Tag: regulations

  • The centenary of the 1923 Constitution

    The centenary of the 1923 Constitution

    The
    WWI victory of the Entente, a coalition of nations that Romania joined in 1916,
    led to the union with the Kingdom of Romania of territories with a majority
    Romanian population in Tsarist Russia and Austro-Hungary. In March 1918,
    Bessarabia or the eastern Moldavian land between the rivers Prut
    and Dniester that had been annexed by Russia in 1812 joined Romania, followed
    in November and December by Banat, Bukovina and Transylvania. The Kingdom of
    Greater Romania thus created was a brand new and much more diverse
    entity than what had existed before.


    Romania’s 125-year-old
    constitutional history began in 1866, with the coronation of Carol
    of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and the adoption of the first founding
    act of the Romanian state. To date, Romania has had no fewer than seven
    constitutions, each reflecting a different type of political regime. The 1866 Constitution
    was the founding constitution, that of 1923 was the constitution of the unification,
    that of 1938 was the expression of Carol II’s authoritarian regime, while the
    next three constitutions were adopted during the communist regime, in 1948,
    1952 and 1965. The final one, which is still in force today, was adopted in 1991
    and reinstated the values of democracy after the overthrow of the communist
    regime in 1989.


    The
    Constitution of 1923, which was published in the Official Gazette on 29th March,
    represented the most refined expression of Romanian constitutional law.
    The anniversary of 100 years since its adoption is an opportunity to remember
    the biggest Romanian democratic state that was created in the aftermath of WWI
    and for which around half a million Romanians sacrificed their lives, at a time
    when the country was led by King Ferdinand and Queen Marie.

    The Romanian
    Academy and the Italian Embassy in Bucharest celebrated together the
    anniversary of the 100 years that have since passed. The president of the
    Romanian Academy, the historian Ioan-Aurel Pop, outlined the most important
    moments in Romania’s constitutional history and discussed the 19th century
    Romanian legislation that helped lay the foundations of the future Romanian
    state:


    Romania had already had a
    constitution from 1866, but the general view was that it was no longer fit for
    purpose after 1918. Many said the Romanians drafted their constitution very
    late. In fact, they did so at the right time, together with most modern states
    in Europe. Italy had its own constitution in 1861 after the unification,
    incorporating the 1848 constitution created after the revolution in Palermo.



    The history of the period prior to the Romanian
    Constitution in the 19th century is fascinating. We can see the old
    customs disappearing, only to make room for other modern values replacing them.
    One such value was the importance of the popular vote.


    The historian Ioan-Aurel Pop:


    Just as we learned in school, the
    Constitution was the fundamental law of the states. I should add of the modern
    states, there were no constitutions in the Middle Ages, much as some pundits
    would like to push things back in the past. In the Romanian space, the Organic
    Regulations of 1831-1832 for Wallachia and Moldavia or the Leopoldine Diploma
    of 1691 for Transylvania had been imposed under foreign domination, having a mere
    constitutional value, without, however, being the democratic expressions of the
    Romanian people’s elected personalities. The Constitution of 1866 was the first such genuine act, written following an advanced European model, the Belgian
    model, and tailored to suit the Romanian realities, in a state that had barely
    become a constitutional monarchy.

    The 19th
    century ended properly in the 1920s of the 20th century, after
    the great world clash of the 1914 -1918. Everything changed yet again, while the
    new circumstances of the newly-emerging state of Greater Romania lead up to the
    birth of a new Constitution.


    Ioan-Aurel Pop:


    In 1918, Romania doubled its population and enlarged its territory, to
    be optimistic, not twice but almost three times as much. Therefore, a
    unification was needed and a uniformization, primarily a legislative one. And
    that, only the Constitution could accomplish. Our Constitution of 1923, adopted
    by Parliament, was a democratic one, considering the level of democracy at that
    time, and I’d like to add, the level of democracy in the South-east European
    states. The document declared Romania a national, unitary and indivisible
    state, with an inalienable territory. It was dubbed the Constitution of the
    union and was rather short-lived.


    Unfortunately, the Constitution of 1923 fell
    prey to both totalitarian regimes, fascism and communism. In 1938, it fell
    apart under the blows of fascist ideas, while in 1948, when it was barely
    reinstated, it was dismantled by the regime of the Communist Party.

    The historian Ioan-Aurel
    Pop:


    After less than two decades of being in force, in 1938, Romania had another constitution. Then,
    after World War Two, the one of 1923 had been officially reinstated and was in force until the official instatement of the communist regime in 1947. A little over four decades of communism followed, while the present constitution of
    Romania, adopted after 1989, with all the ensuing changes, owes a lot to the
    content of the old constitution of 1923. It was a document that was elaborated
    after a long period of reflection, it symbolized the formation, from a domestic
    legislative point of view, of unified Romania, also proving its perennial dimension.


    The Constitution of 1923 re-emerged in 1989 as a
    re-founding document of democracy. Its centenary today proves it still is a
    landmark of the heritage of Romanian judicial thought.






  • Regulations on seasonal worker transport

    Regulations on seasonal worker transport

    This spring, farming across Europe is severely affected by the absence of the seasonal workers involved in harvesting, triggered by the travel restrictions imposed in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Many of these seasonal workers used to come from Eastern Europe. This is why Romania introduced a number of conditions applying to the Romanians who leave for seasonal work abroad.



    The regulations are included in a Transport Ministry order under which all charter flights taking Romanian seasonal workers abroad must be scheduled at minimum 4-hour intervals.



    Under the order, the companies organising such flights have to notify the flight schedule ahead of time. Recruitment agencies are also bound to provide people with protection equipment, including masks and gloves, and workers will not be brought to airports more than 4 hours prior to take-off time, the regulation also says.



    Recruitment agencies will organise the transport only after they have received the greenlight from airports. Moreover, they must have at least one representative at the airport, to provide assistance to passengers, including in case of delayed or cancelled flights.



    The document tackles problems such as the one reported late last week at the airport in Cluj-Napoca, north-western Romania, when nearly 1,500 seasonal workers crowded in front of the airport, thus breaching the social distancing rules imposed under the military orders issued in the context of the coronavirus pandemic.



    Romanian workers are being brought into Germany for seasonal farm work after the local farmers warned that without Eastern European labour, harvests will be compromised. In Berlin, the agriculture minister cautioned that, in the context of the COVID-19 crisis, seasonal employees will have to comply strictly with the safety measures imposed by the authorities.



    According to the BBC, Germany, which usually employed some 300,000 seasonal workers in agriculture, has so far allowed 80,000 people to enter the country for this purpose.



    Several flights have taken Romanian workers from Sibiu (centre), Cluj-Napoca, Iaşi (north-east) and Bucharest over the past few days, and similar operations are scheduled for the forthcoming days.



    On the other hand, a number of flights to Germany have been cancelled recently over failure to comply with the provisions of Military Order no. 8 issued in Romania, under which such flights have to be approved by the Transport Ministry 48 hours prior to take-off.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • May 21, 2018

    May 21, 2018

    EU FUNDS– European Commissioner for Regional Policy Corina Cretu visits Romania for two days to discuss sustainable urban development. The European official joins PM Viorica Dancila and the minister in charge of European funds, Rovana Plumb, in a conference in Bacau on the issue. Corina Cretu will also visit an astronomic observatory in town financed by European funds. In a press release issued before the visit, Commissioner Cretu said that over a billion Euro are earmarked for urban development in Romania.




    CELEBRATION — Orthodox and Greek Orthodox faithful in Romania celebrate the feast of Saints Constantine and Helena, whom almost two million Romanians are named after. Emperor Constantine issued the Milan Edict in the year 313 CE, making Christianity an official religion in the Roman Empire. His mother Helena built churches in Bethlehem and Golgotha.




    REGULATIONS— New traffic regulations have been issued in Romania. Drivers who do not get their mandatory annual check-up are up for a fine and seizure of their registration and tags. The same penalty applies for cars that exchange owners, but do not get registered in the new owners name within 90 days of the purchase. As a novelty, auto mechanics who perform annual check-ups have an obligation to make a video recording of the procedure.




    DECISION — Romania and Ukraine have convened to introduce two pairs of trains linking Suceava, in northwestern Romania and Cernauti, in western Ukraine, starting on January 1st, 2019. The announcement was made by the Ukrainian ministry in charge of infrastructure after a meeting between Ukrainian Minister for European Integration, Viktor Dovhan, and Junior Secretary for the Ministry of Transportation, Maria Magdalena Grigore. The Ukrainian community in Romania is estimated at 400,000.




    CHISINAU — In the first round of snap elections for the mayoral seat in Chisinau, the capital of the Republic of Moldova, no candidate got the majority. The top ranked candidates will face off in the decisive round in two weeks, pro-Russian Socialist Ion Ceban, who got 41% of the vote, and Andrei Nastase, pro-European, on behalf of the Dignity and Truth Platform, with around 32%.




    HANDBALL — Mens handball team AHC Potaissa from Turda, in north-western Romania, won on Sunday the Challenge Cup, in spite of a defeat away from home 26-27, against AEK Athens from Greece in the second leg of the final. Potaissa had crushed their adversary in the first leg 33-22. The team played their second final in the Challenge Cup, after being defeated last year by the Portuguese team Sporting Lisbon. Potaissa is the fourth Romanian team to win the tournament, after CSA Steaua Bucharest in 2006, UCM Resita in 2007, 2008, and 2009, and HC Odorheiu Secuiesc in 2015. This month, womens team SCM Craiova won in the EHF finals against Norwegian team Vipers Kristiansand, and Romanian champions CSM Bucharest won in Budapest the bronze medal in the Final Four of the Champions League.