Tag: tsunami in Indonesia

  • October 1, 2018

    October 1, 2018

    2018-2019 ACADEMIC YEAR – Nearly half a million students in Romania
    today are starting a new academic year. President Klaus Iohannis attended the
    opening ceremony in Iasi, recalling that the city hosted the first modern
    university in Romania in 1860. The President added that the recent decades,
    marked by economic and technological advancement, have turned the great
    university centers in pillars of economic growth. In turn, Prime Minister
    Viorica Dancila attended the opening ceremony at the Faculty of Medicine and
    Pharmacy in Craiova, saying that the Romanian medical school is an elite
    school, and that healthcare and education should underlie the development of
    society. The new academic year starts with the Education Minister position left
    vacant, after Valentin Popa resigned last week. Rovana Plumb, Minister of
    European Funds, has been nominated as interim Education Minister.




    REMARKS – The recent changes to the justice legislation in Romania
    risk throwing the country back in the early 2000s, a period marked by deep
    corruption, US Ambassador to Bucharest Hans Klemm said today at the opening
    ceremony of a new academic year at the Law School in Bucharest, also attended
    by the French Ambassador to Bucharest, Michele Ramis. Hans Klemm referred to
    the amendments brought to the Criminal Code and Criminal Procedure Code, the
    modifications brought to the Judicial Inspection Corps, and the magistrates’ protests
    against the changes, which were unimaginable in the past, Klemm argued. In
    their current version, these amendments will hinder or make it utterly
    impossible the investigation and prosecution of such crimes as murder and
    organized crime, the US official went on to say. According to Ambassador Klemm,
    international cooperation in the justice field will be reduced significantly
    over worries linked to sharing information with Romania.




    DEBATE – The latest developments in Romania related
    to the independence of the justice system are today under debate in the
    Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs at the European
    Parliament, in a meeting chaired by European Commission first vice-president
    Frans Timmermans. According to the European Parliament, the preliminary opinion
    issued by the Venice Commission regarding the three draft laws revising the
    status of judges and prosecutors, judicial organization and the functioning of
    the Superior Council of Magistracy will be also tackled. The meeting precedes
    Wednesday’s scheduled debate in the European Parliament, devoted to the rule of
    law in Romania, to be attended by Romania’s Prime Minister Viorica Dancila. The
    Romanian official discussed the topic earlier this week with the main political
    parties in the European Parliament.




    PARLIAMENT – Romanian Senators and Deputies will resume session on
    Tuesday after today they are attending ceremonies marking the start of a new
    academic year across the country. The Chamber of Deputies’ agenda includes the
    law regulating the exploitation of natural gas in the Black Sea. The debate and
    the vote on this matter was delayed by a week. The bill got Senate’s approval
    and has been tabled to the Chamber of Deputies. Members of the Alliance of
    Liberals and Democrats in Romania have announced they would introduce several
    amendments, while Social-Democrat leader Liviu Dragnea wants to delay the vote,
    to give MPs enough time to analyze and discuss the offshore bill. Also this
    week the ruling coalition faces two simple motions. The Liberal Party in
    opposition has filed a simple motion against Finance Minister Eugen Teodorovici
    in the Chamber of Deputies, while the Save Romania Union and Liberal party have
    filed a motion against Transport Minister Lucian Sova in the Senate. Both documents
    will be debated and voted on Wednesday. Parliament’s committee investigating
    the involvement of the Personal Security Service (SPP) in the activity of
    certain political parties and some of their leaders is also scheduled to start
    its activity this week. Deputy Prime Minister Paul Stanescu and the former
    director of the Service, Dumitru Iliescu, will be the first to be deposed.




    VISIT – European Union Chief Negotiator for Brexit Michel Barnier
    on Tuesday is paying an official visit to Bucharest. According to a press
    release made public by the European Commission’s Representation in Romania,
    Michel Barnier will meet with Romanian President Klaus Iohannis, Senate Speaker
    Calin Popescu-Tariceanu, Chamber of Deputies Speaker Liviu Dragnea, Prime
    Minister Viorica Dancila and Minister Delegate for European Affairs, Victor
    Negrescu. Additionally, the EU official will hold talks with representatives of
    Parliament’s joint committees for European affairs and foreign policy and with
    members of Parliament’s special committee for the coordination of actions
    connected to the Romanian Presidency of the European Council in the first half
    of 2019.




    NOBEL PRIZE – Scientists James P. Allison of the United States and
    Tasuku Honjo of Japan were today awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 2018
    for their discovery of cancer therapy by inhibition of negative immune
    regulation. The Nobel Prize for Literature will be announced next year along
    with the recipient selected for 2019, in the wake of wide-ranging sexual
    assault allegations targeting members of the Swedish academy, made public by
    #MeToo. The Academy has thus decided to postpone the literature prize for next
    year, to allow the institution to reform and replace its outgoing members. Five
    Nobel prizes were instated by Swedish inventors, industrialist and
    philanthropist Alfred Nobel, for medicine, chemistry, physics, literature and
    peace. A sixth Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences was founded by Bank of
    Sweden in 1968.




    TSUNAMI – The Government of Indonesia
    today called for international aid in the wake of Friday’s earthquake and
    ensuing tsunami that hit Sulawesi Island, killing some 830 people. The
    Government said 1,200 inmates escaped from three prisons, speculating the chaos
    that followed Friday’s catastrophe. The Romanian Foreign Ministry has conveyed
    condolences to the families of the victims and expressed its deepest compassion
    and solidarity with the Indonesian people and authorities. In another
    development, at least two people died and some 120 were wounded after Trami
    typhoon swept through southern Japan, disrupting the transport network.




    REFERENDUM – 90% of Macedonian voters on Sunday favored the name
    changing to North Macedonia in a Government-organized referendum.
    Unfortunately, the referendum was invalidated due to low voter turnout. The
    name-changing plan is aimed at putting an end to a long-standing spat with
    Greece, a country which this summer signed an agreement unlocking Macedonia’s
    path to NATO and the EU. To become a member of the North-Atlantic Treaty
    Organization, Macedonia needs to ratify the agreement with Greece by referendum
    and change its constitutional name. Only then will the Greek Parliament be able
    to ratify the agreement. The European Union has urged both parties to respect
    the results of Sunday’s referendum, with NATO also hailing what it has termed
    a historic decision to put aside all differences with Greece.




    TENNIS – Romanian tennis player Simona Halep is ranked first and
    enjoys a considerable lead in WTA standings. Halep is up 2,400 points over
    runner-up Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark and 2,700 against Germany’s Angelique
    Kerber. The gap will shrink starting next week, considering Halep withdrew in
    the first round in Beijing this year. Last year the Romanian player reached the
    finals. This is Simona’s 48th consecutive week at the top of the
    women’s singles rankings. Also the Romanian player is ranked 11th in
    an all-time ranking. Other Romanians ranked in the WTA Top 100 are Mihaela
    Buzarnescu (24), Irina Begu (53), Sorana Cirstea (61), Ana Bogdan (80) and
    Monica Niculescu (82).

    (Translated by V. Palcu)

  • September 29, 2018 UPDATE

    September 29, 2018 UPDATE

    FUND – The Romanian Ministry of Public Finance
    has launched a bill aimed at defining the legal framework for the Sovereign
    Development and Investment Fund for public debate. The fund will be a Romanian
    judicial entity whose organization and functioning are regulated by Government
    decree. The Fund will be a joint stock company owned entirely by the Romanian
    state. According to the Finance Ministry, the Fund is aimed at developing and
    financing sustainable investment projects using its own funds. It will bring
    together 33 state-owned companies, with a total social capital of some 2
    billion euros.




    MEETING – Romanian Foreign Minister Teodor Melescanu
    met with counterparts from Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Sri Lanka, Bahrain,
    the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Laos on the sidelines of the UN General
    Assembly held in New York. Additionally, the Romanian official met with his
    Hungarian counterpart, Peter Szijjarto. According to a Ministry release, the
    two officials looked at ways to improve bilateral relations, based on the Strategic
    Partnership between the two countries, EU and NATO membership and mutual
    respect. Talks focused on topics of mutual interest, especially supporting the
    European track of states in the Western Balkans and the need to diversify
    energy transport routes, in order to ensure energy security at regional and
    European level.




    LAW ENFORCEMENT – The Romanian Police has identified
    32 vehicles wanted internationally. Eight were reported as stolen in the United
    Kingdom, five in Belgium and Spain each, four in Italy, three in Germany, two
    in France and one in Poland, the Netherlands, Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania
    each. The Romanian Police recommends prudence to people who want to buy a
    second-hand vehicle in trade fairs abroad and to ask the buyer for all the proper
    car identification documents.




    GUAM – Ex-soviet states making up the so-called
    GUAM group – Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and the Republic of Moldova, will
    join efforts to consolidate their positions and defend territorial integrity,
    GUAM officials said as part of a GUAM Parliament Assembly held in Chisinau.
    GUAM officials have criticized Russia’s involvement in fueling territorial
    conflicts and military aggression, particularly in Georgia and Ukraine. GUAM
    was set up in 2006, with the aim of developing cooperation between members,
    consolidating stability and joint security at European level. The Republic of
    Moldova is currently holding the rotating presidency of GUAM. Chisinau is
    facing increased pro-Russian separatism in Transdniestr, a region the broke
    with Moldova in 1992 in the wake of an armed conflict that killed hundreds and
    that ended with the military intervention of Russian forces.




    TSUNAMI – The Romanian Foreign Ministry has conveyed
    its deepest condolences to the families of the victims of Friday’s earthquake
    and ensuing tsunami that hit Sulawesi Island, the Republic of Indonesia, which
    killed hundreds and left scores wounded or missing. The Ministry also expressed
    compassion and solidarity with the Indonesian people and authorities, also in connection
    to the high number of victims and the level of damages. Most casualties were
    reported in Palu city on the western coast of the island.




    RECORD – 4,807 people, mostly high-school children
    from all over the country, on Saturday set a new world record in Alba Iulia,
    central Romania, making up the largest human image of a country. The map of
    Romania had the number 100 highlighted at its center, standing for the
    celebration of the Great Union Centennial in 2018. The previous record was held
    by Myanmar, where 3,466 people made a human representation of their country in
    February 2018.




    TENNIS – Romanian tennis players Irina Begu and
    Raluca Olaru on Saturday lost 7-5, 6-3 to Olga Danilovic of Serbia and Tamara
    Zdansek of Slovenia in the women’s doubles final at the tournament in Taskent,
    Uzbekistan, totaling 250 thousand dollars in prize money. Olaru has previously
    won the Taskent doubles twice, in 2008 alongside Olga Savchuk of Ukraine and in
    2016 with Ipek Soylu of Turkey. Begu won the women’s singles in 2012.


    (Translated by V. Palcu)

  • September 29, 2018

    September 29, 2018

    TREASON CASE – The Directorate Investigating Organized Crime and
    Terrorism in Romania (DIICOT) has announced that it has closed a case based on
    the high treason accusations brought by Ludovic Orban, the president of the
    National Liberal Party in opposition, against Prime Minister Viorica Dăncilă.
    According to the Directorate, the case, which concerned the memorandum approved
    by the Government with respect to the relocation of the Romanian Embassy from
    Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, was dismissed because no breach of the law has been
    established. The criminal complaint filed in May by Ludovic Orban also
    concerned Liviu Dragnea, the president of the Social Democratic Party in power,
    who was accused of unlawful disclosure of state secrets, Orban said at the
    time.




    MEETING – Romanian Foreign Minister Teodor Melescanu
    met with counterparts from Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Sri Lanka, Bahrain,
    the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Laos on the sidelines of the UN General
    Assembly held in New York. Additionally, the Romanian official met with his
    Hungarian counterpart, Peter Szijjarto. According to a Ministry release, the
    two officials looked at ways to improve bilateral relations, based on the
    Strategic Partnership between the two countries, EU and NATO membership and
    mutual respect. Talks focused on topics of mutual interest, especially
    supporting the European track of states in the Western Balkans and the need to
    diversify energy transport routes, in order to ensure energy security at
    regional and European level.




    LAW ENFORCEMENT – The Romanian Police has identified
    32 vehicles wanted internationally. Eight were reported as stolen in the United
    Kingdom, five in Belgium and Spain each, four in Italy, three in Germany, two
    in France and one in Poland, the Netherlands, Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania
    each. The Romanian Police recommends prudence to people who want to buy a
    second-hand vehicle in trade fairs abroad and to ask the buyer for all the
    proper car identification documents.




    GUAM – Ex-soviet states making up the so-called
    GUAM group – Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and the Republic of Moldova, will
    join efforts to consolidate their positions and defend territorial integrity,
    GUAM officials said as part of a GUAM Parliament Assembly held in Chisinau.
    GUAM officials have criticized Russia’s involvement in fueling territorial
    conflicts and military aggression, particularly in Georgia and Ukraine. GUAM
    was set up in 2006, with the aim of developing cooperation between members,
    consolidating stability and joint security at European level. The Republic of
    Moldova is currently holding the rotating presidency of GUAM. Chisinau is
    facing increased pro-Russian separatism in Transdniestr, a region the broke
    with Moldova in 1992 in the wake of an armed conflict that killed hundreds and
    that ended with the military intervention of Russian forces.




    TSUNAMI – According to authorities in Indonesia,
    some 400 people were killed in the earthquake and ensuing tsunami that hit
    Sulawesi Island on Friday. Most casualties were reported in Palu city, hit by
    tsunamis measuring three meters in height. The coms and power grid are
    temporarily offline, while images flooding public media reveal dead bodies
    amidst debris along the shoreline, international news agencies report.




    HANDBALL – The Romanian women’s handball team
    is today playing Poland’s B team as part of a training campaign ahead of the
    European Championship hosted this year by France. The tournament will take
    place over November 29 – December 16. Romania was drawn in Group D along with
    Norway, Germany and the Czech Republic. At the European Championships of 2016,
    Romania was ranked 5th.




    TENNIS – Romanian tennis players Irina Begu and
    Raluca Olaru on Saturday lost 7-5, 6-3 to Olga Danilovic of Serbia and Tamara
    Zdansek of Slovenia in the women’s doubles final at the tournament in Taskent,
    Uzbekistan, totaling 250 thousand dollars in prize money. Olaru has previously
    won the Taskent doubles twice, in 2008 alongside Olga Savchuk of Ukraine and in
    2016 with Ipek Soylu of Turkey. Begu won the women’s singles in 2012.


    (Translated by V. Palcu)