Tag: Romanian-British relations

  • November 2, 2018 UPDATE

    November 2, 2018 UPDATE

    PRESIDENCY -The President of Romania, Klaus Iohannis, will have a meeting on November 14th in London with the British PM, Theresa May, at the latters invitation, official sources told AGERPRES news agency on Friday. On the same day, Klaus Iohannis will attend a reception at Buckingham Palace, in honour of Charles, Prince of Wales 70th birthday, at the invitation of Queen Elizabeth II.



    GOVERNMENT- The PM of Romania, Viorica Dăncilă, said in Varna on Friday, that at the 4-party meeting between Romanian, Bulgarian, Greek and Serbian officials she had underlined that more must be done for Europes energy security, especially by diversifying supply sources and stepping up the interconnection process. In the field of transport, she reiterated Romanias interest in the building of new motorways and bridges across the River Danube. Attending the meeting were the PMs of Bulgaria and Greece, Boiko Borisov and Alexis Tsipras, the President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic, and the Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu. Prior to the talks, Dǎncilǎ and her Israeli counterpart agreed on the organisation of an economic forum, ahead of the joint meeting of the 2 countries governments. PM Dăncilă presented to her Israeli counterpart the changes operated on the legislation regulating public-private partnerships, which have made the Romanian investment climate more attractive. The Romanian official also reconfirmed Romanias interest in strengthening and deepening relations with Israel in energy and cyber security, healthcare, research and innovation. The 2 prime ministers also discussed means of cooperation between Romania and Israel, in the context of the Romanian presidency of the EU Council as of January 2019.



    BUDGET -The leaders of the Social Democratic Party and the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats, which make up the ruling coalition in Romania, convened on Friday for talks on this years budget adjustment and on 2019 budgetary projections. Attending the meeting was also finance minister Eugen Teodorovici. The agenda also included plans for setting up a Sovereign Development and Investment Fund and the companies that should be part of this fund, personnel downsizing measures in certain ministries and governmental agencies, and a possible increase in minimum salaries as of December 1.



    EU FUNDING -The European Commissioner for regional development Corina Creţu reiterated that Bucharest has so far submitted no funding applications for any major project that could be financed by the European Commission, except for the M6 underground line which is currently being analysed. We are long past the deadlines Romania has set itself for applying for EU funds for regional hospitals, for 3 motorways, for the Braila bridge and for the Bucharest ring road, Corina Creţu says. In a social network post, the European Commissioner dismisses the accusations made against her after she had repeatedly warned that the EU fund absorption by the Romanian Government has slowed down. Darius Vâlcov, adviser to PM Viorica Dăncilă, claimed on Thursday that the funding provided by the EU only accounts for 10% of the costs of building a regional hospital, and that the balance must be supplied by the Romanian state.



    LABOUR- Switzerland will lift all labour market restrictions for Romanian workers in May next year. The announcement was made during a visit to Bucharest on Thursday by the president of the Swiss Confederation, Alain Berset, who was received by President Klaus Iohannis. Alain Berset said, on the other hand, that Switzerland supports Bucharests bid for OECD membership, and that, although it is not an EU member, it will stand by Romania during the countrys presidency of the EU Council, in the first half of 2019.



    PROSECUTOR GENERAL – Romanias Prosecutor General, Augustin Lazăr, has demanded in court the suspension of procedures to remove him from office, started by the Justice Minister, Tudorel Toader. Lazar had earlier filed a complaint at the Justice Ministry against the assessment report drafted by Tudorel Toader. On October 24, the line minister started the procedure to remove Romanias Prosecutor General from office, mentioning 20 points against Lazar, among which signing a secret protocol with the Romanian Intelligence Service in 2016 and hiding the truth about this protocol.



    DEFENCE –Romanian defence minister Mihai Fifor said on Friday that Romania has reached the objectives set for this year in terms of the Armys endowment. The official claims that from this point of view, and not only, Romania is one of NATOs trustworthy partners. Mihai Fifor has recalled that this is the second year in a row that the Romanian Government allots 2% of the GDP for defence. The line minister has also said the Romanian military are still present on theatres of operations, and are also dispatched to Poland, under a partnership within NATO.



    VETERINARY The Romanian Veterinary Board has organised a rally at the Government headquarters on Friday, in order to draw attention to the major problems facing this profession and jeopardising public health. Veterinary physicians demand the immediate amendment of the law regulating their profession, which must be brought in line with a ruling of the EU Court of Justice. Otherwise, the protesters warn, public health is at grave risk in Romania, where anybody may open a veterinary dispensary and sell medications, without the need for veterinary physician supervision, and anybody may purchase such medication and give it to animals.



    FARMING Hundreds of companies from 25 countries are taking part in Bucharest, until Sunday, in the international farming trade fair INDAGRA, the largest of this kind in Romania. As part of the trade fair, the Rural Investment Financing Agency has organised a national conference on “Rural Development: A fundamental element of economic competitiveness and cohesion at EU level. Taking part in the conference was the Minister for Agriculture and rural Development, Petre Daea. The participants discussed the elements supporting the transformation of Romanian agriculture and rural communities, so as to be able to contribute to the competitiveness of the national economy.



    PROTEST – Over 100 workers from the ArcelorMittal Hunedoara steelworks in south-western Romania protested on Friday against the delayed negotiations on pay-rises. The protesters claim that most of them will earn next year the national minimum wage, if the Government increases this wage. The president of the “Steelworker Trade Union, Petru Vaidoş, said the trade union will brief the ArcelorMittal European Enterprise Committee, that will convene in Luxembourg next week. This is the second protest started by the steelworkers from ArcelorMittal Hunedoara, after that organised on October 18. The company based in Hunedoara has some 700 employees. (Translated by AM Popescu and D. Vijeu)

  • Romanian-British Strategic Relations

    Romanian-British Strategic Relations

    Romania plays a key role within NATO, says the British Defence Secretary, Gavin Williamson, who paid a visit to Romania on Thursday. He had a meeting in Bucharest with his Romanian counterpart, Mihai Fifor. During the talks, the Romanian defence minister requested British support in the process of rendering the NATO army corps headquarters operational, as Roamnia has expressed its readiness, at the recent summit of the alliance, to host such a structure on its territory. The security situation in the Black Sea region was also one of the focal points of the talks in Bucharest.



    Mihai Fifor: “Weve mentioned the Russian Federations political and military aggressiveness and its intention to militarise the Black Sea by increasing the number of military troops in the region and deploying new capabilities with a predominantly offensive potential, from all categories of the armed forces. The Russian Federation focuses its efforts on hybrid tactics and actions, with the aim of undermining the internal stability of both former Soviet states and of the allied countries situated in its vicinity, fuelling the so-called ‘frozen conflicts.



    In turn, Gavin Williamson said his country will provide military support to the NATO Brigade in Craiova, south-western Romania, and gave assurances that Great Britain will further contribute to consolidating European security, post-Brexit, as it had actually done long before the EU took shape.



    The two officials paid a visit to the RoAF 57th Air Base in Constanta County, in the south-east. They met with British military operating the aircraft belonging to the Royal Air Force and with the Romanian personnel of the military base. Mihai Fifor thanked the approximately 160 British military who carry out air police missions by August 31, flying four Eurofighter Typhoon aircraft, alongside the MIG 21 Lancer aircraft operated by their colleagues from the Romanian Air Forces.



    Mihai Fifor: “It is an immense pleasure to me to reiterate our appreciation for the presence in Romania of Great Britains Royal Air Force. I take this opportunity to restate our common wish to continue this cooperation, which is extremely valuable to Romania; it is a team effort made by a team of professionals. I wish you good luck in your future missions, smooth flights and clear skies!



    Mihai Fifor has also said the British partners presence in Romania is a message of solidarity within the North-Atlantic Alliance, a fact also confirmed by Gavin Williamson. The efforts made by the military are extremely important as they bring more safety to the people living on the whole European continent, and the partnership between the two nations will be brought to a higher level, the British official has also underlined. The two officials have also had another private meeting, afterwards they talked to the military stationed at the base before flying back to Bucharest.

  • Prince Charles visits Romania

    Prince Charles visits Romania

    There are few famous strangers Romanians seem to have taken a liking to, perceiving them as one of their one. Among them, the British Crown Prince Charles, who for the last two decades has been frequently visiting Romania, a country where he also holds a few estates. A keen enthusiast of the nature and architecture of Transylvania, Prince Charles set up a foundation promoting national heritage buildings, such as houses, citadels and fortified churches built by the Saxon settlers who migrated here in the Middle Ages.



    On Wednesday, President Klaus Iohannis awarded Prince Charles the “Romania Star” National Order, in Rank of Grand Cross, in token of appreciation for his activity in Romania and for helping promote the country’s image worldwide. Prince Charles hailed the good relations between the two countries and again spoke of his deep appreciation for Romanians. “All I’ve ever tried to do in the last 20 years while I have been visiting Romania was to help Romanians and make them remember the distinctiveness of their culture, their architectural legacy and, above all, their potential today”, Prince Charles said.



    During his meeting with Prime Minister Sorin Grindeanu, Prince Charles discussed what will happen to Romanians living in the UK after Brexit, about political and military relations between the two countries, both members of NATO, and about taking a common approach to foreign policy issues. An admirer of folk traditions, Prince Charles also visited the National Village Museum in Bucharest, where he expressed his delight with the old peasant houses and traditional customs.



    Prince Charles even joined a circle dance to the tunes performed by a folk ensemble, he sat down and talked to master craftsmen, taking an interest in their craft and the materials they use. In front of a traditional household typical of the Danube Delta, Prince Charles was received by the several-time Olympic and World champion rower Ivan Patzaichin, who gave the Prince an oar bearing his signature.



    The director of the Village Museum, Paula Popoiu, told us more about the visit: “Prince Charles visited the Village Museum and told me, before departing, that the museum is magnificent and he would return to visit it again. I find it truly remarkable for a man of such importance as him, who’s helping Romania so much, promoting our traditions, to visit our museum and deem it ‘magnificent’”.



    The agenda of Prince Charles’s official visit also included a meeting with the Patraich of the Romanian Orthodox Church, Daniel, and a family dinner with his cousin once removed, Princess Margareta of Romania, steward of the Romanian Crown. The eldest of King Mihai I’s five daughters, Princess Margareta has been fulfilling royal duties on behalf of his majesty who last year withdrew from public life due to his old age and health problems. (Translated by V. Palcu, edited by D. Vijeu)