Tag: Romania’s last king Michael I

  • The Week in Review: December 3-9, 2017

    The Week in Review: December 3-9, 2017

    Romania’s
    last sovereign, King Michael I has passed away




    Romania’s last king,
    Michael I, died at the age of 96, after a long and painful illness, at his
    residence in Switzerland, where he had lived in exile. Michael I was the last
    of the four sovereigns of the German Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen dynasty, which
    took the throne in Bucharest in 1866 and built modern Romania. Many messages of
    condolences have been sent to the Royal Family, after the announcement that
    King Michael passed away. Romania’s President, Klaus
    Iohannis, evoked the impressive personality of His Majesty:


    King
    Michael was one of Romania’s greatest personalities, who played a big role in
    Romania’s history. It is a great loss for Romania, for Romanians. Condolences
    to all the members of the Royal House.


    In a televised declaration to the country, the
    eldest daughter of King Michael, Princess Margareta, Custodian of the Crown, said:


    Romanians, the country lost King Michael I. For more than nine
    decades, he served Romania with all his power, devotion and patience. With
    endless love and strong principles, King Michael wrote the most valuable page of
    contemporary history in the Book of the Nation. His kindness and forgiveness outshined
    all the evils of the past century. His wisdom gave continuity to our identity
    at times of deviation from the natural
    course of the country. Our king is an intrinsic part of the Romanian state.


    The European
    Commission President, Jean-Claude Juncker, has expressed deep sadness at the
    news and paid homage to His Majesty, recalling that back in 1997, King Michael toured
    the European capitals to promote Romania’s accession to the European Union. In
    the country, the Romanians continue to pay tribute and light candles in front
    of the former Royal Palace in downtown Bucharest and of Elisabeta Palace, the
    Bucharest residence of King Michael. The remains of the King will be repatriated
    on Wednesday, December 13, and will lie in state at Peles Castle in Sinaia, the
    Southern Carpathians, until later in the evening, when it will be brought to
    the Royal Palace in Bucharest. The funeral is scheduled for Saturday, December
    16, at Curtea de Argeş (in the south), the last resting place of the Romanian
    kings. The Romanian Government has declared three days of national mourning for
    December 14, 15 and 16. On Monday,
    December 11, the two chambers of the Romanian Parliament will pay homage to the
    former sovereign, in a joint solemn session. Michael I ruled between 1940
    and 1947. According to historians, with the decisions made during WWII he
    shortened the war by at least six months and saved hundreds of thousands of
    lives.



    The
    Romanian Government has endorsed the 2018 budget bill


    The 2018 budget and social security bill, approved by the Romanian
    Government on Wednesday, is based on a 5.5% forecast economic growth rate and
    an average annual inflation rate of 3.1%. Romanian PM Mihai Tudose has said it is
    for the first time that Romania’s GDP exceeds 200 billion Euros, which allows
    the Government to increase salaries and pensions. The bill will be adopted by
    the Romanian Parliament on December 21, according to a timetable set on Thursday
    by the joint Standing Bureaus of the Parliament’s two chambers. Also on
    Thursday, a revised estimate issued by the European Statistical Office, Eurostat, shows Romania
    registered the biggest economic growth rate across the EU in the third quarter
    of the year. In July-September, Romania’s GDP increased by 8.6% as compared to
    the same period of last year.



    Controversial justice
    bills in Romania


    The specialparliamentary commission on the justice laws has
    decided that it is necessary to set up a special section for the investigation
    of offences committed by prosecutors and judges in relation to their
    professional duties. The same commission has also approved a proposal under
    which services, bureaus and other operational compartments within the National
    Anti-corruption Directorate can’t be set up without the approval of the
    Prosecutors Section of the Higher Council of Magistrates. The
    proposals have been backed by the MPs of the ruling coalition made up of the
    Social Democratic Party and the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats, as well as
    by MPs of the Democratic Union of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania. The National
    Liberal Party and the Save Romania Union, in opposition, voted against the
    setting up of a Section for the investigation of prosecutors and judges, on
    grounds that it would be used in order to intimidate and put pressure on
    magistrates. The ruling coalition’s plan to amend the justice laws has
    generated protests in Bucharest and other big cities across the country.



    Romanian women handball players have qualified for the
    round of sixteen of the World Championships in Germany, and Romania’s football
    vice-champions have qualified to the Europa League round of 32


    Romania’s
    national handball team has qualified from the first position in the group to
    the round of sixteen of the World Championships in Germany, after defeating
    Angola on Thursday evening. The national team has had an excellent performance,
    with 4 wins in the matches with Paraguay, Slovenia, Spain and Angola. In the
    previous edition, held in 2015, Romania won the bronze medal. It is the only
    team which has participated in all the 22 world championship final tournaments
    so far. In another move, Romania’s football vice-champion FCSB (former Steaua
    Bucuresti) on Thursday evening lost on home turf, 1-2, the last match of the
    Europa League Group G, to the Swiss team FC Lugano. FCSB has qualified to the
    round of the last 32, from the second position in the group.