Tag: vaccination certificates

  • New relaxation measures

    New relaxation measures

    The COVID-19 infection rate is going down
    every day in Romania, which has enabled the authorities to ease the
    restrictions starting June 1, as promised. Therefore, starting next month, the
    number of participants in open-air cultural and entertainment events will increase
    from 500 to 1,000, provided participants can prove they have taken the vaccine.
    Organizers will also have to make sure participants have vaccination certificates.
    Private events will allow a maximum of 50 participants indoors and 70 people
    outside. In this case as well participants have to be vaccinated. Sports
    activities will resume both indoors and outdoors, with venues now opened at 25%
    capacity. This limit can be exceeded if participants have taken the anti-COVID
    jab or present a negative test against COVID-19 taken before the event.

    The number
    of people taking part in indoors artistic, scientific or entertainment events has
    also increased from 50% to 70% capacity, with the possibility of reaching 100% participation
    for vaccinated people. Conferences gathering a maximum of 100 people are also
    allowed, with the possibility of including more participants, provided they are
    vaccinated. Playgrounds in enclosed areas will also reopen, provided parents
    accompanying children can provide proof of vaccination or that they had the
    disease. The number of people allowed in sports or fitness venues has also
    increased from 50% to 70% capacity, again, with a larger number of people being
    allowed provided they are vaccinated. Indoor pools have reopened to 70%
    capacity. Restaurants with interior seating have also been allowed to increase
    their client capacity from 50% to 70%.

    Finally, accommodation units on the
    Romanian seacoast have been allowed an occupation rate of 85%. Bars, clubs,
    nightclubs and gambling outlets will stay open until midnight, with 50% client
    capacity only for vaccinated people. Starting June 1, the wearing of face masks
    in enclosed areas such as offices will be allowed for a maximum of 5 employees
    who have taken the anti-COVID vaccine. Face masks remain compulsory everywhere
    else. (VP)

  • New relaxation measures

    New relaxation measures

    The COVID-19 infection rate is going down
    every day in Romania, which has enabled the authorities to ease the
    restrictions starting June 1, as promised. Therefore, starting next month, the
    number of participants in open-air cultural and entertainment events will increase
    from 500 to 1,000, provided participants can prove they have taken the vaccine.
    Organizers will also have to make sure participants have vaccination certificates.
    Private events will allow a maximum of 50 participants indoors and 70 people
    outside. In this case as well participants have to be vaccinated. Sports
    activities will resume both indoors and outdoors, with venues now opened at 25%
    capacity. This limit can be exceeded if participants have taken the anti-COVID
    jab or present a negative test against COVID-19 taken before the event.

    The number
    of people taking part in indoors artistic, scientific or entertainment events has
    also increased from 50% to 70% capacity, with the possibility of reaching 100% participation
    for vaccinated people. Conferences gathering a maximum of 100 people are also
    allowed, with the possibility of including more participants, provided they are
    vaccinated. Playgrounds in enclosed areas will also reopen, provided parents
    accompanying children can provide proof of vaccination or that they had the
    disease. The number of people allowed in sports or fitness venues has also
    increased from 50% to 70% capacity, again, with a larger number of people being
    allowed provided they are vaccinated. Indoor pools have reopened to 70%
    capacity. Restaurants with interior seating have also been allowed to increase
    their client capacity from 50% to 70%.

    Finally, accommodation units on the
    Romanian seacoast have been allowed an occupation rate of 85%. Bars, clubs,
    nightclubs and gambling outlets will stay open until midnight, with 50% client
    capacity only for vaccinated people. Starting June 1, the wearing of face masks
    in enclosed areas such as offices will be allowed for a maximum of 5 employees
    who have taken the anti-COVID vaccine. Face masks remain compulsory everywhere
    else. (VP)

  • February 26, 2021 UPDATE

    February 26, 2021 UPDATE


    COVID-19 IN ROMANIA Starting
    on Friday, the incidence rate of infections with the new coronavirus in Romania
    will be calculated according to different rules, in the sense that outbreaks
    will be introduced in the final analysis. Authorities say that the new rules
    are in line with the international standards and other countries are doing the
    same. According to the head of the Department for Emergency Situations, Raed
    Arafat, a slight increase in the incidence of COVID-19 cases is expected as a
    result of the new approach. The new outbreaks that will be introduced in the
    calculation of COVID-19 cases are reported mainly in hospitals and care
    centers. In another development, some 3,700 new cases of people infected with
    SARS-CoV-2 were reported within 24 hours after performing about 36 thousand
    tests nationwide. In total, since the onset of the pandemic in Romania, almost
    795 thousand cases have been registered. 90% of the Covid-19 patients have been
    cured. The total number of deaths has exceeded 20,200. Friday marked one year
    since the first case of COVID-19 was confirmed in Romania. The first death from
    coronavirus was officially reported in the country on March 22 last year.




    COVID-19 IN THE WORLD Worldwide the number of cases of
    Sars-Cov -2 infection has exceeded 113 million, and that of deaths 2.5 million.
    According to worldometers.info, more than 89 million infected people have been
    cured. Meanwhile, European countries have opted for voluntary vaccination
    against Covid-19, although some of them, such as France, the United Kingdom or
    Hungary, are examining potential certificates or passports to prove
    it, international news agencies report. In Germany, coronavirus vaccination is
    voluntary and the government has stressed that there are no plans to make it
    mandatory. Vaccination is not mandatory in France either. However, the
    government has launched an online consultation to find out citizens’ views on
    the possibility of implementing a vaccination certificate and whether it should
    be mandatory or optional. In the United Kingdom, which was the first country in
    the world to launch a mass vaccination program against Covid-19, immunization
    is widely accepted by the population. The vaccination plan in Italy is also
    voluntary and started with the highest risk groups. For its part, the Austrian
    Government insists that vaccination is and will be voluntary and that it has
    not yet been decided, for example, whether it can be a condition for carrying
    out an activity. The World Health Organization insists that the cure for the
    pandemic is to speed up immunization, and the available vaccines promise an
    effectiveness of about 90%. In another development, the European Medicines
    Agency on Friday announced the antibody cocktail development by Regeneron can
    be used in treating COVID patients. The United States adopted the product last
    year for emergencies, President Donald Trump being one of the patients treated
    with Regeneron.




    BUDGET The
    Romanian Parliament’s budget-finance committees continued, on Friday, the
    debates on the 2021 budget bill. The budgets of the main ministries have been
    voted in the form proposed by the Government. None of the amendments tabled by
    the opposition has been adopted. According to the calendar established by the
    joint Permanent Bureaus, the joint sitting of the Chamber of Deputies and the
    Senate on the state and social security budgets is scheduled for Monday. The
    bill will get the final vote on Tuesday. The budget is based on a deficit
    target of 7.16% of the GDP, and an economic growth rate of 4.31%.




    SUMMIT The EU heads of state and government,
    including the President of Romania, Klaus Iohannis, on Friday attended a
    virtual summit on security and defense. Referring to vaccination certificates,
    President Iohannis said they can be used for medical purposes. EU leaders have
    called for coordinated action to combat COVID-19 in Europe, but couldn’t solve
    their disagreements over a possible vaccination passport. The Romanian
    president hailed the European Commission’s efforts to deal with the pandemic,
    both in terms of purchasing and distributing vaccines, as well as ensuring the
    functioning of the single market. On the other hand, participants have
    reiterated the EU’s firm commitment to cooperate closely with NATO and
    strengthen partnerships with the UN and key regional partners. President
    Iohannis pointed out Romania supports the implementation of the Union’s
    initiatives in the field of healthcare and defense, at the same time ensuring
    complementarity with NATO, which remains the foundation of collective defense
    for allied states. Klaus Iohannis expressed his firm support for consolidating
    political dialogue and for development the strategic partnership between the EU
    and NATO, arguing the trans-Atlantic ties are key to EU security.




    POSEIDON 21 – Some 700 soldiers, 13 military
    ships, 9 aircraft, a pyrotechnic intervention vehicle and a remote-controlled
    underwater robot will be deployed during the exercise ‘Poseidon 21’ organized
    by the Romanian Naval Forces between February 26 and March 6. It is the first
    multinational exercise in the Black Sea this year, and involves the
    participation of forces and equipment from Bulgaria, France, Greece, Romania,
    Spain, USA and Turkey. ‘Poseidon 21’ is an exercise with a high degree of
    complexity, included in the NATO Training Program proposed by Romania at the
    NATO Summit in Warsaw, in 2016, to strengthen security measures on the European
    south-eastern flank, as well as to ensure a continuous presence in the Black
    Sea region.




    FORD – Due to the problems related to
    the supply of semiconductors that affect a large part of the world car
    industry, the Ford factory in Craiova (southwestern Romania) has suspended for
    eight days the production of vehicles and engines. Production would resume on
    March 10. The factory representatives have state that, in the eight days off
    work, the employees will be paid according to the agreements concluded between
    the company and the unions and taking into account the legislation in force.
    This month, the Dacia factory, owned by the French group Renault, also stopped
    production for five days in Mioveni (southern Romania). The crisis in the
    automotive industry is expected to last a few more months and could lead to a
    world production of over a million smaller cars this year. (M.I. & V.P.)