Tag: Poland

  • Football Flash

    Football Flash

    The fixture counts towards the 2018 World Cup preliminaries and kick starts in Bucharest, on Friday at 9.45 PM, local time.


    The Romanians are in dire need of a win in the game against Poland, as their Group E record sheet so far includes only one win against Armenia and two draws in fixtures against Montenegro and Kazakhstan. With five points, Romania is 3rd placed in the group. Montenegro is at the top of the table, while Poland is the runner-up team. Each team has seven points on their record sheet.



    For this Friday’s game Poland ranks as favorite, since for one year now they have had a win-only record. The last defeat sustained by Poland was in Frankfurt, in September 2015. Back then, it was defeated by Germany, 3-1, in the European Championship preliminaries. At the final tournament, Poland reached as far as the quarterfinals, where they drew against Portugal, eventually conceding defeat after the penalty shootouts. We recall Portugal won the European Championship.



    Head-to-heads reveal that Romania has not conceded defeat to Poland for 27 years. In Warsaw in 1989, Poland grabbed a 2-1 win against Romania in a friendly confrontation. Since 1989 and up to present, Romania has taken on Poland six times, succeeding four wins and two draws. The last two friendly games pitting Romania against Poland were hosted by the city of Warsaw, in April 2002 and November 2009, respectively. Back then, Romania grabbed two wins, 2-1 and 1-nil, respectively.(Translated by Eugen Nasta)

  • July 10, 2016

    July 10, 2016

    WARSAW – After taking part on Friday and Saturday in the NATO Summit in Warsaw, the President of Romania Klaus Iohannis had talks today with his Polish counterpart, Andrzej Duda. The talks focused on measures to strengthen and extend the strategic partnership between Romania and Poland, as well as on the best ways to carry on the regional initiatives launched by the two countries. The two presidents also discussed the joint implementation of the decisions made in the NATO summit hosted by Poland, and the means to strengthen the trans-Atlantic cooperation between Romania, Poland and the USA, with an emphasis on security issues, as well as the effects of the Brexit vote, given that nearly one million Polish citizens and half a million Romanians currently live in the UK.



    GOVERNMENT – PM Dacian Cioloş will be on an Asian tour starting on Monday. The tour begins with an official visit to Vietnam, on July 11-14, followed by participation in the 11th Europe-Asia Meeting (ASEM), in Ulan Bator, Mongolia, on July 15 and 16. According to a news release issued by the Government, the visit to Vietnam is intended to restore the traditionally friendly relations between the two countries, with a focus on trade and economic cooperation. Apart from bilateral talks with the Vietnamese PM, President and other officials, PM Cioloş will attend the Romania-Vietnam Economic Forum in Hanoi, jointly with a delegation of over 20 representatives of the Romanian business community, to capitalise on the forthcoming EU-Vietnam free trade agreement. At the ASEM summit, PM Cioloş will present arguments for turning Romania into a key point for projects aimed at connecting Europe and Asia.



    SCHENGEN – The Romanian Foreign Minister Lazăr Comănescu said he hoped Romania to get closer to joining Schengen, after proving that it is able to protect the European Unions external borders. He added that, after its Schengen accession, Romania would contribute to strengthening the Unions capacity to secure its borders, and mentioned that Bucharest was the second largest contributor to FRONTEX, the agency that manages the security of the external borders of the European bloc. The Romanian official also reiterated that Romania fully complied with the technical criteria for accession. Originally scheduled for March 2011, Romanias accession to the border-free European area was repeatedly postponed, as some Member States voiced reserves with respect to the reform of the Romanian judiciary and the efficiency of its fight against corruption.



    VISAS – The Romanian PMs chief of staff, Dragoş Tudorache, will have talks on Monday in Brussels with the Canadian Immigration Minister John McCallum, and with European Commission officials. The talks will focus on Canadas waiving visa requirements for Romanians, a field in which, according to PM Dacian Ciolos, there has been progress. Ciolos said however that without a political decision in Ottawa on this topic, Romania, as an EU member state, might, just like Bulgaria, decide not to ratify the EU-Canada trade agreement. In April, Canada and the US were given three more months to come in line with the EU policy on mutual visa regimes, under which the countries whose citizens no dot need EU entry visas must in turn allow the free movement of all EU citizens on their territories. Canada currently requests entry visas for Romanians and Bulgarians, whereas the USA has visa requirements in place for five EU member states, including Romania.



    DIPLOMACY – The Romanian Foreign Ministry called on the British authorities to clarify the situation and to prevent hostile actions against the Romanians living in the UK, after a Romanian shop was recently set on fire in Norwich. Although this is an isolated incident, Bucharest intends to work with London to prevent the spiralling of anti-Romanian actions. All those who have information on similar incidents are urged to notify both the competent British authorities, and the Romanian embassy in London, reads a news release of the Romanian Foreign Ministry. Violence against immigrants was reported in London after the referendum in which the UK voted to leave the EU.



    EURO 2016 – Paris is hosting tonight the final of the 2016 European Football Championship, between France and Portugal. France, which also won the European championship of 1984, is the team that scored the largest number of goals in EURO 2016 (13). Portugal was also a finalist in the 2004 tournament. Romania was sent home from the competition as early as the group stage. After the failure in the European Championship, the Romanian Football Federation decided not to extend the contract with manager Anghel Iordanescu. Romanias new manager is the German coach Christoph Daum.

  • Romania and NATO

    Romania and NATO

    The Romanian Foreign Minister Lazar Comanescu took part in a Romanian-Poland-Turkish trilateral meeting in Warsaw, ahead of the NATO summit to be hosted by the Polish capital city in early July. The three officials discussed the security challenges in the region, and in this context they highlighted the importance of strengthening collective defence, as well as NATOs eastern flank. The Romanian Minister voiced his confidence that the NATO Summit would reconfirm the Allies unity and cohesion in a multi-dimensional approach to security challenges, irrespective of their source. He also said that ensuring NATO presence on eastern Member State territory remains of the essence, and stressed the complementary nature of the southern and northern sections of the eastern flank.



    Lazar Comanescu: “We are aware of the special importance and attention that must be paid to the northern segment of NATOs eastern flank. It is equally important to pay similar attention to the eastern and south-eastern segment, because, if we look at the sources of the security threats, which are in fact threats to both security and stability, we see that they primarily occur closer to our own region, particularly the Black Sea region, including Crimea and Ukraine.



    The Romanian official also emphasised the strategic importance of the Black Sea for the Euro-Atlantic security, and pleaded for consolidating and coordinating NATO and EU efforts and the relationship between NATO and its eastern partners.



    Lazar Comanescu: “We have all agreed on the importance of and need for the Warsaw summit bringing about decisions that truly contribute to consolidating the Alliance capabilities and its ability to cope with these challenges. We are talking about a stronger presence of the Alliance in the region, be it ground or air presence. And what is also very important, not only for us but also for the security of the entire Euro-Atlantic region, is to identify a framework for cooperation and for the presence of the Alliance in the Black Sea region.



    The trilateral talks between the Romanian, Polish and Turkish foreign ministers were initiated by Bucharest, four years ago, and are based on the convergence of national approaches to a substantial number of topics. Held in an informal format, the talks are intended to contribute to exchanging views and improving coordination within NATO.

  • Romania and NATO

    Romania and NATO

    The Romanian Foreign Minister Lazar Comanescu took part in a Romanian-Poland-Turkish trilateral meeting in Warsaw, ahead of the NATO summit to be hosted by the Polish capital city in early July. The three officials discussed the security challenges in the region, and in this context they highlighted the importance of strengthening collective defence, as well as NATOs eastern flank. The Romanian Minister voiced his confidence that the NATO Summit would reconfirm the Allies unity and cohesion in a multi-dimensional approach to security challenges, irrespective of their source. He also said that ensuring NATO presence on eastern Member State territory remains of the essence, and stressed the complementary nature of the southern and northern sections of the eastern flank.



    Lazar Comanescu: “We are aware of the special importance and attention that must be paid to the northern segment of NATOs eastern flank. It is equally important to pay similar attention to the eastern and south-eastern segment, because, if we look at the sources of the security threats, which are in fact threats to both security and stability, we see that they primarily occur closer to our own region, particularly the Black Sea region, including Crimea and Ukraine.



    The Romanian official also emphasised the strategic importance of the Black Sea for the Euro-Atlantic security, and pleaded for consolidating and coordinating NATO and EU efforts and the relationship between NATO and its eastern partners.



    Lazar Comanescu: “We have all agreed on the importance of and need for the Warsaw summit bringing about decisions that truly contribute to consolidating the Alliance capabilities and its ability to cope with these challenges. We are talking about a stronger presence of the Alliance in the region, be it ground or air presence. And what is also very important, not only for us but also for the security of the entire Euro-Atlantic region, is to identify a framework for cooperation and for the presence of the Alliance in the Black Sea region.



    The trilateral talks between the Romanian, Polish and Turkish foreign ministers were initiated by Bucharest, four years ago, and are based on the convergence of national approaches to a substantial number of topics. Held in an informal format, the talks are intended to contribute to exchanging views and improving coordination within NATO.

  • Poland and the Rule of Law

    Poland and the Rule of Law

    After more than eight years, late last year, the Law and Justice Party headed by Jaroslaw Kaczynski came back to power in Poland, forming the government by itself for the first time after 1989 and holding a comfortable position in Parliament. Soon after investiture, the new executive came up with a series of legislative changes, received with worry in Brussels. Among them, amendments to the law governing the functioning of the Polish Constitutional Court, changing 5 of the 15 members of the Court, and changing one particular provision so that decisions could be made only with the mandatory participation of 13 out of 15 members, not 9 as it was before.



    Critics say that this removes an entire leverage and balance system, and the Government’s power of decision becomes too big. The State Radio and Television Law was amended too, the entire leadership sacked, and now the new heads of these public institutions can be appointed directly by the Government.



    Following these developments, the European Commission made an unprecedented decision starting an investigation against an EU Member State concerning the principle of pre-eminence of law. The potentially serious conclusions of this investigation might lead to Poland’s right of vote being suspended. In an interview to Radio Romania, the political analyst Janos Bugajski, from the Washington Center for European Policy Analysis, made an attempt to explain the situation. According to him, one big issue is the fact that the current government might isolate the country within the EU.



    There has been a similar situation during the previous Law and Justice Government, headed by Kaczynski, when they adopted a highly conservative, anti-EU discourse, and drifted away from Germany in particular, thus getting to the position in which they got to be regarded as the ones wiping away Poland’s democratic evolution, Bugajski said. Apparently, the current situation is quite similar to that one; the government is placing its own people in the most important positions and is trying to change the rules of the game, in order to make it easier to pass certain laws, change the Constitution and promote a more conservative agenda, which would, in turn, drive away people in Brussels, the analysts also stressed.



    However, he said, estranging itself from Germany is a much bigger issue. Under the previous governments, Poland was much closer to Berlin, which helped it become a major player in the Union. Without this close relationship, Poland will turn into a minor player of the EU, Bugajski concluded.


    The European Parliament president, Martin Schultz, has leveled criticism at the action taken by the new Polish authorities which, in his opinion, have treated their victory in the election as an empowerment mandate whereby they put the state’s welfare under the harness of the winning party. This is a dangerous Putinization of European politics, Schultz said in an interview to a German publication.



    This issue with the rule of law in Poland has this week been subject for debate in the European Parliament. The community is a system sharing common values: the rule of law, democracy and fundamental rights, the Dutch Foreign Affairs Minister Bet Koenders emphasized on that occasion. We recall the Netherlands is currently holding the European Union presidency.



    With details on that, here is Radio Romania Correspondent to Brussels, Cerasela Radulescu: “Attending the debate, Poland’s Prime Minister Beata Szydlo was adamant in stating that the rule of law was never infringed upon in her country and that the people cast their vote in favour of that party, which is now the ruling party, thanks to its democratic program the government must implement, abiding by the Constitution and the European treaties. The debate focusing on the Constitutional Tribunal is a political one, said the Prime Minister of Poland. It should be a judicial as well as an internal problem. The Polish Prime Minister has called on the European Union to respect the sovereignty of her country and highlighted that Poland will remain a member of the European Union. “



    The European Commission wants an objective clarification of what happened in Poland, but also a dialogue to be initiated with the authorities in Warsaw. “Our mission is to solve the situation from a legal point of view, so that the rule of law may be observed”, said the First Vice-President of the European Commission, Frans Timmermans.



    According to political analyst Claudiu Degeratu, Poland cannot be ignored, and serious sanctions cannot be placed against that country: ”I think the European Union does not actually want to advance with that procedure much further. It probably had to respond to a certain kind of pressure coming form Germany or from other countries. But I do not think all that will end up in diplomatic relations being severed, or in a very serious deterioration of those relations. I think the first reaction and the key contribution to such a decision came from Berlin.”



    It is very clear, Claudiu Degeratu also said, that any deterioration of the EU’s relationship with Poland entails a worsening of the situation at the level of the European Union.

  • January 19, 2016

    January 19, 2016

    WEATHER – After snowstorms over the weekend, Romania is facing a cold stint until Thursday. Last night temperatures dropped to minus 21 degrees in the centre and south of the country, while in the capital city Bucharest they reached minus 17 degrees. Temperatures will fall even more in the days to come in most parts of the country. On the other hand, road and railway transport is still disrupted in the south and south east, the areas the most affected by the heavy snowfalls and the blizzards of the past weekend. Several roads are still closed, including part of the motorway connecting the capital city to the Black Sea. Eight villages have reported power outings, and schools and kindergartens in several counties in the south-east remain closed down today.



    DIPLOMACY – The Romanian PM, Dacian Cioloş, will be on an official visit to Paris on Wednesday and Thursday. He will have meetings with President François Hollande, with PM Manuel Valls and with the speakers of the two Chambers of the French Parliament, Gérard Larcher and Claude Bartolone. The talks will focus on the privileged relations between Romania and France, on stepping up the projects in the Roadmap of the bilateral strategic partnership, on improving economic relations and strengthening contacts between the business communities, as well as important topics on the European and international agenda, such as terrorism, migration and the EU security policy. Other topics will also be approached, such as Romanias Schengen accession, the forthcoming report of the European Commission under the Cooperation and Verification mechanism, as well as cooperation as part of Bucharests preparations to take over the presidency of the EU Council. Ciolos will also meet with representatives of the Romanian community and with managers of important French companies. France is the fifth largest foreign investor in Romania.



    EU – The PM of Poland, Beata Szydlo, will be in Strasbourg today for talks in the European Parliament regarding Warsaws observance of the rule of law. The controversial measures of the ruling Conservative Party, which strengthened its control over the judiciary and the mass media, generated tensions between Poland and the EU. The European Commission initiated an unprecedented inquiry to establish whether Poland still complies with the European democracy standards. Yesterday in Brussels, the President of Poland, Andrzej Duda, discussed the matter with the head of the European Council, his former political opponent, Donald Tusk, and with the NATO Secretary General, Jens Stoltenberg, in an attempt to ease tensions. Whereas Donald Tusk said an aggressive tone in the dialogue between Brussels and Warsaw should be avoided, the head of the Polish State said his country would never turn its back on Poland, but emphasised that the EU must respect Poland in its turn.



    ECONOMY – The growth rate of the Chinese economy in 2015 slowed down to 6.9%, the lowest since the 3.9% rate of 1990, Beijing announced today. China confirmed the slow-down of the worlds second-largest economy in spite of the growth in services, which last year, for the first time, accounted for more than a half of Chinas GDP of nearly 10,300 billion US dollars. The figures announced by the National Statistics Bureau in China for last year are significantly below the 7.3% reported for 2014. The authorities emphasized that the growth rate in 2015 was a “hard-won one, and added that the structural adjustment of the economy has reached a critical stage. Most indicators dropped in 2015, from the industrial output, undermined by over-capacities, to the real estate sector and to foreign trade, previously a traditional growth engine for the Chinese economy.



    SPORTS – The Romanian player Alexandra Dulgheru (no. 61 WTA) has qualified in Melbourne today to the second round of the Australian Open, the first Grand Slam tournament of the year, after defeating the Australian Storm Sanders (no. 355 WTA) 6-4, 6-2. Also today, three other Romanian players lost their games in the first round. World no. 2 Simona Halep was surprisingly defeated by Chinas Shuai Zhang (133 WTA), Irina Begu (31 WTA) was outperformed by the Swedish Johanna Larsson (50 WTA), and Andreea Mitu (96 WTA) was defeated by the German Julia Gorges (45 WTA). Another Romanian player, Monica Niculescu (no 40 WTA), qualified on Monday to the second round of the tournament, and is to play against the Russian Elizaveta Kulicikova (no 109 WTA).

  • January 5, 2016

    January 5, 2016

    Although temperatures are slightly increasing, the weather remains very cold for this time of the year in Romania. Snowfalls are still reported in the south-east and north-west. The highs range between minus 8 and 5 degrees Celsius, with a minus 6 degree reading in Bucharest at noon. Over the past few days, 3 people died because of the biting cold, and 42 others have been rescued by the authorities. Road, railway and air transport is disrupted by the snow and wind.



    Bulgaria, Romanias southern neighbour, announced a code yellow alert against snow, black ice and strong wind, valid today in several parts of the country, the Romanian Foreign Ministry announced. Romanian citizens who travel or intend to travel to Bulgaria are urged to have their vehicles properly equipped and to check the latest news in this respect. The Foreign Ministry previously warned Romanian tourists that a similar alert was in place in Bosnia-Herzegovina.



    The importance of guaranteeing the freedom of the press is vital to any democratic country, particularly in a EU member state, said the Liberal Deputy Ionuţ Stroe, the head of Romanias delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. In a statement to Radio Romania, he described as disquieting the fact that a law drafted by the new Conservative power in Poland, under which the directors of the public radio and television stations are to be appointed by the finance minister, was passed by the Parliament in Warsaw without public debate. On Monday, 4 international media freedom watchdogs filed a complaint in this respect with the Council of Europe. They criticise the law as threatening the independence of public media. The authors of the protest urge the Polish Conservative party “Law and Justice to immediately scrap this law, which is pending for promulgation by President Andrzej Duda, from the same party.



    Copenhagen announced temporary controls on its German border, shortly after Sweden had taken similar measures at its border with Denmark. The Danish PM Lars Lokke Rasmussen warned that unless the EU manages to protect its borders, several countries will have to tighten security checks. He explained that, following the restrictions imposed by Sweden, Denmark might be faced with a large number of illegal immigrants. In turn, the Swedish authorities claim that they are trying to reduce the number of refugees reaching their country. Last year, 160,000 people applied for asylum in Sweden, the largest number in Europe after Germany. Denmark and Sweden are the last states to introduce border checks in the Schengen zone. In September 2015, Germany introduced controls on its Austrian border, and last week Norway, which is not an EU member but is part of the visa-free area, announced that travelers without a visa would be denied access to the country.



    The leaders of the Moldovan pro-Western Liberal and Democratic parties, announced they would hold new talks in order to form a new parliamentary majority and a new government. The announcement comes after on Monday the prime minister designate, Ion Sturza, failed to get the votes of a sufficient number of MPs in the Moldovan Parliament, more than half of whose members were absent from the session. The Parliament Speaker, Adrian Candu, said that the vote is failed according to the Constitutional Court rules, and the head of state Nicolae Timofti is now to nominate a new candidate for the PM seat. Should the new attempt fail as well, Timofti must dissolve the Parliament and announce early elections. The previous cabinet, headed by the Liberal-Democrat Valeriu Streleţ, was dismissed on October 29, following a no-confidence motion tabled by the pro-Russian Communists and Socialists, but backed by the Democratic Party as well.



    The UN Security Council strongly criticized the attack on the Saudi Embassy in Tehran, and Saudi Arabia suspended diplomatic ties with Iran after its embassy in Tehran was stormed and set alight by violent protesters, disgruntled with the execution of Shia Muslim cleric Nimr Baaqer al-Nimr by Riyadh. As tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran escalate, Russia expressed willingness to host negotiations between the two foreign ministers. In turn, the EU and USA call for calm following the row between Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shia Iran.



    The Romanian tennis player Simona Halep, number 2 in the world, has withdrawn from the Brisbane tournament in Australia, having nearly 900,000 US dollars in prize money, and so did the current trophy holder, no. 4 WTA Maria Sharapova of Russia. Simona said that, in spite of the problem with her left leg, she would take part in the Sydney tournament next week. Two other Romanian players, Andreea Mitu and Patricia Maria Ţig, have qualified in the doubles quarter-finals of the Shenzhen tournament in China, which has 500,000 US dollars in prize money. In the first round, they defeated Zarina Dias / Ling Zhang (Kazakhstan/China), 6-2, 6-4.

  • RRI Sports Club: Romania qualifies for the World Women’s Handball Championship semifinals

    RRI Sports Club: Romania qualifies for the World Women’s Handball Championship semifinals

    The Romania national womens handball team on Wednesday evening grabbed a surprising win over Denmark (31-30), managing to advance to the semifinals of the World Handball Championship. Cristina Neagu has been declared best player of the match, after scoring 15 goals.



    In the three other fixtures, at this stage of the competition, France lost to the Netherlands, 25-28, Poland registered a surprising win over Russia, 21-20, while Norway defeated Montenegro, 26-25.



    In the semifinals, Romania will be taking on Norway, while Poland is pitted against the Netherlands. Romania is the only country to have participated in all final tournaments of the World Championships, since 1957, boasting three medals: gold in 1962 and silver in 1973 and 2005, respectively.


    (Translated and edited by: Diana Vijeu)

  • Historical meeting in Warsaw

    Historical meeting in Warsaw

    25 years after the collapse of a communist regime that came to power in Poland after World War II with the help of the Soviet occupation troops, US president Barack Obama travelled to the Polish capital Warsaw to reaffirm his country’s commitment to its east-European allies worried about Russia’s newfound appetite for territorial expansion. For the United States, the security of Poland and other states in the region is the cornerstone of its own security and it is “sacrosanct”, said Barack Obama, reiterating a message conveyed last month in Bucharest by his vice-president Joe Biden.



    Obama said he would ask the US Congress to allocate 1 billion dollars for the deployment of more US troops, including land, navy and air forces, to this part of the world. From the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea and from Estonia to Bulgaria, the former Moscow-satellite countries are part of NATO today, but still vulnerable to threats coming from the East.



    In a meeting with his counterparts from the region, including Romania’s president Traian Basescu, Barack Obama said the US is no threat to Russia. Restoring mutual confidence will take, however, time, and NATO cannot stand by as Russia violates the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity that have so far ensured peace in Europe. The White House leader also spoke about the former Soviet republics that have embraced western values and are trying to leave Moscow’s orbit despite all obstacles:



    “And we will be stepping up our partnerships with friends like Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia as they provide for their own defence.”



    Obama said that further provocation by Russia in Ukraine would bring costs for Russia, including possible sanctions. He added that his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin can exercise his influence with the separatists in eastern Ukraine to ease the tension in the region. In Obama’s opinion, Putin should have talks with Ukraine’s new president elect, Petro Poroshenko, and acknowledge the outcome of the recent presidential elections in this country.



    The long-term implications of Russia’s actions have also been discussed in Brussels. NATO defence ministers agreed on additional measures needed for the security of NATO countries in Eastern Europe. NATO secretary general Anders Fogh Rasmussen:



    “During the last five years, Russia has increased its defence spending by 50%, while NATO countries have decreased their defence spending by 20. Its unsustainable. And what we have witnessed in Ukraine is a wake-up call. And based on that, political leaders, in particular in Europe, should review their defence spending.”



    Attending the meeting in Brussels, Romania’s defence minister Mircea Dusa confirmed Bucharest’s decision to allocate 2% of the country’s GDP for defence starting in 2017.