Tag: Press Freedom

  • May 3, 2017 UPDATE

    May 3, 2017 UPDATE


    ORGANISED CRIME – Police and prosecutors with the Directorate Investigating Organised Crime and Terrorism (DIICOT) on Wednesday conducted home searches in Bucharest and several counties in Romania, targeting an organised crime group in a case involving the National Freight Railways Corporation. Forty people, including the current and the former managers of the corporation, are suspected of having set up an organised crime group, of aggravated embezzlement, forgery and fraud. The group members allegedly under-appraised in 2016 assets belonging to the company, before selling nearly 2,500 freight cars intended for scrapping. The difference between the actual worth and the under-assessed worth of the goods went, according to the police, into the accounts of a company that collected ferrous scrap metal. As a result, the Corporation incurred losses of over 6.3 million euros.



    PRESS FREEDOM – Press used as a tool of propaganda and the involution of quality journalism are the main characteristics of the Romania media in the past year, reads the latest Active Watch report on press freedom. The main problems identified by the report, published on Wednesday on World Press Freedom Day, are propaganda, public intoxication, disinformation, threats and biased speeches. Journalism is still used abusively by some people in order to intimidate, blackmail or influence peddle, and the serious professional misconduct of some news televisions has triggered reaction on the part of the audience and civil society. According to the report, the former leadership of the public radio started an aggressive campaign against the bill on the separation of the offices of president and director general of the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Corporation. This campaign was sanctioned by the National Audiovisual Council for bias. Also, the leadership of the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Corporation harassed, by means of internal investigations, the radio journalists who notified such cases of misconduct and issued an order establishing restrictions with regard to journalists liberty to report cases of professional and legal misconduct. Previously, a report drawn up by Reports without Borders, published last week, ranked Romania 46th out of 180 countries in the world press freedom index. Romania went up 3 places since last year.



    EU COUNCIL – The Romanian Foreign Ministry organised in Bucharest on Wednesday a conference on the Romanian presidency of the EU Council, in the first half of 2019. Romania has the opportunity to set a new fresh and dynamic pace that would help the rebirth of the European project, said the Prime Minister Sorin Grindeanu in his message to the participants in the conference. In turn, the Romanian Foreign Minister Teodor Melescanu announced that, while holding the six-month presidency of the EU Council, Bucharest will take action to accelerate the integration of the Balkan countries and will organise an eastern partnership summit. The European Affairs Minister Ana Birchall stated that the EU Council presidency is a national project for Romania and, although the times will be difficult, the challenge can be turned into an opportunity.



    BREXIT – Britain will not pay 100 billion euros to leave the EU, the Finance Secretary David Davis said on Wednesday, after British media reported that the EU negotiators had revised their original figures. The new bill, 40 billion euros higher than previous estimates, includes the payment of farming subsidies and administrative fees to the EU. Other elements taken into account are the budget of the UK and the EU investment expenditure. The revision of estimates indicates a tougher position taken by the 27 member states with respect to Britains demands. The EUs chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier presented the priorities for the first stage of negotiations: reaching an agreement on the method of calculation of Britains financial obligations, protecting the rights of the European citizens living in Great Britain and the external borders issue. Michel Barnier did not provide an estimate for the amount that Great Britain should pay to the EU, but stressed the fact that the financial agreement did not entail punishing the country. The date of the official divorce was set for March 29, 2019, unless an extension is agreed on by decision-makers.



    FRENCH ELECTION – According to the latest opinion poll made public on Wednesday, Emanuel Macron, the candidate of the social-liberal civic organisation En Marche!, is very likely to win the second round of the presidential elections to be held in France on Sunday, Le Figaro reports. According to the poll conducted by Ipsos, Macron is supported by 59% of the voters, while Marine Le Pen, running for the National Front, would only get 41%. The on-line poll was run between April 30 – May 1, and covered a representative sample of 13,742 people.



    MOLDOVA – The presence of any troops or military bases headed and controlled by other countries, on the territory of the Republic of Moldova, is against the Constitution, Moldovas Constitutional Court ruled on Tuesday. The president of the Constitutional Court, Alexandru Tănase, explained that although the legislation makes it clear that “the Republic of Moldova does not allow the deployment of foreign military on its territory,” there are still Russian Federation troops in the pro-Russian breakaway region of Transdniester.



    TOURISM – Check-ins in Romanian accommodation units in the first quarter of the year totalled more than 2 million people, up around 11% compared to the same period of 2016, according to data made public on Wednesday by the National Statistics Institute. Most of the foreign tourists came from Europe (76.2% of the total), especially from Germany, Italy, and the UK. Last year the number of foreign tourists was nearly 11% larger than in 2015, namely 2.5 million, a record for the last few decades.



    WRESTLING – The Romanian athlete Andrei Dukov won the silver in the 57-kilo freestyle category, on Tuesday, at the European Wrestling Championships in Novi Sad, Serbia. Defeated in the final by the Georgian-born Azeri Giorgi Edisherashvili, Dukov improved his performance since last year, when he won bronze in the continental championship. Also on Tuesday, on the first day of the competition, the Romanian Alina Vuc won the bronze in the 48 kilogram category, after defeating the Polish Anna Lukasiak. Romania, which has already reached its two medal target for this competition, is taking part in the European Championship in Novi Sad with 14 athletes.




  • May 3, 2017

    May 3, 2017

    ORGANISED CRIME – Police and prosecutors with the Directorate Investigating Organised Crime and Terrorism (DIICOT) have today conducted home searches in Bucharest and several counties in Romania, targeting an organised crime group in a case involving the National Freight Railways Corporation. Forty people, including the current and the former managers of the corporation, are suspected of having set up an organised crime group, aggravated embezzlement, forgery and fraud. The group members allegedly under-appraised in 2016 assets belonging to the company, before selling nearly 2,500 freight cars intended for scrapping. The difference between the actual worth and the under-assessed worth of the goods went, according to the police, into the accounts of a company that collected ferrous scrap metal. As a result, the Corporation incurred losses of over 6.3 million euros.




    PRESS FREEDOM – “Journalists are intimidated not just in authoritarian regimes, but also in countries that are usually regarded as democratic, the president of the European Parliament Antonio Tajani said in a message on World Press Freedom Day, celebrated today. A former journalist himself, Tajani mentions as negative examples Turkey, Russia and China, and says the EU is the strongest defender of the freedom of expression all over the world. World Press Freedom Day is celebrated in Bucharest as well, with the launch of the FreeEx Report on press freedom in Romania in 2016-2017, which looks at the main events with an impact on the freedom of expression. Previously, a similar report drawn up by Reporters without Borders (RSF) and released last week ranked Romania 46th out of 180 countries in terms of press freedom. “The excessive politicising of the mass-media, corrupt financing mechanisms, editorial policies subordinated to owner interests and the intelligence agency infiltration of staff – such has been the impact of the medias transformation into political propaganda tools, which has been particularly visible in election years, reads the RSF report. Romania went up 3 places since last year, when it was 49th in this ranking.




    TOURISM – Check-ins in Romanian accommodation units in the first quarter of the year totalled more than 2 million people, up around 11% compared to the same period of 2016, according to data made public today by the National Statistics Institute. Most of the foreign tourists came from Europe (76.2% of the total), especially from Germany, Italy, and the UK. Last year the number of foreign tourists was nearly 11% larger than in 2015, namely 2.5 million, a record for the last few decades.




    BREXIT – Britain will not pay 100 billion euros to leave the EU, the Brexit Secretary David Davis said today, after British media reported that the EU negotiators have revised their original figures. The new bill, 40 billion euros higher than previous estimates, includes the payment of farming subsidies and administrative fees to the EU. Other elements taken into account are the budget of the UK and the EU investment expenditure. The revision of estimates indicates a tougher position taken by the 27 member states with respect to Britains demands. Today, the EU chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, will present detailed guidelines for the EU side. The date of the official divorce was set for March 29, 2019, unless an extension is agreed on by decision-makers.




    MOLDOVA – The presence of any troops or military bases headed and controlled by other countries, on the territory of the Republic of Moldova, is against the Constitution, Moldovas Constitutional Court ruled on Tuesday. The president of the Constitutional Court, Alexandru Tănase, explained that although the legislation makes it clear that the Republic of Moldova does not allow the deployment of foreign military on its territory, there are still Russian Federation troops in the pro-Russian breakaway region of Transdniester.




    WRESTLING – The Romanian athlete Andrei Dukov won the silver in the 57-kilo freestyle category, on Tuesday, at the European Wrestling Championships in Novi Sad, Serbia. Defeated in the final by the Georgian-born Azeri Giorgi Edisherashvili, Dukov improved his performance since last year, when he won bronze in the continental championship. Also on Tuesday, on the first day of the competition, the Romanian Alina Vuc won the bronze in the 48 kilo category, after defeating the Polish Anna Lukasiak. Romania, which has already reached its two medal target for this competition, is taking part in the European Championship in Novi Sad with 14 athletes.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • Media freedom and pluralism in Romania

    Media freedom and pluralism in Romania

    Every
    year, in early May, we celebrate World Press Freedom Day, an event that
    provides an opportunity to measure to what extent journalists’ rights and
    freedom of speech are observed. The Media Pluralism Monitor, developed and
    funded by the European Commission and the European Parliament, is one such
    measurement tool. The report looks at case studies from the 19 member countries
    covered by the analysis, and is aimed at identifying potential threats to media
    freedom in the European Union.




    Four
    big risk areas are examined: basic protection, media pluralism, political
    independence and social inclusion. The indicators used to measure the threats
    to basic protection are freedom of speech, the observance of the right of
    access to public information, journalistic standards and independence from
    national authorities. As regards political independence, the report looks at
    political control over media channels and broadcasting networks and the degree
    of independence in funding public media institutions.




    The
    general conclusion is that the only field where the risks are low is basic protection
    in the media, and the risks for the other fields are average at European level.
    Still, against this background, Romania is faced with an average risk in all
    four main fields. Moreover, the basic protection indicators place Romania on a
    unique position, as Adina Marincea, a researcher with Media Research Centre has
    told us. Media Research Centre is the institution that has drawn up the country
    report for Romania:




    Out
    of the 19 countries analysed, Romania is the only one facing an average risk when
    it comes to basic protection and observing journalistic standards. Among the
    most pressing issues that we have identified, and which journalists in Romania
    have to deal with, especially in the printed press, is the precarious economic
    situation. This translates into situations in which the payment of salaries is
    delayed and unreliable, in job insecurity, salary cuts and employment contracts
    for short periods of time, which ensure little social protection against
    unemployment. At the same time, these contracts make it easier for employers to
    sack journalists.




    This precarious economic situation is sometimes
    closely linked with the interests of the employer, which do not always coincide
    with the standards of the profession, as journalist Petrisor Obae, the
    coordinator of the paginademedia.ro website has told us:




    The problems in the
    Romanian media are two-fold. First of all, at a macro level, owners and
    employers in the media have realised that the media can be a powerful toy that
    can be used to advance their own personal interests. To this adds the economic
    pressure. Secondly, at the micro level, that of journalists themselves, there
    are many who simply don’t know how to write and do research and who are not
    familiar with the basic rules of their profession. Social problems also play a
    role and they are used by employers to their advantage. When journalists’ basic
    needs are not satisfied and they have to worry about putting food on the table,
    they will naturally be more likely to ignore the ethics of their profession, a
    notion which is already becoming obsolete.




    In fact, one of the issues identified by the report
    on media pluralism in Europe concerns the observance of professional standards,
    in particular by the private media, which accounts for the biggest share in the
    media sector. Here is Adina Marincea again:




    Journalistic standards and codes are often
    non-existent, they are not observed or are drawn up by employers and managers,
    not by journalists or professional associations. All these factors interfere
    with the editorial content and there have been many accusations of illegal
    funding of the media by various economic and political players, and even of
    journalistic censorship.




    Speaking about interference and censorship, we
    inevitably approach another field, namely political independence. Adina
    Marincea has more:




    When speaking about political independence, there
    are two indicators that usually draw alarm signals. Similar cases have been
    reported in Slovakia, Slovenia and Lithuania.




    The fact that part of the media, especially the private media, has
    become excessively politicised in order to protect employers’ interests,
    including their economic ones, is the conclusion of another study, the FreeEx
    report, drawn up by the ActiveWatch NGO. The report presents situations in
    which employers pressure journalists into not publishing certain articles that
    could affect the image of some political figures or disclose their abuses.
    There are cases of journalists who, because they dared publish such materials,
    were ‘punished’ by having their collaboration contracts terminated. Also, there
    are cases of local mayors who used the local media to blackmail their political
    opponents. To Razvan Martin, political and economic dependence is also caused
    by the bad financial situation that has not improved at all for some media
    companies. Razvan Martin:




    Being
    very vulnerable from an economic point of view, some media outlets are
    vulnerable to pressure from certain politicians or various financiers. However,
    I’m not convinced that a better economic situation of certain media outlets or
    periodicals would make them less vulnerable to certain influences. I’m afraid
    that their reason of being is to play such political games and not to inform
    the public or to obtain a legitimate economic profit. I’m referring to the most
    visible, mainstream media outlets, the TV news channels, focusing on the public
    agenda. But I don’t want to generalise because there are still very many honest
    journalists and quite honourable media institutions. There are media platforms
    producing quality journalism, online in particular.




    Having a different economic and editorial situation,
    the two public broadcasting institutions, the Romanian Television and the
    Romanian Radio Broadcasting Corporation have been confronted with problems too
    in the past year, according to the FreeEx Report on the Media Freedom in
    Romania. Razvan Martin:




    The public radio is doing OK from an economic point
    of view, but there were problems there too related to a campaign against an
    otherwise legitimate bill to amend the public broadcasting law. There is even a
    summons by the National Audiovisual Council warning that airtime was abusively
    used to attack this bill. The Romanian Television is on the verge of collapse
    having accumulated huge debts and politicians do not appear interesting in
    addressing the situation.




    Recently, Parliament has appointed by vote a new President and Director
    General at the Romanian Television.

  • May 3, 2016 UPDATE

    May 3, 2016 UPDATE

    State secretary Corina Şuteu, former director of the Romanian Cultural Institute in New York, was nominated on Tuesday by PM Dacian Cioloş as the new culture minister, after Vlad Alexandrescu was discharged, reads a news release issued by the Government of Romania. The dismissal comes against the backdrop of a scandal at the Romanian Opera House in Bucharest, triggered by discontent with the successive appointments for the director post as well as with the substantial imbalances between the salaries paid to the Romanian and the foreign dancers. Protests led to the cancellation of three shows, and PM Ciolos asked for Vlad Alexandrescus resignation. In messages posted on Facebook or published in the media, Vlad Alexandrescu says he was forced out because he upset various interest groups. The head of government said he had not been informed of the problems Vlad Alexandrescu claimed to have been facing and added that the nomination of Corina Suteu is intended to help carry on the reform process.




    Romania will see an economic growth peak this year, before a moderate growth rate next year, the European Commission estimates. According to its spring forecast, the high growth rate is due to the increase in revenues and to the tax relaxation. The European Commission warns Romania, however, that new legislative initiatives in the financial sector pose macroeconomic risks. According to Brussels, the domestic macroeconomic risk has deepened, as a result of the uncertainty induced by the debt discharge law, which may have a negative impact on investor confidence. This year, Romania is expected to have an economic growth rate of 4.2%, and next year 3.7%. In March the inflation rate dropped substantially, after the VAT was cut down, and it will likely remain negative midway through the year, with an expected increase afterwards triggered by planned salary raises.




    The European Commission has warned Turkey that the prospective lift of visa requirements for Turkish citizens may be quickly suspended in case Ankara fails to meet the criteria set by the European bloc. Turkey, which wants its citizens to be able to travel freely in the EU in exchange for enforcing the migrant deal, must meet 72 criteria set by Brussels. Early this week, Turkey agreed to cancel the travel visas for all EU citizens, including citizens of Cyprus, which is one of the requirements, but, as a Turkish official stated, this is not an official recognition of Cyprus by Turkey. The European Commission will decide on Wednesday whether these criteria are complied with, and should the report be positive, it will draft a legislative proposal to be endorsed by the European Parliament and the EU member states.




    On World Press Freedom Day, celebrated on May 3, the Council of Europe Secretary General, Thorbjorn Jagland, called on the 47 member countries to make sure that their national legislation on defamation does not silence the media and does not weaken public debate. The Council of Europe says it is critical for democracy that the media carry on its monitoring and criticising of those in power. In Romania, some people continue to abuse the journalist profession in order to intimidate, blackmail or trade influence, and some public authorities have attempted to block the access to information on major topics in the recent history of Romania – the 1989 Revolution, the miners riots of June ’90 or the Colectiv tragedy, reads the latest FreeEx report released by ActiveWatch. The document also reveals that the global Press Freedom Index worked out by Reporters without Borders puts Romania in the 49th place in the world, up three positions since the previous year.




    The Romanian Simona Halep (no. 7 WTA) Tuesday qualified to the eighth-finals of the Premier WTA tournament in Madrid, with 4.7 million USD in total prizes, after defeating Karina Knapp (Italy) (6-1, 6-1). Halep is the third Romanian to reach the third stage of the tournament in Madrid this year, after Patricia Ţig (134 WTA) and Irina Begu (34 WTA). Halep played the final of this tournament in 2014, when she lost to Russias Maria Sharapova.

  • May 3, 2016

    May 3, 2016

    The Prime Minister of Romania, Dacian Cioloş, is to submit to President Klaus Iohannis today a request to discharge Vlad Alexandrescu as Culture Minister and a nomination for his replacement. According to political sources, one of the favourites for this appointment is Corina Şuteu, former head of the Romanian Cultural Institute in New York, and currently a state secretary in the Culture Ministry. The dismissal comes against the backdrop of a scandal at the Romanian Opera House in Bucharest, triggered by discontent with the successive appointments for the director post as well as with the substantial imbalances between the salaries paid to the Romanian and the foreign dancers. Protests led to the cancellation of three shows, and PM Ciolos asked for Vlad Alexandrescus resignation. In messages posted on Facebook or published in the media, Vlad Alexandrescu says he was forced out because he upset various interest groups. The head of government said he had not been informed of the problems Vlad Alexandrescu claimed to have been facing and promised he would urge the new minister to carry on the reforms initiated by Alexandrescu.



    The second International Light Festival, Spotlight 2016, will take place in Bucharest between May 5 and 8. Apart from captivating shows, including 15 art installations, building lighting and video-mapping sessions prepared by the guest artists will transform representative buildings in Bucharest, such as the CEC Building, the National History Museum building and the National Military Society buildings. This year, Spotlight is part of the events supporting the candidacy of Bucharest for European Capital of Culture in 2021.



    May 3 is the World Press Freedom Day. On this occasion, the Council of Europe Secretary General, Thorbjorn Jagland, called on the 47 member countries to make sure that their national legislation on defamation does not silence the media and does not weaken public debate. The Council of Europe says it is critical for democracy that the media carry on its monitoring and criticising of those in power. In Romania, some people continue to abuse the journalist profession in order to intimidate, blackmail or trade influence, and some public authorities have attempted to block the access to information on major topics in the recent history of Romania – the 1989 Revolution, the miners riots of June ’90 or the Colectiv tragedy, reads the latest FreeEx report released by ActiveWatch. The document also reveals that the global Press Freedom Index worked out by Reporters without Borders puts Romania in the 49th place in the world, up three positions since the previous year.



    In Romania, companies that pay less than roughly 280 euros per month, the new national minimum wage for full-time employees, will be fined. Under a government resolution endorsed late last year, more than 1.1 million employees benefit from this increase, which took effect on May 1. The raise is intended to bring national minimum wages up to nearly 60% of the national average salary. Still, salaries in Romania remain some of the lowest in the EU, only higher than in Bulgaria, but below those in other former communist states. At the opposite pole, the highest national minimum wages are paid in Luxemburg, 1,923 euro/month, followed by Belgium, Netherlands, Germany and Ireland, where national minimum wages are around 1,500 euro per month.



    The European Commission has warned Turkey that the prospective lift of visa requirements for Turkish citizens may be quickly suspended in case Ankara fails to meet the criteria set by the European bloc. Turkey, which wants its citizens to be able to travel freely in the EU in exchange for enforcing the migrant deal, must meet 72 criteria set by Brussels. The European Commission will decide on Wednesday whether these criteria are complied with, and should the report be positive, it will draft a legislative proposal to be endorsed by the European Parliament and the EU member states.



    Norway, as part of a US-headed international coalition with operations in Syria and Iraq, will deploy 60 troops to train Syrian rebels fighting against the terrorist groups in that country, the Norwegian PM, Erna Solberg announced, according to Le Figaro. The Norwegian troops selected into this special task force will be sent to Jordan, and the name of the groups they will train has not been disclosed. Norway is already present in areas where the international coalition is fighting against the IS group, particularly in Erbil (Iraq), where soldiers are training peshmerga fighters for countering terrorist groups.



    The Romanian Irina Begu (no. 34 WTA) managed a surprising win against Spains Garbine Muguruza (4 WTA), 5-7, 7-6, 6-3, in the second round of the WTA tournament in Madrid, with 4.7 million USD in prize money. In the eighth-finals, Irina will be facing the American Christina McHale (59 WTA). Also qualified in the eighth-finals is another Romanian player, Patricia Ţig (134 WTA). Two other Romanians have qualified into the second round of the Madrid tournament, Simona Halep, no. 7 WTA, and Sorana Carstea (no. 127 WTA). Halep played the final of the Madrid tournament in 2014, when she lost to Russias Maria Sharapova.

  • Press Freedom

    Press Freedom

    In 2014 global press freedom has hit its lowest level in over a decade, reveals a recent Freedom House report. The document shows that last year journalists were faced with mounting pressure. Governments particularly use security and anti-corruption legislation to silence critical voices, advocacy groups and criminal networks use outrageous tactics to harass the media, while media tycoons try to manipulate information in order to serve their own political or material interests.



    Of the 199 countries and territories included in the report, 63 were featured ‘free in terms of information media, while 71 were described as ‘partly free. 65 countries continue to be press freedom deprived. Romania ranks 84th in the standing, with a partially free media. President Klaus Iohannis described the role of the mass media as key to defending public interest. A free press contributes to consolidating democracy and developing a prosperous society.



    In turn, Foreign Minister Bogdan Aurescu said press freedom is instrumental for a functional democracy. Minister Aurescu went on to say that May 3 should also pay a tribute to journalists who prove that “the pen is a mightier weapon than censorship or intimidation. The Romanian official referred to the reporters, bloggers or satirical journalists who became targets and victims of violence for exercising their democratic right to free speech. In some countries journalists are even subject to intimidation, censorship or jail time for their courage to voice their opinions.



    The US charge daffaires Dean Thompson recently said that press freedom was ‘under siege, and that being a journalist can be a ‘dangerous trade. According to the US official, in 2014, over 60 journalists were killed and many others wounded, harassed, arrested or threatened. In another move, the Romanian Press Club has highlighted that in 2015 Romania is faced with aggravated internal crises and the effects of economic difficulties, which leaves little room for recovery. Beyond economic issues, Club officials argue, the editorial leadership should come up with solutions to solve the identity crisis gripping most publications. One such solution would be to promote an unbiased, innovative and consistent journalism.