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont until Monday to give up
    plans to declare the region’s independence, otherwise Catalonia would see its
    local autonomy suspended. Rajoy accused the Catalan government of having
    generated one of the most difficult times in Spain’s democracy and of having
    staged a very dangerous attack against the Constitution, the unity of Spain,
    the Catalan state and, most importantly, against Spain’s people living
    together.






    MOLDOVA– The European
    Union announced it would not grant the Republic of Moldova the remaining 28
    million euros under the reform programme, intended for changes in the field of
    the judiciary. The Union believes the Government in Chisinau has failed to meet
    the conditions requested by Brussels. The EU delegation in Moldova mentions in
    a news release that the authorities in Moldova have shown poor commitment for
    reform, have not allotted enough funding and staff and, as a result, progress
    in terms of judicial reforms has been insufficient. Last week, PM Pavel Filip
    announced Moldova would no longer receive this year’s installment of the 100
    million euro aid programme provided by the EU. He admitted that the measure had
    been prompted by Chisinau’s decision to change the election system for the
    forthcoming parliamentary elections, in such a manner as to favour the major
    parties.







  • October 12, 2017 UPDATE

    October 12, 2017 UPDATE

    GOV’T RESHUFFLE– The National Executive Committee of the Social
    Democratic Party, the main party in the coalition in power in Romania, has convened to discuss the government reshuffle requested by PM Mihai Tudose. During
    the same meeting, the relations between the government and the party are to be
    clarified. Over the past few days the PM has discussed the reshuffle both
    with President Klaus Iohannis, and with the Social Democratic leader, Liviu
    Dragnea. The names the most frequently mentioned in the media in relation to
    the reshuffle are Sevil Shhaideh, deputy PM and Minister for Regional
    Development, and Rovana Plumb, minister delegate for European funds, both of
    them members of the Social Democratic Party and prosecuted for corruption
    offences. The minister in charge with liaising with Parliament, Viorel Ilie, a
    member of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats in Romania, the junior partner
    in the ruling coalition, is also in a similar situation. Other ministers with
    image problems may also be replaced.






    PACE – On Thursday, the Parliamentary Assembly of the
    Council of Europe adopted a resolution which reads that Ukraine was wrong in
    passing the new Education Law and will therefore have to implement the
    recommendations that are to be formulated by the Venice Commission. The
    statement was made by Korodi Attila, member of the Romanian Delegation to the
    European body. He has also stated that Ukraine must observe the European
    standards, in particular the European Charter for Regional or Minority
    Languages and the Framework Convention for the Protection of National
    Minorities. The reason for the debate held at the Parliamentary Assembly,
    proposed by the Romanian delegation with support from another five national
    delegations, was the new Education Law adopted in Ukraine, which drastically
    restricts access to mother tongue education for ethnic minorities. On
    Wednesday, the Ukrainian President Petro Poroskeno had promised that the Kiev
    authorities would introduce all the recommendations made by the Venice Commission
    into the law and would observe the European Charter for Regional or Minority
    Languages. Nearly half a million ethnic Romanians live in the neighbouring
    country, mainly in the Romanian territories annexed by the USSR in 1940,
    further to an ultimatum, and taken over by Ukraine as a successor state in
    1991.






    BREXIT – The European Council is the only place where
    Romania will present its stand on Brexit, said on Thursday the Minister
    Delegate for European Affairs Victor Negrescu. According to him, no Romanian
    official has presented a formal stand regarding the Brexit negotiations.
    Minister Negrescu also stated that the main goal of the Bucharest authorities
    with regard to these negotiations was to ensure the rights of the over 300,000
    Romanians living in the United Kingdom. The clarification was made against the
    background of the British daily The Times saying that Romania, France
    and Germany have called for the blocking of new negotiations chapters, until an
    agreement is reached on the rights of
    foreign citizens in Great Britain.




    AUTOMOTIVE – President
    Klaus Iohannis and PM Mihai Tudose took part on Thursday in the launch of the
    new Ford Ecosport model, at the Ford plant in Craiova, southern Romania. The
    head of state said that, by attending the event, he wanted to convey a strong
    message of support for the automotive industry in Romania, which is growing
    increasingly competitive and has a better and better image in the European
    market. Since it took over the plant in 2008, Ford has invested over one billion
    euros in the production unit in Romania. More than 2,800 people are employed by
    Ford Craiova. The biggest carmaker in Romania is Automobile Dacia, based in
    Pitesti, in the south, taken over by the French group Renault in 1999. Over
    13,500 people are working for this company, which has a turnover of over 4.3
    billion euros.






    SPAIN – Spain
    celebrated its National Day on Thursday, amid tensions between the separatist
    authorities of Catalonia and the central government in Madrid. PM Mariano Rajoy
    gave the regional Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont until Monday to give up
    plans to declare the region’s independence, otherwise Catalonia would see its
    local autonomy suspended. Rajoy accused the Catalan government of having
    generated one of the most difficult times in Spain’s democracy and of having
    staged a very dangerous attack against the Constitution, the unity of Spain,
    the Catalan state and, most importantly, against Spain’s people living
    together.






    MOLDOVA – The European
    Union announced it would not grant the Republic of Moldova the remaining 28
    million euros under the reform programme, intended for changes in the field of
    the judiciary. The Union believes the Government in Chisinau has failed to meet
    the conditions requested by Brussels. The EU delegation in Moldova mentions in
    a news release that the authorities in Moldova have shown poor commitment for
    reform, have not allotted enough funding and staff and, as a result, progress
    in terms of judicial reforms has been insufficient. Last week, PM Pavel Filip
    announced Moldova would no longer receive this year’s instalment of the 100
    million euro aid programme provided by the EU. He admitted that the measure had
    been prompted by Chisinau’s decision to change the election system for the
    forthcoming parliamentary elections, in such a manner as to favour the major
    parties.