Tag: rally

  • Sports flash

    Sports flash

    Monica Niculescu and Fanny Stollar on Thursday advanced to the women’s doubles finals as part of the WTA 250 tennis tournament in Tasmania’s Hobart, an event with 275,000 USD in prize money all told. On Thursday, the Romanian-Hungarian pair in the quarterfinals defeated the second-seeded Norwegian Japanese pair made of Ulrikke Eikeri and Makoto Ninomiya, 6-1, 7-6. Monica and Fanny play straight in the finals as their scheduled semi-finals opponents, pulled out of competition. They were third-seeded US player Sofia Kenin and Magda Linette of Poland.

    Romanian motorcyclist Emanuel Gyenes on Wednesday succeeded the best result so far at the ongoing edition of the Dakar Rally. In the fourth leg of the moto class, Gyenes came in 22nd, arriving 25 minutes and 21 seconds later than the winner, Australia’s Daniel Sanders. Also, Gyenes is 12th-placed according to Rally 2 ranking. Emanuel Gyenes is also the leader according to the ranking of pilots competing with no technical assistance.

    Romania’s national water polo team sustained yet another defeat in the second game as part of the World Cup in Otopeni, nearby Bucharest. In Division One’s Group C, on Wednesday Romania sustained a 12-16 defeat by Japan, being placed at the bottom of the table according to the final ranking. In Group A, Hungary are at the top of the table. Greece won Group B, while the United States, Group C. In Group D, Croatia emerged at the top of the table.

    Group winners have advanced straight to the quarterfinals alongside Japan, the best second-placed team. On Thursday, three other games are scheduled for the other places in the quarterfinals, as Spain takes on Serbia, France play Montenegro, while Romania goes against Georgia.

    In news from basketball, U-BT Cluj-Napoca on Wednesday sustained at 79-91 home defeat by Israeli opponents Hapoel Jerusalem, in a Group B confrontation as part of EuroCup men’s competition. Haopel thus took their revenge as in October 2024 in Bulgaria’s Samokov, U-BT Cluj Napoca grabbed a 81 – 73 win. According to Group B tables, Spain’s Valencia are at the top, with 12 wins and two defeats. Holders U-BT Cluj-Napoca are 5th-placed with seven wins and seven defeats. U-BT’s next scheduled fixture is this next week’s away game against Italian opponents of Umana Reyer of Venice.

  • January 17, 2024 UPDATE

    January 17, 2024 UPDATE

    PROTESTS Family
    doctors in many cities in Romania Wednesday protested against the amounts
    proposed by the authorities for the reimbursement of services. They say that
    the cuts in the budgets of family medicine practices will have negative
    effects, both for patients, and for the healthcare system as a whole. A bill
    posted for public review on the website of the National Health Insurance
    Agency, provides, among other things, that the funding granted to family
    doctors will be over 30% smaller in 2024, and the bonuses granted to practices
    in rural areas will be discarded. Meanwhile, the Sanitas trade union demands a
    20% raise of all salaries in public healthcare and the scrapping of all salary inconsistencies
    between various categories in the healthcare sector. On Thursday union leaders
    are to present their requests to the Finance Ministry, and threaten to go on strike
    unless their demands are met. The staff of some of the 9 government agencies
    for small and medium-sized enterprises in the country also went on a
    spontaneous 2-hour strike, demanding pay raises up to the average salary in the
    Economy Ministry. The protests of farmers and transporters also continue across
    the country, although employers in the field claim that they reached an
    agreement with minister Sorin Grindeanu and a protocol with clear deadlines was
    signed, benefiting passenger and freight carriers. The agriculture minister
    Florin Barbu has also held talks with trade associations, and says that at this
    moment all claims presented by farmers are solved.




    PRICES On
    Wednesday the Romanian agriculture minister Florin Barbu had a meeting with
    retailer representatives, with the talks mainly focusing on extending the
    cap on the basic food markup for another three months. Major retail chains
    suggested a mechanism targeting specific products for which significant price
    variations are still reported, instead of extending the overall markup cap.
    Minister Florin Barbu said the topic will also be discussed with PM Marcel
    Ciolacu, as retailers had requested. An emergency order introducing a temporary
    measure to curb excessive price increases for some agricultural and food
    products came into force on August 1st, 2023, and targeted 14 groups of food
    products, including bread, cow milk, cottage cheese, eggs, sunflower oil, fresh
    chicken and pork.




    AUTOMOTIVE Over the past 12 years Romania has
    doubled the number of cars and lorries, to become the EU member country with
    the highest increase of the vehicle per capita ratio, according to a report
    made public by the EU statistics office, Eurostat. Romania is still among the
    countries with the smallest number of automobiles per capita in the EU. The
    highest ratio is reported by Italy (684 cars per capita), followed by Luxembourg,
    Finland and Cyprus, with Latvia, Romania and Hungary at the opposite pole (417 cars
    per capita in Romania).




    JUDICIARY People
    who leave the country in order to avoid criminal prosecution, trial or
    execution of punishment may have to pay the expenses incurred by the State for their
    repatriation. The minister of justice, Alina Gorghiu, has announced that a
    draft law in this respect has been posted on the website of the ministry for
    public review. She says repatriating a fugitive criminal can cost the state up
    to EUR 25,000. Last year alone, Romania spent around EUR 2 mln of taxpayer
    money for the repatriation of some 600 fugitives.




    SCHENGEN The Schengen
    accession of Romania and Bulgaria, although partial, is a good sign, said the
    Belgian PM, Alexander De Croo, whose country has taken over the rotating
    presidency of the Council of the European Union. He applauded the efforts made
    by both countries to address Schengen concerns and stressed that, if things
    continued to go according to plan, the next steps would be taken. On March 31,
    Romania and Bulgaria will lift controls at air and maritime borders with EU
    member states.




    CITIZENSHIP The
    number of applications for Moldovan citizenship has increased significantly as
    of late, which is why Chisinau is asking for the review period to be extended
    to up to 6 months. According to official data, 70% of the applicants are
    Russian citizens, and 20% are Ukrainian. The increase in the number of
    citizenship applications made by Russians indicates attempts to avoid enlisting
    in the army – says the analyst Anatol Ţaranu, a former ambassador of the
    Republic of Moldova to the Russian Federation, quoted by Radio Chisinau.
    According to experts, Russia could begin a full mobilisation after the
    presidential elections due in March 2024. Kyiv claims that Moscow loses about
    1,000 soldiers every day on the front in invaded Ukraine. (AMP)

  • December 16, 2023

    December 16, 2023

    BUDGET The 2024 state budget and social security budget bills will be reviewed by Parliament’s specialist committees as of Monday. On Tuesday the draft laws will be discussed in a joint plenary
    meeting, with a final vote expected on Wednesday. On Thursday night the
    government passed the two bills, which rely on better spending of EU funds and
    on improving tax collection by means of a more efficient operation of the
    national tax agency and on curbing tax evasion. PM Marcel Ciolacu, the leader
    of the Social Democratic Party, spoke about an increase of budget revenues from
    27% to 30% of GDP. According to him, the 2024 budget earmarks the largest
    funding in Romania’s history for education and investments. The Opposition, on
    the other hand, says the budget is based on unrealistic figures and that
    payment of public pensions will be a major problem next year.


    EU President Klaus Iohannis says the EU winter summit, which came to an
    end in Brussels on Friday, will be remembered for the historic decision to initiate
    accession negotiations with Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova. The Romanian
    official encouraged the government of Moldova to step up the reforms required
    for EU integration. As for Ukraine, the president of the European Commission,Ursula von der Leyen, says the
    decision was a promise kept and an investment in stability and security. EU
    leaders also discussed the Israel-Hamas war, and condemned the continuing
    hostilities with growing numbers of victims among Palestinian civilians in Gaza
    and the West Bank. They argued that peace will only be achieved through a
    two-state solution. A revision of the 2021-2027 Multi-Annual Financial
    Framework, support for Ukraine, securitaty and defence, migration and the
    future EU Strategic Agenda were also discussed at the European Council meeting
    on Thursday and Friday in Brussels.


    COMMEMORATION Romania marks today 34 years since the start of the 1989 Revolution
    in Timişoara (west) which eventually led to the fall of dictator Nicolae
    Ceauşescu’s communist regime. In this context, the Revolution Memorial was
    opened to the public in Timişoara on Saturday. The organisers prepared a
    complex programme, providing information on the events of 1989, with a special
    section for the visually impaired.


    ISRAEL Hundreds of people gathered in Tel Aviv on Friday night,
    following an announcement that 3 Gaza hostages had been accidentally killed by
    Israeli troops. The protesters demanded that the government immediately signed
    a deal to free the remaining hostages. Over 100 people are still captive in
    Gaza, after being kidnapped by Hamas in the October 7th attacks on Israel.
    Meanwhile, humanitarian aid will reach Gaza via an Israeli checkpoint, for the
    first time since the start of the war, after Israel authorised access through
    the Kerem Shalom checkpoint. So far humanitarian aid could only go through the Rafah
    checkpoint from Egypt. After more than 2 months of armed conflict and the siege
    imposed by Israel since October 9th, living standards in Gaza Strip
    are described by the UN and NGOs for Palestinian civilians as a nightmare. According
    to the UN, some 1.9 million people, accounting for 85% of the region’s
    population, have been relocated. (AMP)

  • May 21, 2023 UPDATE

    May 21, 2023 UPDATE

    EDUCATION On Monday the staff in Romania’s public undergraduate
    education will go on strike, the trade unions in the sector announced after
    Sunday’s talks with government officials. The protest will continue until
    unions have received a credible solution from the government, the leader of
    the Spiru Haret Trade Union Federation, Marius Nistor, said. The government put
    forth a clear roadmap for the endorsement of the new salary law and promised pay
    raises for non-teaching staff, which according to unionists would only amount
    to EUR 20 a month. Financial incentives for entry-level teachers and experienced
    staff teaching in underprivileged areas have also been proposed. The higher
    education staff will also go on token strikes as of Monday, the head of the Alma
    Mater National Trade Union Federation Anton Hadăr announced. Trade unions said
    negotiations would continue in the coming days.


    MOLDOVA
    A large-scale rally was held in Chişinău on Sunday, at the initiative of
    president Maia Sandu, in order to prove Moldovans’ support for the country’s EU
    accession. Europe is the Republic of Moldova. The Republic of Moldova is
    Europe. Moldova is not alone, the president of the European Parliament, Roberta
    Metsola said in Romanian at the European Moldova National Assembly. Participants
    adopted a resolution confirming the support of Moldovan citizens for the
    country’s EU accession efforts. The rally takes place as the Republic of
    Moldova, an EU accession candidate country, would like to begin accession
    negotiations by the end of this year. For this stage to begin, Moldova must
    complete 9 recommendations, which will be assessed by this autumn in a European
    Commission report. In Bucharest, the Organisation of Moldovan Students
    organised a similar rally in front of Moldova’s Embassy. Scores of people
    watched the speeches in Chisinau jointly with the Moldovan Ambassador to
    Bucharest, Victor Chirila.


    DIPLOMACY The Romanian foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu takes part on
    Monday in the meeting of the EU Foreign Affairs Council in Brussels. The EU
    foreign ministers will discuss measures to mitigate the effects of Russia’s
    aggression in Ukraine and the situation in the Horn of Africa. The EU officials
    will also touch on the bloc’s commitment in Central Asia, developments in Tunisia,
    the relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the context of high-level EU
    diplomatic contacts with both countries. According to the Romanian foreign
    ministry, Bogdan Aurescu will reiterate Romania’s firm, multidimensional and
    continuing support for Ukraine and will express hopes that an agreement will be
    reached as soon as possible on the 8th support package for the
    Ukrainian air forces under the EU Peace Facility. Minister Aurescu will also
    highlight the importance of keeping pressure on Russia by consolidating
    sanctions, and will reiterate the idea of setting up a special international tribunal
    for the crime of aggression to prosecute Russian crimes of aggression during
    the war in Ukraine.


    RAILWAYS The president of Romania’s Competition Council, Bogdan
    Chiriţoiu, made statements concerning Carpatica Feroviar, a new company that
    will take over the operations of the state-owned railway freight corporation CFR
    Marfă. The new company will take over the profitable contracts and the
    equipment needed for completing them, while the other assets will be sold in order
    to cover as much as possible of the old company’s debts to the state budget
    Chiriţoiu explained. He emphasised that current operations will not be
    discontinued. The financial performance of CFR Marfă improved slightly in 2022,
    but the company still owes some EUR 400 mln to the state budget and social
    security budget.


    BEEKEEPERS Romanian beekeepers say they are left with large amounts
    of unsold honey because of imports of cheaper and poorer-quality honey. The
    head of the Romanian Beekeepers Association, Ioan Fetea, says the situation is
    particularly serious as last year’s yield was a lot smaller than in previous
    years. Last year beekeepers saw modest yields, but they could not even sell those,
    precisely because of these dumping practices, obviously explained by the fact
    that that honey is not in line with EU regulations. Almost half of the honey
    imported into Europe is adulterated, counterfeit, and obviously sold very
    cheaply, which puts tremendous pressure on local producers, Fetea explained. Beekeepers
    are also struggling with a fall in the number of bee families, because of the
    use of insecticides in agriculture.


    UKRAINE The US president Joe Biden Sunday announced new military aid
    measures for Ukraine, following talks with his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskyy,
    on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Hiroshima. The new aid package will
    consist of ammunitions, artillery and armoured vehicles, Joe Biden explained, just
    days after approving the provision of F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine. According
    to Reuters, this new package is worth up to USD 375 mln and is designed to
    strengthen Ukraine’s defence in the war against Russia. The British PM Rishi
    Sunak also announced in Hiroshima that his country would start training
    Ukrainian pilots this summer, to support Ukraine’s air forces in the conflict.
    Rishi Sunak added that no one wants peace more than Volodymyr Zelenskyy, but
    the terms for peace, he added, should be based on Ukraine’s principles. In the
    3-day summit in Japan, the G7 nations voiced their willingness to stand by
    Ukraine in the long run.



    ROWING Romania won 2 gold and 3 silver medals at
    the 2023 European Rowing Under 19 Championships in Brive-la-Gaillarde, France,
    in which it took part with 11 boats. Romania came out second in the overall nations
    tables, behind Italy and ahead of Turkey. In last year’s competition, Romania
    had won 5 medals (3 gold, one silver and one bronze), and finished top of the
    ranking by nations. (AMP)

  • May 21, 2023

    May 21, 2023

    EDUCATION
    In Bucharest, the Liberal PM Nicolae Ciucă, the Social Democratic leader Marcel
    Ciolacu and the labour minister Marius Budăi invited trade unions in public
    education to talks in order to avoid an all-out strike announced for tomorrow. Unionists
    said protests could only end when the solutions to their demands, particularly
    concerning salaries, were introduced in officially endorsed legislation. The
    finance minister Adrian Câciu said the teaching staff’s demands could have been
    solved, if Romania had received the money in the second disbursement round
    under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan, which is currently suspended
    because of targets that have not been met in the field of energy, for which the
    National Liberal Party is responsible. On the other hand, PM Nicolae Ciucă said
    the solution to the unions’ demands has to do with the unified salary law that
    the labour ministry headed by the Social Democrats has failed to finalise in
    spite of the support of the entire ruling coalition. Amid these disagreements, the
    president of the Social Democratic Party, Marcel Ciolacu, demanded that
    negotiations on the new cabinet make-up following the PM rotation should be
    suspended until the issue in the education sector has been solved, and the Democratic
    Union of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania, a junior partner in the ruling
    coalition, agreed. The Liberals on the other hand argue that the government
    transition should be completed quickly in order to maintain stability and
    balance. Under a protocol signed by the 2 parties, on 26 May the Social
    Democrats should take over the prime minister post from the Liberals, for the
    next 1,5 years, until the next general elections.


    MOLDOVA
    A large-scale rally is held in Chişinău today, at the
    initiative of president Maia Sandu, in order to prove Moldovans’ support for
    the country’s EU accession. Europe is the Republic of Moldova. The Republic of
    Moldova is Europe. Moldova is not alone, the president of the European
    Parliament, Roberta Metsola said in Romanian at the European Moldova National
    Assembly. Participants adopted a resolution confirming the support of Moldovan
    citizens for the country’s EU accession efforts. The rally takes place as the Republic
    of Moldova, an EU accession candidate country, would like to begin accession
    negotiations by the end of this year. For this stage to begin, Moldova must
    complete 9 recommendations, which will be assessed by this autumn in a European
    Commission report. In Bucharest, the Organisation of Moldovan Students
    organised a similar rally in front of Moldova’s Embassy. Scores of people
    watched the speeches in Chisinau jointly with the Moldovan Ambassador to
    Bucharest, Victor Chirila.


    UKRAINE The US president Joe Biden Sunday announced new military aid
    measures for Ukraine, following talks with his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskyy,
    on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Hiroshima. The new aid package will
    consist of ammunitions, artillery and armoured vehicles, Joe Biden explained, just
    days after approving the provision of F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine. According
    to Reuters, this new package is worth up to USD 375 mln and is designed to
    strengthen Ukraine’s defence in the war against Russia. The British PM Rishi
    Sunak also announced in Hiroshima that his country would start training
    Ukrainian pilots this summer, to support Ukraine’s air forces in the conflict.
    Rishi Sunak added that no one wants peace more than Volodymyr Zelenskyy, but
    the terms for peace, he added, should be based on Ukraine’s principles. In the
    3-day summit in Japan, the G7 nations voiced their willingness to stand by
    Ukraine in the long run.


    FLOODING
    In Italy, code red alerts for heavy rainfalls with landslide risks are valid
    today as well, in the Emilia Romagna region in the north of the country, already
    affected by unprecedented flash floods. Fourteen people died and 36,000 others
    were evacuated by the authorities. According to Radio Romania’s correspondent
    in Italy, in Ravenna province alone, the most severely hit by the floods, over 16%
    of the territory has been evacuated. A preliminary estimate by Confagricoltura,
    the association of Italian farmers, indicates that the flooding in Emilia
    Romagna caused crop damages of over EUR 1.5 bln.


    GREECE
    Greece is holding elections today for its single-chamber 300-seat parliament, with
    around 9.5 million people expected to take part in the vote. As many as 36 parties
    and political associations are running for parliamentary seats, for which they
    need at least 3% of the votes. The most likely to win is incumbent PM Kyriakos
    Mitsotakis’s party, New Democracy, with 33% of the voting intentions in polls. The
    left-of-centre Syriza party, headed by Alexis Tsipras, is predicted to carry
    26% of the votes. A novelty in this election is the scrapping of the 50-seat
    bonus for the winning party. Unless the parties manage to form a new
    government, early elections will be held in July, with a return to the previous
    bonus system. (AMP)

  • The February 16, 1933, railway workers’ strikes in Bucharest

    The February 16, 1933, railway workers’ strikes in Bucharest

    A deep economic crisis hit the whole world between
    1929-1933. Also known as the Great economic Crash, the crisis, among other
    things, translated into violence, an increasingly poor living standard, strikes
    and protest rallies. Romania was also marred by this crisis, having its dismal share
    of the aftermath and the ensuing social unrest. Strikes and protest rallies
    flared up countrywide, especially in the industrial regions. Illustrative of such
    a situation was the 1929 miners’ strike in Lupeni. Back then workers were
    protesting against the so-called sacrifice curbs, meaning salary cuts and price
    hikes. During the aforementioned four-year span, another strong protest
    movement was the strike staged over January-February 1933 by the railway
    workers employed by Bucharest’s Grivita Repair workshops. However, the strike
    was equally politicized by the communist regime that held Romania under its
    grip between 1945 and 1989.


    If we take some time to examine documents of that
    time, we can detect two stages in the unfolding of events. The first stage was
    the legitimate strike staged by the railway workers’ unions, who negotiated
    some of the claims employers even complied with. Over January 31st
    and February 2nd, 1922, the Grivita trade unions obtained an increase
    in wages as well as other benefits, for their members. The second stage unfolded
    after the communist and Comintern-controlled unions were a lot more focused on their political claims. We
    recall the Comintern used any form of social unrest to cause instability.


    Negotiations were brought to a standstill
    for a couple of days, while immediately afterwards, on the morning of February
    16, 1933, the government took forceful action against the 4,000 workers who had
    barricaded themselves on the premises of the repair workshops. The gendarmes’
    intervention claimed the lives of seven workers, while 15 others were wounded. 160 workers were arrested.


    The communist regime that was instated in Romania after
    1945 had been constantly using that strike as a propaganda tool and for the particular
    reason whereby communist leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej had been employed by
    Grivita, where he was one of the instigators and where he was imprisoned. Notwithstanding,
    after 1989, archive research and the interviewing of the very few surviving
    witnesses have revealed a different kind of reality. In 1998, Radio Romania’s Oral
    History Centre interviewed engineer Constantin
    Negrea, who in 1927 was a young employee with the Romanian Railway Repair Workshops.
    Negrea reminisced the 1931 protest rallies he joined himself with the 800
    workers, and which claimed the lives of two people.

    Constantin Negrea:


    In 1931, certain
    problems occurred. We had been threatened with the sacrifice curb. And we, on
    January 29, 1931, we staged a protest rally against the implementation of the
    sacrifice curb. We were deprived of our dues, bit by bit. And then, we took to the
    streets after 4 pm, heading towards the Grant Bridge, to the Repair workshops,
    we wanted to get there. We also had a couple of sergeants in tow, they were
    accompanying us. We were shouting we did not want the sacrifice curb. When
    we hit the Grant Bridge, we got shot at! One man, Craciun, died, he was a carpenter,
    and a Jew, Schwartz, who came from
    Oradea to get married. So there were two people dead!


    Two years later, the 1933 strikes began with staging
    protest rallies, just like their predecessors, yet they changed the tactics, so
    their voice could be better heard.


    Instead of moving about and shouting in the street we
    didn’t want the sacrifice curb, we replaced that with the activation of the siren
    every thirty minutes, many times. We replaced taking to the streets in protest
    rallies. We began to organize ourselves in union groups and everyone knew on
    the day of 15 we were supposed to rally, all of us, even though the frost was
    so harsh. We intended to get out in the repair workshops’ courtyard where there
    was some kind of a little park set up on the premises. Constructions works for
    the park were not completed, so a couple of sand loads had been unloaded, and
    there was a sand bank there. Well, several cauldrons were brought there, 5,
    maybe 6, where we warmed ourselves lighting a fire. After that, a plank
    barricade was erected at the back entrance of the Locomotives Division, it was
    an entrance there and there also was a roof.


    Despite strikers’ radicalism, among
    them there were people who were talking sense and the fears they voiced turned out
    to be real, in the long run.


    Evening set in and,
    logically, the people there, there was a one Mogos who worked at the plant and there
    was another one, they stepped aside, they kind of dodged, and said: We get
    fired and we won’t be able to earn our keep anymore! They were older, more sensible,
    more well-advised, quite unlike us, who were younger. The last time we rallied
    was around 5 pm, at five past I’d already made for the siren, and in ten
    minutes I walked back to the gates. At 5.45am sharp, live rounds were fired. They
    shot on sight and six people died, that’s how many were shot dead.


    The dead and the communist
    organizers, who were sentenced to prison, saw their worst when the strike of
    February 1933 ended. The events in Grivita that happened 90 years ago were the events
    of a generation that firmly opposed the deterioration of their lives. Sadly,
    the February 1933 strikes were partially hijacked by the radical communists, the advocates of
    a criminal regime.(EN)


    .

  • Romanians are protesting the latest price hikes

    Romanians are protesting the latest price hikes

    Autumn has constantly been the season of social protests in the past 30 years of Romanian democracy. The approaching winter, which has always taken Romanias politicians by surprise, is amplifying the fears and discontent of the Romanians. They already have some of the lowest salaries and pensions in the European Union and their purchasing power has been severely affected by the growing inflation rate, up to more than 15% annually.



    Prices went through the roof for almost every product, from food to electric appliances and services and experts believe the phenomenon is due to the latest price hikes in energy. The government has come up with a series of incoherent schemes aimed at capping prices and offering subsidies, which unfortunately proved ineffective and fell short of convincing people, who are more and more frightened by the huge electricity and utility bills they are going to get this winter.



    Members of a union confederation known as Cartel Alpha mounted a first protest rally in Zalau, north-western Romania, in an attempt to draw attention to the growing electricity prices, which have significantly impacted the business environment, institutions and especially the population.



    The unionists say this is only the beginning of a series of protests titled The Anti-poverty March, a protest caravan, which is going to cross the country on its way to capital Bucharest, where a large-scale rally is scheduled on October 20th.



    “Romania presently has no strategy to cope with the upcoming winter”, a trade union leader says. Cartel Alpha has also mounted a protest rally in front of the Mintia Power plant calling for pay rises and price caps as well as for amendments to the Social Dialogue Law. “We want to draw the Romanian governments attention to the deepening energy crisis, which is impoverishing people. We are asking for pay rises and capped energy prices, as well as for the resumption of energy production in coal-fired power stations”, says the president of the Hunedoara branch of Cartel Alfa, Cristian Iştoc.



    He explained that the site of their protest, the Mintia power plant, hasnt been chosen randomly. The aforementioned energy production unit was shut down in March 2021 and since then electricity prices have increased ten times. “Electricity is more expensive here than in Germany, whereas salaries are four times lower, and thats completely unfair”, Iştoc said. The situation in Romania is not singular; tens of thousands have taken to the streets of Prague, Paris, London and Budapest to protest the falling living standards, an indirect but very palpable effect of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.


    (bill)

  • Athlete of the week

    Athlete of the week


    Romania’s best performance as part of The
    European Rallies’ Championship in the modern era. This
    is the rating of Romanian Sports Automobile Federation for this past weekend’s
    performance of Simone Tempestini. In the second stage of the European Rallies’ Championship,
    the Azores Islands’ Rally, the Italian-born Romanian rally driver came in 4th.
    For his notable feat as part of the rally in the Atlantic archipelago, Radio
    Romania International has designated Tempestini the Athlete of the Week.


    According to Agerpres News Agency, in the
    Azores islands rally, Simone Tempestini and his co-driver, Sergiu Itu, also won
    two special events, coming in second in other three. The Tempestini / Itu crew,
    driving a Skoda Fabia R5, were outclassed by 50 seconds and 4 tenths of a second
    by the all-Spanish winning crew made of Efren Llarena and Sara Fernandez, who
    clocked 2 hours, 24 minutes, 58 seconds and 3 tenths of a second. The Romanian
    crew’s exceptional trail somehow balanced out their unassuming debut in the ongoing
    season. We recall that two weeks ago Tempestini and Itu had to abandon the race
    in the first stage of the European Rallies Championship held in Portugal, when
    they were a mere 10 kilometers away from finishing the race. At the moment, Tempestini
    is 8th placed according to the general rankings, with 23 points. With 45 points, Portuguese driver Armindo Araujo is at the top of the table. Following in descending order are Spaniards Efren
    Llarena and Nil Solans, with 42 and 32 points, respectively.


    Many-time
    Romania’s national rally champion Simone Tempestini was born on August 12,
    1994, in Treviso, Italy. He came to Romania with his father, Marco Tempestini, who was hired as a professional rally driver as a
    member of the Cluj-based Napoca Rally Academy team. It was also with Napoca
    Rally Academy team that, while still a junior competitor, Simone made his debut
    in 2009. In 2016 Simone became a world juniors’ champion. Simone was granted
    the Romanian citizenship also in 2016.


    (EN)

  • Athlete of the week

    Athlete of the week


    Romania’s best performance as part of The
    European Rallies’ Championship in the modern era. This
    is the rating of Romanian Sports Automobile Federation for this past weekend’s
    performance of Simone Tempestini. In the second stage of the European Rallies’ Championship,
    the Azores Islands’ Rally, the Italian-born Romanian rally driver came in 4th.
    For his notable feat as part of the rally in the Atlantic archipelago, Radio
    Romania International has designated Tempestini the Athlete of the Week.


    According to Agerpres News Agency, in the
    Azores islands rally, Simone Tempestini and his co-driver, Sergiu Itu, also won
    two special events, coming in second in other three. The Tempestini / Itu crew,
    driving a Skoda Fabia R5, were outclassed by 50 seconds and 4 tenths of a second
    by the all-Spanish winning crew made of Efren Llarena and Sara Fernandez, who
    clocked 2 hours, 24 minutes, 58 seconds and 3 tenths of a second. The Romanian
    crew’s exceptional trail somehow balanced out their unassuming debut in the ongoing
    season. We recall that two weeks ago Tempestini and Itu had to abandon the race
    in the first stage of the European Rallies Championship held in Portugal, when
    they were a mere 10 kilometers away from finishing the race. At the moment, Tempestini
    is 8th placed according to the general rankings, with 23 points. With 45 points, Portuguese driver Armindo Araujo is at the top of the table. Following in descending order are Spaniards Efren
    Llarena and Nil Solans, with 42 and 32 points, respectively.


    Many-time
    Romania’s national rally champion Simone Tempestini was born on August 12,
    1994, in Treviso, Italy. He came to Romania with his father, Marco Tempestini, who was hired as a professional rally driver as a
    member of the Cluj-based Napoca Rally Academy team. It was also with Napoca
    Rally Academy team that, while still a junior competitor, Simone made his debut
    in 2009. In 2016 Simone became a world juniors’ champion. Simone was granted
    the Romanian citizenship also in 2016.


    (EN)

  • Sports Roundup

    Sports Roundup

    We start with football. Coach Edward Iordănescu started with a defeat at the helm of the Romanian national football team. On Friday, in Bucharest, the Romanian footballers were defeated 1 – 0 by the Greek national team, in a friendly match. The only goal of the match was scored by Andreas Bouchalakis, in the 39th minute. Playing for the first time for the national eleven were Octavian Popescu, from FCSB, and Radu Drăguşin, who is under a contract with Juventus Turin and was borrowed by Salernitana.



    The campaign to prepare for the League of Nations matches continues on Tuesday, with a friendly match with the Israeli team, scheduled for Netanya. Two of the main members of the Romanian team, Alexandru Maxim and Mario Camora, will miss this game, as announced on Sunday by the Romanian Football Federation. Maxim was severely affected by a respiratory virus infection, and Camora suffered from muscle problems. The two join four other footballers, namely Răzvan Marin, Alexandru Mitriţă, Deian Sorescu and Florin Tănase, who left the training program and isolated themselves, after having tested positive for Covid-19 the day following the match with Greece.



    Now news from tennis. Romania was left without representatives at the WTA 1000 tennis tournament in Miami, with prizes up for grabs worth 8,300,000 dollars. The last Romanian in the competition, Irina Begu, was defeated, in the third round, by the Belarusian Aleksandra Sasnovici, with 7-5, 6-7, 6-4, on Saturday, after three hours of play. In the second round, Begu had passed the main favorite of the tournament, Arina Sabalenka, also from Belarus.



    Let’s move on to women’s handball. Minaur Baia Mare has taken a big step towards the semifinals of the European League. On Saturday, the Maramures team defeated, at home, in the first round of the quarterfinals, the Norwegian team Sola, 40 to 32. The second round will be played on Sunday, in Stavanger. In the previous edition, Minaur hosted the tournament, which included the semifinals and the final of the competition, ranking 3rd. In another game from the first leg of the quarterfinals, played on Sunday, SCM Râmnicu Vâlcea was defeated, at home, by the Danish team Herning – Ikaast with the score 39-33. The return game will take place on Saturday in Denmark.



    Romania’s national rally champion, Simone Tempestini, was ranked 4th on Sunday in the Azores Rally, the second stage of the European Rally Championship. According to the Romanian Motor Sports Federation, Tempestini achieved Romania’s best result in the modern era of the European Rally Championship. (LS)


    And that was all from Sports roundup, you can also find this sports item on the Internet, on RRIs webpage and Facebook profile.

  • Sports Roundup

    Sports Roundup

    We start with football. Coach Edward Iordănescu started with a defeat at the helm of the Romanian national football team. On Friday, in Bucharest, the Romanian footballers were defeated 1 – 0 by the Greek national team, in a friendly match. The only goal of the match was scored by Andreas Bouchalakis, in the 39th minute. Playing for the first time for the national eleven were Octavian Popescu, from FCSB, and Radu Drăguşin, who is under a contract with Juventus Turin and was borrowed by Salernitana.



    The campaign to prepare for the League of Nations matches continues on Tuesday, with a friendly match with the Israeli team, scheduled for Netanya. Two of the main members of the Romanian team, Alexandru Maxim and Mario Camora, will miss this game, as announced on Sunday by the Romanian Football Federation. Maxim was severely affected by a respiratory virus infection, and Camora suffered from muscle problems. The two join four other footballers, namely Răzvan Marin, Alexandru Mitriţă, Deian Sorescu and Florin Tănase, who left the training program and isolated themselves, after having tested positive for Covid-19 the day following the match with Greece.



    Now news from tennis. Romania was left without representatives at the WTA 1000 tennis tournament in Miami, with prizes up for grabs worth 8,300,000 dollars. The last Romanian in the competition, Irina Begu, was defeated, in the third round, by the Belarusian Aleksandra Sasnovici, with 7-5, 6-7, 6-4, on Saturday, after three hours of play. In the second round, Begu had passed the main favorite of the tournament, Arina Sabalenka, also from Belarus.



    Let’s move on to women’s handball. Minaur Baia Mare has taken a big step towards the semifinals of the European League. On Saturday, the Maramures team defeated, at home, in the first round of the quarterfinals, the Norwegian team Sola, 40 to 32. The second round will be played on Sunday, in Stavanger. In the previous edition, Minaur hosted the tournament, which included the semifinals and the final of the competition, ranking 3rd. In another game from the first leg of the quarterfinals, played on Sunday, SCM Râmnicu Vâlcea was defeated, at home, by the Danish team Herning – Ikaast with the score 39-33. The return game will take place on Saturday in Denmark.



    Romania’s national rally champion, Simone Tempestini, was ranked 4th on Sunday in the Azores Rally, the second stage of the European Rally Championship. According to the Romanian Motor Sports Federation, Tempestini achieved Romania’s best result in the modern era of the European Rally Championship. (LS)


    And that was all from Sports roundup, you can also find this sports item on the Internet, on RRIs webpage and Facebook profile.

  • Sports weekend

    Sports weekend

    German
    cyclist Nikodemus Holler Thursday night won the preliminary stage of the 10th
    edition of Sibiu Cycling Tour, held in the town’s historical center. The race
    was two and a half kilometres long. Its starting and finish points were in the
    town’s Grand Square. Two Polish cyclists, Kacper Walkowiak and Wojciech Sykala,
    followed suit throughout the race. The Romanian Iustin-Ioan Văidian, came in
    8th at the end of the race. We recall Vaidian is a regular of the national team
    and his timing was the best among the Romanian competitors. The first stage of
    the 183 kilometre-long race is held on Friday. The route is Sibiu – Sălişte -
    Dobârca – Cristian – Cisnădie – Bâlea Lac.


    The
    national absolute rally champion, Simone Tempestini, this coming weekend will
    represent Romania in the first leg of the European Rally Championship, to be
    held in Italy’s capital city Rome. Simone will take the start driving a Skoda
    Fabia R5. His co-pilot will be Sergiu Itu. Tempestini and Itu last took part in
    Rally di Roma Capitale in the 2017 season. Both competitors were 22 back then,
    and came in 5th overall. The first special race will be held on
    Saturday. The Rally in Rome has 15 events, with 197 rally kilometers all told.


    In news from football, this past Thursday, Mircea Lucescu was appointed head
    coach of Ukrainian football team Dinamo Kyiv, according to a message posted on
    the club’s official site. We recall Lucescu was for many years head-coach of another Ukrainian team, Shakhtar Donetsk. Lucescu signed a two-year contract,
    with the option for a one-year extension. Lucescu was also head-coach for the
    national team of Turkey, over August 2017 and February 2019.


    The
    reported COVID-19 infections as of late have made the ongoing domestic football championship
    look a little bit complicated. Group 1 runner-up team CFR Cluj’s head-coach Dan
    Petrescu tested positive for COVID-19, and so did several other footballers and
    members of the club’s technical staff. Two staff members of top-of-the-table
    team Universitatea Craiova also tested positive for COVID-19, while the
    footballers tested negative. In Group 1 on Saturday, Gaz Metan Medias play a
    home game against FCSB. In Group 2, almost all footballers of Dinamo’s pool of
    regulars tested positive, so they have been placed in quarantine.

    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)






  • Sports weekend

    Sports weekend

    German
    cyclist Nikodemus Holler Thursday night won the preliminary stage of the 10th
    edition of Sibiu Cycling Tour, held in the town’s historical center. The race
    was two and a half kilometres long. Its starting and finish points were in the
    town’s Grand Square. Two Polish cyclists, Kacper Walkowiak and Wojciech Sykala,
    followed suit throughout the race. The Romanian Iustin-Ioan Văidian, came in
    8th at the end of the race. We recall Vaidian is a regular of the national team
    and his timing was the best among the Romanian competitors. The first stage of
    the 183 kilometre-long race is held on Friday. The route is Sibiu – Sălişte -
    Dobârca – Cristian – Cisnădie – Bâlea Lac.


    The
    national absolute rally champion, Simone Tempestini, this coming weekend will
    represent Romania in the first leg of the European Rally Championship, to be
    held in Italy’s capital city Rome. Simone will take the start driving a Skoda
    Fabia R5. His co-pilot will be Sergiu Itu. Tempestini and Itu last took part in
    Rally di Roma Capitale in the 2017 season. Both competitors were 22 back then,
    and came in 5th overall. The first special race will be held on
    Saturday. The Rally in Rome has 15 events, with 197 rally kilometers all told.


    In news from football, this past Thursday, Mircea Lucescu was appointed head
    coach of Ukrainian football team Dinamo Kyiv, according to a message posted on
    the club’s official site. We recall Lucescu was for many years head-coach of another Ukrainian team, Shakhtar Donetsk. Lucescu signed a two-year contract,
    with the option for a one-year extension. Lucescu was also head-coach for the
    national team of Turkey, over August 2017 and February 2019.


    The
    reported COVID-19 infections as of late have made the ongoing domestic football championship
    look a little bit complicated. Group 1 runner-up team CFR Cluj’s head-coach Dan
    Petrescu tested positive for COVID-19, and so did several other footballers and
    members of the club’s technical staff. Two staff members of top-of-the-table
    team Universitatea Craiova also tested positive for COVID-19, while the
    footballers tested negative. In Group 1 on Saturday, Gaz Metan Medias play a
    home game against FCSB. In Group 2, almost all footballers of Dinamo’s pool of
    regulars tested positive, so they have been placed in quarantine.

    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)






  • Protest without incidents on August 10

    Protest without incidents on August 10

    As many as 25 thousand people, including from the Diaspora, protested on Saturday evening in front of the government headquarters in Bucharest asking for an answer to what happened at the protest of the Diaspora one year ago, given that nobody has been found guilty for the protesters repression yet. We remind you that the protest of August 10, 2018, which was attended by almost 100 thousand people who showed discontentment with the governing coalition, was marked by the brutal and disproportionate intervention of gendarmes who used tear gas and water cannons against the protesters. People were injured on both sides, and legal action was taken in several cases, which are currently being handled by the prosecutors of the Directorate for Investigating Organized Crime and Terrorism DIICOT.



    According to the organizers of this protest rally, which unfolded without major incidents, the participants also protested against the latest developments in the political and social life. 4 people were taken into custody by the police as tear gas sprays and cold weapons were found on them. Also 11 people needed medical care, given the high temperatures reported on Saturday in the capital Bucharest. Protests also took place in other cities of Romania as well as abroad, mainly in the European capitals where many Romanians live. The interim interior minster Mihai Fifor thanked the protesters for the civilized and peaceful way in which they protested. Minister Fifor also thanked the authorities involved for the way they got mobilized, for their responsible attitude and professionalism.



    The protest in Bucharest was also covered by several foreign publications. “Thousands rally in Romania on anniversary of violent protest” wrote the British publication This is Money, that also added: “The protest was organized and promoted by groups of Romanians working abroad, angry at what they say is entrenched corruption, weak public administration and attempts by the ruling coalition to weaken the judiciary in one of the European Unions most corrupt states”. The English version of an article carried by Radio Free Europe headlines: “We know what you did last summer”. The issue was also covered by the German TV station Deutsche Welle that said that the rally was held in the context of a weakened governing coalition, given the poor results they obtained in the EP elections and the imprisonment for corruption of its leader Liviu Dragnea. (translation by L. Simion)


  • August 9, 2019 UPDATE

    August 9, 2019 UPDATE

    RALLY – A rally is scheduled to take place on Saturday in front of the Government headquarters in Bucharest, exactly one year since the large-scale protest rally against the Government formed by the Social Democratic Party and the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats, when the gendarmes intervened brutally and people were wounded on both sides. Some 25,000 people are expected to participate in Saturdays protest, including the German pianist Davide Martello, known for his performances held in conflict areas around the world. Protests have been announced in other cities across the country but also abroad. This week, the interim Interior Minister Mihai Fifor has twice called on the participants to protest peacefully and to observe the law. He has also said that Romania is a European state and its citizens have the right to freely express their views. The Bucharest Gendarmerie has announced that, for safety reasons, the participants are asked to not carry luggage and to move away from individuals or groups that intend to endanger the smooth running of the event. Road police will temporarily restrict traffic on the roads around the square where the protest will take place, and the General Inspectorate for Emergency Situations will deploy firefighting equipment in the area and provide emergency medical assistance.



    CARACAL INVESTIGATION – Searches continue at the Caracal home of Gheorghe Dinca, the 66-year old man who confessed, after being apprehended more than 2 weeks ago, to having killed and incinerated 2 teenage girls. New evidence is searched with respect to 18-year old Luiza Melencu, who went missing in April, after hitching a ride in Dincas car. On Thursday, genetic tests on the bone fragments found in a bag in a forest near Caracal were completed, and results indicate that the bones belong to 15-year old Alexandra Măceşanu, whom Dincă said he had killed in late July. Also on Thursday, the search on the suspects laptop, camera, mobile phones and memory stick was completed, with the data to be processed by forensic IT experts. The President of the European Parliament, David Sassoli, has called for more efficient measures to prevent murder and other violence against women, in a Twitter response to the Caracal case.



    TRADE – In the first half of this year, Romanian exports totalled nearly 35 billion euros, while imports stood at over 42.5 billion, taking the trade balance deficit to around 7.7 billion euros, the National Statistics Institute announced on Friday. The largest share in traded commodities was accounted for by vehicles and transport equipment and other manufactured products. According to the Statistics Institute, the trade deficit in the first half of this year is over 1.3 billion euro deeper than in the corresponding period of 2018.



    NAVY – Events devoted to the Romanian Navy Day, traditionally celebrated on August 15, have started in the Romanian Black Sea port of Constanţa. On Saturday, the Constanta Military Port organises an Open Door Day, with thousands of people expected to visit 14 Navy vessels, 2 Coast Guard ships, a Puma Naval helicopter, a submarine and mobile missile launchers. The event begins with a performance by the Navy Band, and participants will also be able to take part in workshops, presentations and exhibitions and interact with officials for navy education institutions, marines, military divers and hydrography experts. Until August 15, other Danube and Black Sea ports in Romania will also host concerts, book launches and interactive workshops.



    NATO – NATO announced on Friday that the upgrade of the Aegis Ashore missile defense system at the military base in Deveselu, in southern Romania, has been completed. The operation was carried out as part of a step-by-step approach to US missile defense in Europe, announced in September 2009. According to a NATO press release, the upgrade did not render the Aegis Ashore system offensive. The system targets only potential threats outside the Euro-Atlantic region and is exclusively defensive. In another move, the USS Porter destroyer was sent on a mission to the Black Sea on Friday, to help maintain maritime stability and prove the USs support for its NATO allies and regional partners. Its the sixth military vessel to enter the Black Sea this year. USS Porter was preceded by USS Carney, which last month took part in an American – Ukrainian exercise, alongside military ships from 19 countries, including Romania.



    ANONIMUL – The 16th Anonimul International Independent Film Festival comes to a close on Saturday in Sfântu Gheorghe, in the Danube Delta, south-eastern Romania. Six Romanian and foreign feature films took part in the official competition. The Ukrainian director Sergey Loznitsa, the winner of the 2018 Cannes “Un Certain Regard” award, is the guest of honour in this years festival. He received the “ANONIMUL” Trophy for his contribution to world cinema.



    UNIVERSITY – The 17th edition of the Izvoru Mureşului Summer University is taking place between August 12 and 17 in Harghita County, central Romania. This years theme is Romania and the Romanians abroad, one year after the Great Union Centennial. The topics approached will include preserving the identity of the Romanians in Ukraine, the Republic of Moldova in the context of regional geopolitical development and the Romanian national interest, the policies of parliamentary parties and public institutions with respect to the Romanians abroad and the Romanians in the multi-ethnic regions in Romania. Attending the works will be participants from Romania and from the diaspora, as well as from the Republic of Moldova, Ukraine, Hungary, Serbia, and Bulgaria, mass media and civil society representatives, and members of the academic community in Romania and abroad.