Tag: Union of Bessarabia with Romania

  • The Week in Review 26.03-01.04.2018

    The Week in Review 26.03-01.04.2018

    100 years since the union of Bessarabia with Romania



    On March 27th, the Romanian Parliament organized a solemn session to celebrate 100 years since the union of Bessarabia with Romania. A declaration was adopted, reading that Parliament deems legitimate the wish of those citizens of the Republic of Moldova who support the union with Romania as a natural step in the process of the development and affirmation of the Romanian nation. A province with a predominantly Romanian-speaking population that was part of the Tsarist Empire for 106 years, Bessarabia became united with the Motherland in 1918. Years later, in 1940, the Soviet Union re-annexed it under an ultimatum, and the present-day Republic of Moldova was created on part of that territory. With the aim of stifling and denying the Romanian identity of the local population, the Soviet authorities invented a Moldovan language and identity, different from the Romanian one.



    Also, during each and every election held in Moldova, there is a fierce battle between the politicians who support the country’s European integration and those who would like to bring Moldova back under Russia’s sphere of influence. We should not forget that in 1992, Moscow supported with troops the pro-Russian separatist ambitions in Transdniester, where Russian heavy weapons still exist. Therefore, things are by no means simple, and a reunification with Romania would take time. Until reunification becomes a genuine topic of discussion, Romanian officials agree that what is important right now is to strengthen the special relations between Romania and the Republic of Moldova and support the European and Euro-Atlantic efforts of that small east-European state, which is the poorest in Europe.



    On Wednesday, Transgaz Romania officially took over the similar company in the Republic of Moldova, Vestmoldtarnsgaz. On that occasion, Romania’s Prime Minister Viorica Dancila said: “As of today, we can say that Transgaz became a regional player, and at the same time we are happy to witness the energy interconnection between Romania and the Republic of Moldova.”



    The contract signed on the occasion will facilitate the building of the Ungheni-Chisinau gas pipeline, which will be a continuation of the pipeline that is now linking the city of Iasi in north-eastern Romania with Ungheni, in the east of Moldova.



    The never-ending modification of the justice laws



    The opposition National Liberal Party and Save Romania Union have for the second time notified the Constitutional Court with regard to the three justice laws on the status of magistrates, the organization of courts and the functioning of the Superior Council of Magistracy. The opposition accuses the ruling coalition of not taking seriously the changes advised by the Court and claims that, even changed, they still leave plenty of room for abuse and put a question mark over the independence of the Romanian judiciary.



    Liberal MP Gabriel Andronache gives an example: “On the day they were passed, in the Senate’s plenary session an amendment was introduced to the law amending and completing Law 303, defined by the parliament majority as ‘technical-legislative correlation’, when it actually changed the definition of judicial error. It is unacceptable, in our opinion, for something like that to happen in parliamentary procedure. There are also many reasons referring to the content of these amendments which continue to make these regulations toxic for the Romanian justice system.”



    The ruling Social Democratic Party argues the amendments have been made democratically and that the reformed justice laws are more necessary than ever. Here is the Social-Democratic leader Liviu Dragnea: “They have been challenged at the Constitutional Court and the Court has ruled that, with the exception of several articles, all laws are constitutional. Now we are going to se what they have challenged. Constitutional Court justices are going to analyze them again. This desperation will eventually end. “



    Romania’s Constitutional Court has announced it will tackle the new notifications regarding the amendments to the justice laws by April 19th.



    A new diplomatic row: Russia against everyone



    Russia has decided to play victim and respond to the West in keeping with the principle of reciprocity, vehemently denying any involvement in the nerve agent attack against the former Russian double agent Serghei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Great Britain on March 4. According to the British police, a large quantity of neurotoxin has been detected on the entrance door of Skripal’s house.



    As a strong signal conveyed to Moscow that it cannot defy international legislation over the use of chemical weapons, about 150 Russian diplomats from North America, Europe and Australia have been expelled in solidarity with Britain. Furthermore, in the United States, the Trump administration has closed down the Russian consulate in Seattle arguing that the premises were too close to the largest nuclear submarine base in the US. The Foreign Ministry in Bucharest has also announced that a Russian diplomat will be declared persona non-grata and expelled from Romania.



    Foreign Minister Teodor Melescanu has explained that a solidarity signal is needed mainly in the Brexit context, in order to prove that the EU wants to continue to have a very strong relationship with London in the field of defense and security even after Britain’s leaving the bloc. According to the Russian Embassy in Bucharest, Romania’s decision is probably the manifestation of what it calls “collective political madness”. Later in the week, the Sergei Skripal scandal got new proportions with Russia pledging reprisals against all the countries that chose to react to it.

  • March 27, 2017 UPDATE

    March 27, 2017 UPDATE

    March 27 — Romania’s President, Klaus Iohannis, on Monday promulgated the law establishing March 27, the Day of the Union of Bessarabia with Romania, as a national holiday. According to the presidential administration, the law has a special significance, marking an important moment in Romania’s history. Also on Monday Bucharest and other cities across Romania hosted manifestations devoted to the celebration of 99 years since the union of Bessarabia (in the east) with Romania. On Sunday, in Chişinău, the Republic of Moldova, hundreds of people participated in a march of the Three Colors, unfolding a flag 100 meters long. On March 27, 1918 against the backdrop of the dismantling of the Tsarist Empire, the Country’s Council in Chişinău, gathered in a solemn session, voted by an absolute majority the union of Bessarabia with the Kingdom of Romania, after 106 years of Russian occupation. In 1940, following an ultimatum, Soviet Moscow annexed both Bessarabia and the north of Bukovina, territories that are currently part of the former Soviet republics of Moldova and Ukraine.



    Rome Declaration — The Romanian President, Klaus Iohannis, said that in the context in which populism and nationalism were gaining ground in the EU, member states had to remain more united than ever. In an interview granted to the Italian publication La Repubblica, he added that the Rome Declaration adopted by the European leaders at the end of the past week, conveyed a message of cohesion which proved the wish of all EU states to carry on with the common project. Romania’s objective is a EU which acts in solidarity at internal and external level and which is capable of adopting a key role at global level.



    Govt coalition – Daniel Constantin, the co-president of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats (ALDE), has lost the political support of his party for the positions of deputy Prime Minister and Environment Minister, which he was holding in the leftist government in Bucharest led by Sorin Grindeanu. Graţiela Gavrilescu has been proposed to replace Daniel Constantin. The decision was made after Constantin had contested a decision by some party colleagues to hold an extraordinary congress next month, the other ALDE co-president Calin Popescu Tariceanu explained. He also criticized Constantin for his latest political moves. Constantin rejected the allegations adding the decision runs counter to the alliance’s statute.



    DNA — The chief prosecutor of the National Anti-Corruption Directorate, Laura Codruţa Kovesi, said Monday, after her meeting with justice minister, Tudorel Toader, that she was not asked to resign and that she did not intend to do so. The meeting took place in the context in which the justice minister announced he would present Wednesday the conclusions of his assessment of the activity of the Anti-Corruption Directorate’s chief and of the prosecutor general, Augustin Lazăr. Minister Toader decided to check on the two officials’ activity after the Constitutional Court ruled that there was an institutional conflict between the National Anti-Corruption Directorate and the Government. The Court was notified after the anti-corruption prosecutors started an investigation into the way in which the Romanian Government passed the emergency decree no. 13 on January 31, which changed the Criminal and Criminal Procedure Codes. The decree was subsequently repealed.



    Foreign Intelligence — The Romanian Senate, as a decision-making body, on Monday passed a proposal which changes the way in which appointments are made at the top of the Romanian Foreign Intelligence Service- SIE, in the sense that the director of the institution is appointed by Parliament, in joint session, upon the proposal of the Romanian President. Under the present law, the Romanian Foreign Intelligence Service is headed by a director appointed by Romania’s Supreme Council of National Defense upon the proposal of the country’s President. Last week President Iohannis announced he would hold talks with the parliamentary majority over the appointment of a new Foreign Intelligence director. Also last week the Parliament’s two chambers took note of Mihai Răzvan Ungureanu’s resignation from the position of director of SIE and declared it vacant. Ungureanu, a former prime minister and foreign minister, resigned last September.



    Protests — Negotiations between policemen, who are discontented with their low pays in comparison with other public employees, and government representatives continued, on Monday, after more than 2 thousand policemen protested on Saturday in Bucharest. The interior minister, Carmen Dan, said she would try to work out solutions together with the police trade unions representatives to increase their benefits. On the other hand, the Minister of Public Consultation and Social Dialogue, Gabriel Petrea, pointed out that salary gaps and the problems in the field could not be solved at once without significantly affecting the budget. The policemen are asking for a 20% rise in basic salaries as of April 1 and a different calculation system of benefits for night shifts, for work in difficult conditions, on weekends and on legal holidays. (translation by L. Simion)