Tag: war

  • September 17, 2023 – UPDATE

    September 17, 2023 – UPDATE

    UN President Klaus Iohannis will be leading Romania’s
    delegation to the 78th session of the UN General Assembly between
    September 18 and 22 in New York. In his address, Mr. Iohannis will present
    Romania’s views on current global developments, highlighting Romania’s foreign
    policy priorities and its contribution to reaching the goals on the UN
    multilateral agenda. President Iohannis will also attend the Summit on
    Sustainable Development Goals, and will be a guest of honour at the World
    Leaders Forum organised by the prestigious Columbia University in New York, where
    he will be discussing Romania’s outlook on the war in Ukraine and its impact on
    Black Sea security.


    PENSIONS A new
    version of the special pension law, comprising the amendments requested by the
    Constitutional Court, will be endorsed by the end of September, said the
    interim Chamber of Deputies speaker, Alfred Simonis. He added the law covers
    all categories of special pensions, but because the special benefits paid to
    magistrates and other categories cannot be scrapped, as it happened in the case
    of MPs, taxation will be introduced, which the Court has accepted. Also,
    Simonis said, ceilings must be introduced for each particular profession, so as
    to eliminate special pensions of EUR 8,000 or even EUR 14,000 a month. The
    Constitutional Court last month sent back to Parliament the new draft pension
    law, on grounds that pension benefits currently being paid cannot be readjusted
    to different principles than the ones in the law under which they have been
    granted.


    CEREMONY A military and religious ceremony was held on
    Sunday at the Heroes’ Cross on Caraiman Peak in central Romania, to celebrate
    95 years since the monument was unveiled. Included in the Guinness Book of
    Records, the 40m cross is the highest such monument placed on a mountain top in
    the world. It was erected at an altitude of 2,291 m between 1926 and 1928, at
    the initiative of and with support from Queen Marie and King Ferdinand of
    Romania, as a tribute to WW1 heroes.


    FLIGHTS The Romanian airline TAROM announces new flights to and from Chișinău,
    in the neighbouring Republic of Moldova, as of September 24. TAROM will operate
    additional flights over weekends, to reach a total of 21 weekly return flights,
    with prices starting at EUR 85.


    MOTORWAYS As of next week Romania will have 1,000 km of
    motorway in use, with the opening of the Nuşfalău – Suplacu de Barcău segment
    of the A3 Transilvania motoway. Next month the first 20 km of the Bucharest
    ring motorway will also be opened, and next year the first 2 segments of the Ploieşti-Buzău
    motorway are scheduled to be completed.


    SCHENGEN Austria’s opposition to Romania’s Schengen
    accession is not targeted against Bucharest, but against this freedom of
    movement system, said the Austrian minister for the EU, Karoline Edtstadler. The
    statement comes after Bucharest warned it would sue Vienna over its veto to
    Romania’s accession. Karoline Edtstadler told the media she understood the
    position of Romanian authorities, but added Austria cannot close its eyes to an
    already flawed system. She explained the EU should ensure efficient protection of its external
    borders before envisioning a Europe without internal
    borders. In
    an interview to Austrian mass media, Romania’s PM
    Marcel Ciolacu said that in case of further opposition from Austria, Romania
    will have to take the matter to court and demand compensation for the losses
    incurred because of its failure to join the Schengen area.


    NATO NATO’s secretary general
    Jens Stoltenberg has warned in an interview published on Sunday, that we must
    not expect a swift end to the war in Ukraine, as Kyiv carries on its
    counteroffensive against Russian forces, AFP reports. The war began in February 2022, when
    Russian troops invaded Ukraine. As for Ukraine’s efforts to join NATO, Jens Stoltenberg promised
    that sooner or later, Ukraine will be a NATO member. In July’s NATO summit in
    Vilnius, Alliance leaders agreed that Kyiv may join NATO once
    certain conditions are fulfilled, with the US and Germany emphasising that
    these conditions include reforms to protect democracy and the rule of law. In
    mid-June the Ukrainian army launched a counteroffensive to push out the Russian
    troops from the south and east of the country, but so far only a limited number
    of localities have been freed.


    TABLE TENNIS Romania’s women’s team was defeated by Germany,
    3-0, on Sunday, in the European Table Tennis Championships final in Malmo (Sweden).
    Elizabeta Samara lost to Xiaona Shan 3-0 (11-6, 11-8, 11-8), Bernadette Szocs was
    defeated by Ying Han 3-1 (14-16, 11-8, 11-8, 12-10), and Nina Mittelham beat
    Andreea Dragoman 3-2 (5-11, 11-9, 8-11, 11-6, 12-10), after the Romanian player
    lost two match points. Romania was already a European vice-champion, after
    winning the silver in 2021, at home in Cluj-Napoca.



    RUGBY Defending world champions, South
    Africa Sunday defeated 76-0 Romania’s national rugby team in a World Cup Group
    B match in Bordeaux (France). A week ago Romania lost to Ireland 82-8 (33-8). Romania’s rugby team is next to play against
    Scotland on September 30 and against Tonga on October 8, in Lille. (AMP)

  • September 17, 2023

    September 17, 2023

    FARMERS An alliance of Romanian farmers, unhappy
    with the European Commission’s decision not to extend the ban on grain imports
    from Ukraine, asks the Romanian government to suspend imports of several
    Ukrainian agrifood products. The government, which has already promised
    subsidies for the Diesel fuel used in farming works, announced that before
    taking further measures it was waiting for Kyiv to make public on Monday a plan
    regarding efficient export control to prevent the disruption of the Romanian
    grain market. Depending on that plan, Bucharest will take adequate steps to
    support Romanian farmers. The EC decided
    not to extend its ban on Ukrainian grain imports, in exchange for certain
    commitments from Kyiv. Poland, Slovakia and
    Hungary have introduced unilateral restrictions, while Bulgaria announced it
    did not want the embargo on Ukrainian grain imports extended.


    PENSIONS A new
    version of the special pension law, comprising the amendments requested by the
    Constitutional Court, will be endorsed by the end of September, said the
    interim Chamber of Deputies speaker, Alfred Simonis. He added the law covers
    all categories of special pensions, but because the special benefits paid to
    magistrates and other categories cannot be scrapped, as it happened in the case
    of MPs, taxation will be introduced, which the Court has accepted. Also,
    Simonis said, ceilings must be introduced for each particular profession, so as
    to eliminate special pensions of EUR 8,000 or even EUR 14,000 a month. The
    Constitutional Court last month sent back to Parliament the new draft pension
    law, on grounds that pension benefits currently being paid cannot be readjusted
    to different principles than the ones in the law under which they have been
    granted.


    SCHENGEN Austria’s opposition to Romania’s Schengen
    accession is not targeted against Bucharest, but against this freedom of
    movement system, said the Austrian minister for the EU, Karoline Edtstadler. The
    statement comes after Bucharest warned it would sue Vienna over its veto to
    Romania’s accession. Karoline Edtstadler told the media she understood the
    position of Romanian authorities, but added Austria cannot close its eyes to an
    already flawed system. She explained the EU should ensure efficient protection of its external
    borders before envisioning a Europe without internal
    borders. In
    an interview to Austrian mass media, Romania’s PM
    Marcel Ciolacu said that in case of further opposition from Austria, Romania
    will have to take the matter to court and demand compensation for the losses
    incurred because of its failure to join the Schengen area.


    NATO NATO’s secretary general
    Jens Stoltenberg has warned that we must not expect a swift end to the war in
    Ukraine, in an interview published on Sunday, as Kyiv carries on its
    counteroffensive against Russian forces, AFP reports. The war began in February 2022, when
    Russian troops invaded Ukraine. As for Ukraine’s efforts to join NATO, Jens Stoltenberg promised
    that sooner or later, Ukraine will be a NATO member. In July’s NATO summit in
    Vilnius, Alliance leaders agreed that Kyiv may join NATO once
    certain conditions are fulfilled, with the US and Germany emphasising that
    these conditions include reforms to protect democracy and the rule of law. In
    mid-June the Ukrainian army launched a counteroffensive to push out the Russian
    troops from the south and east of the country, but so far only a limited number
    of localities have been freed.


    RUGBY Romania’s national rugby team play their second
    World Cup match in Bordeaux (France) today, against defending champions, South
    Africa. A week ago Romania lost to Ireland 82-8 (33-8). Romania’s
    rugby team is next to play against Scotland on September 30 and against Tonga on
    October 8, in Lille. The 2023 Rugby World Cup
    ends on October 28. The competition has been held every 4 years since 1987, when
    the first edition of the World Cup was hosted by Australia and New Zealand. (AMP)

  • War veterans, orphans and widows in Greater Romania

    War veterans, orphans and widows in Greater Romania


    The end of World War I left Romania on the victors side, with double its previous territory and population. But the price paid for this triumph was dire, both during and after the war. Among the most challenging post-conflict realities were the veterans, orphans and widows the war had left behind. Collectively referred to under the acronym IOVR, the World War I veterans, orphans and widows accounted for around 12% of the population of Greater Romania. Public institutions worked to introduce reparations for them, and in spite of various dysfunctions, the new government managed to compensate, as much as possible, the losses these people had suffered.



    Our guest today is Maria Bucur, a history and gender studies professor with Indiana University, in Bloomington, USA. She wrote about the history of eugenics, about war and memory, modernisation and citizenship. She argues that the IOVR population shaped new attitudes and radically transformed the concept of citizenship in Greater Romania:



    Maria Bucur: “The Romanian state was transformed radically by the decisions made with respect to the war veterans, widows and orphans, both in terms of new institutions or new responsibilities for some institutions, of new local and national policies, and, more importantly, in terms of the citizenship rights that a major proportion of Romanias population obtained after 1919. These forces, working together, generated a new public rhetoric on citizenship, new expectations among Romanian citizens, and new responsibilities undertaken by the state. The success or failures of the new policies generated new dynamics in the political and civic field.”



    Unfortunately, the exact number of war veterans, orphans and widows remains unknown to this day. Maria Bucur offers an explanation:



    Maria Bucur: “Since the country had almost doubled after the war, the veterans in the territories that were now part of Romania by virtue of the peace treaties became veterans of the Romanian state. We dont have an exact number for them, because the countries to which the territories in question belonged prior to the war did not necessarily count the veterans, as Romania did, and they did not release official statistics on the veterans, widows and orphans in those territories. The figures we have today are early 1920s estimates. In the mid-1930s, when a central committee was finally set up to check these figures, its members concluded that the statistics were incomplete. My own estimate is that Romania had around 1.5 million veterans, over 200,000 of whom were war invalids according to the definition used in those times, and that adding to these were 700,000 widows and orphans.”



    How did Greater Romania show its appreciation for its WWI veterans, orphans and widows? Maria Bucur says reperation policies were, overall, adequate:



    Maria Bucur: “We should emphasise that Romania was in fact more generous than any other country involved in WWI. Apart from pension benefits, the law offered free public education, free healthcare, free railway transportation, free firewood and priority positions in the distribution of land following the land ownership reform. In addition, veterans were given priority access to certain government monopoly areas, such as newsstands in train stations, and priority access to certain positions in public institutions. For instance, the staff in the IOVR offices were mainly war veterans and widows. All these benefits together amounted to a lot more than the ones provided by the French government, for instance, which was always a major model for Romania.”



    The law concerning the IOVR population was known as the “Gratitude Law,” and it applied without discrimination to both the old and the new citizens of the country:



    Maria Bucur: “First of all, the country was grateful not only to the soldiers who had fought for Romania on the home front. Those who had fought against Romania were given exactly the same rights, provided that they explicitly embraced their Romanian citizenship and loyalty to the Romanian state. And I would like to emphasise that such policies were not applied for instance in Yugoslavia, where Croatians were not given the same rights as the Serbian veterans.”



    Maria Bucur believes there are additional explanations for Romanias generosity to former enemies:



    Maria Bucur: “This generosity on the part of the Romanian government may also be viewed in pragmatic and aspirational terms. On the one hand, many Romanian ethnics had fought in the Austrian-Hungarian army out of necessity. Not integrating these veterans in the IOVR policies would have created a radical division between the new territories and the Old Kingdom, which all politicians understood would be a mistake. Another pragmatic aspect had to do with the treaty on minorities, which Romania had to comply with. In aspirational terms, I see the IOVR legislation as a framework as well, one through which the Parliament of Romania sought to outlike a new type of engaged citizenship, a lot closer to public institutions through the benefits offered to the IOVR population.”



    The Romanian WWI veteran reparation model was designed to compensate for losses and to secure peace. And in spite of some failures, this ambitious enterprise was successful. (AMP)




  • July 27, 2023

    July 27, 2023

    WILDFIRES
    Forty Romanian fire fighters are
    relocated today from Attica region on Greece’s Rhodes Island, heavily affected
    by uncontrolled wildfires, the Romanian General Inspectorate for Emergencies
    announced. They travel by sea together with 3 fire engines and a 10-ton fire
    truck, as well as a personnel transport vehicle. According to the Romanian Foreign
    Ministry, high fire risks continue to be reported today in several parts of
    Greece, while the weather is expected to change radically, with strong storms
    forecast especially in Thrace, Macedonia, Khalkidhiki and the north-eastern
    Aegean coast. Romanian citizens who plan on traveling to Greece in this period
    are advised to get fully informed of the situation ahead of leaving, and those
    who are already in the affected areas are urged to comply with the instructions
    issued by local authorities and follow official sources of information.


    NATURAL GAS Romanians will have safe access to natural gas, even in
    the case of lower temperatures than usual in the winter season, as Azerbaijan guaranteed
    Romania access to a capacity of up to 1 billion cubic metres of natural gas if
    necessary. The statement was made by the energy minister, Sebastian Burduja, who
    had a meeting in Bucharest with his counterpart E.S. Parviz Shahbazov. The
    filling level for Romanian storage facilities is over 75.5%, significantly over
    the level promised by Romania to the EU, and nearly 700 million cubic metres
    more than we had at the same time in 2022, the minister said in a social media
    post on Thursday. He added that he discussed with the energy minister of Azerbaijan about ways
    to develop the strategic partnership, bilateral investments and joint projects in the energy sector, including a green corridor to connect the Caspian Sea to
    the Black Sea. The cooperation between Romania and Azerbaijan in the energy
    sector entails major benefits not only for the two countries, but for the
    security of Europe as a whole, Sebastian Burduja pointed out.


    UKRAINE The Russian army hit the port
    infrastructure in the region of Odessa (southern Ukraine) in an overnight
    missile attack that killed a security guard and damaged a cargo terminal, the
    local authorities announced on Thursday morning. The ports in the Odessa region,
    at the Black Sea or the Danube River, have turned into the preferred targets of
    the Russian army, after Moscow recently terminated a deal allowing Ukraine to
    export grains to international markets.


    MOLDOVA The Russian
    Federation will have to downsize its Chişinău Embassy personnel, according to a
    decision made by the Moldovan authorities and already communicated to Russia’s
    ambassador in that country. Russia will keep 10 diplomats and 15 technical and
    support personnel, on a par with the number of staff of the Moldovan embassy in
    Moscow. According to Moldova’s foreign minister Nicu Popescu, Moldova has been
    for decades the target of hostile policies and activities on the part of the
    Russian Federation, and many of the Russian embassy’s activities were aimed to
    destabilize the country. In Moscow, the foreign ministry spokesperson, Maria
    Zaharova, said the decision was ungrounded and a further step taken by Chişinău
    towards deteriorating bilateral relations.


    WEATHER The weather cools
    significantly in Romania, where after a heat wave with temperatures above 40
    degrees Celsius, the highs are expected to range only between 19 and 28
    degrees, with some 25 degrees reported in Bucharest at noon. Thunderstorms
    made victims the previous day, with a 64 year old woman dead as a tree uprooted
    by the wind fell over her car on the Transalpina
    road in Alba County, and two siblings in Botoşani County struck by lightning on
    a field. In Harghita County railroad transport was disrupted after several
    trees fell on the tracks, several localities in Iaşi County were left without
    drinking water and the Black Sea port of Constanţa was closed because of the
    strong wind.



    SPORTS
    The athletes Constantin Popovici and Cătălin Petru Preda won the first medals
    for the Romanian team at the 2023 World Swimming Championships in Fukuoka
    (Japan). Today they ranked first and second in the high diving competition.
    Popovici, 34, is Romania’s first world high diving champion. Twenty-three
    athletes took part in this event. (AMP)

  • Russia attacks port on Danube river

    Russia attacks port on Danube river



    The Romanian defence ministry says at the moment there are no direct military threats against the countrys national territory or its territorial waters. In turn, the foreign minister Luminiţa Odobescu says that, as a NATO and EU member country, Romania has the most important and strongest security guarantees in its history. She had a phone conversation with the US State Secretary Antony Blinken, and together they condemned Moscows recent attacks on Ukrainian civilians and river and maritime infrastructure, as well as Russias cynical undermining of the worlds food security.





    The statements come after a Russian drone attack hit a Ukrainian port near Odessa and destroyed a grain hangar. Ukraines southern operational command says the Russian attack targeted particularly the ports on the Ukrainian side of the Danube River, seen as alternative routes for the countrys grain exports.





    Specifically, the Russians targeted the river ports in Ismail and Reni, in the south of Bessarabia, a former Romanian territory annexed by Stalins Soviet Union following an ultimatum in 1940, and taken over by Ukraine after the USSR collapsed in 1991.





    The port of Reni, vital to the transport of commodities on the Danube, is just 13 km across the river from the Romanian city of Galați. At least 3 drones were destroyed by the Ukrainian defence, but a fourth one managed to strike a grain hangar. In turn, the head of the administration of the port city of Ismail, Rodion Abashev, confirmed in a Facebook post that Russias attack left 6 people wounded.





    The week before, Russia terminated a deal adopted in July 2022 under the UN aegis and brokered by Turkey, which enabled Ukraine to export 33 million tonnes of agricultural products in spite of the war. According to Kyiv, more than 400 million people around the world rely on the food products exported by Ukraine.





    The president of Romania, Klaus Iohannis, firmly condemned Russias attack on the Ukrainian civilian infrastructure on the Danube. “This recent escalation poses serious risks to the security in the Black Sea. It also affects the transit of grain from Ukraine, and implicitly global food security in the near future,” the Romanian official said on Twitter. Also in Bucharest, PM Marcel Ciolacu said targeting port infrastructure is yet another proof of Russias intention to undermine Ukrainian grain exports to global markets, which severely destabilises global food security. (AMP)


  • June 20, 2023

    June 20, 2023

    VISIT Romania’s Foreign Minister,
    Luminita Odobescu, was received on Monday night by the President of the
    Republic of Moldova, Maia Sandu. The talks between the two officials have
    focused on the Republic of Moldova’s European agenda and regional security.
    According to sources with the Romanian Foreign Ministry, Minister Odobescu has
    pointed out that the unprecedented openness in the bilateral area in recent
    years has allowed for the rapid progress of all cooperation initiatives, mainly
    of those with direct relevance in the area of strengthening stability and
    support for the republic’s development. Minister Odobescu has given assurances
    on Romania’s staunch commitment to promoting in a rapid manner the assistance
    projects for Chisinau, in terms of its comprehensive connection to the European
    area through Romania. The head of the Romanian diplomacy has hailed the
    significant headway made by the authorities in Chisinau in the reforms area,
    focusing on meeting the recommendations made by the European Commission in June
    last year, when the country was granted the statute of EU accession candidate.






    RULE The Constitutional Court of
    the ex-soviet, Romanian-speaking Republic of Moldova has ruled as
    unconstitutional the SOR party founded and led by oligarch Ilan Sor. The party
    has been accused of actions that run against the rule of law, jeopardizing the
    sovereignty and independence of the Republic of Moldova, being funded from
    abroad and backed by the Russian secret services. The party leader fled to
    Israel after having received a prison sentence for his involvement in the theft
    of one billion Euros from the Republic’s banking system. From there he
    initiated jointly with the party’s vice-president Marina Tauber a series of
    anti-government protests. We’ll have more on this after the news.






    MESSAGE The Romanians have shown unprecedented
    solidarity, offering a space of safety and calm to the Ukrainian refugees,
    Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu said in his address on the World Refugee Day. In
    March 2022, we got the clear picture of terror, on the cratered streets and
    destroyed buildings in the cities of Bucha and Irpin. We understood the horror
    lived by the desperate families forced to flee the war. Over 4.6 million Ukrainians,
    mostly women and children, have chosen our country as their refuge, Ciolacu
    wrote on Facebook. According to him, since the beginning of the war in Ukraine,
    the Romanians have proven their support and generosity in the face of terror’.








    FOOTBALL Romania’s national
    football side ended in a two-all draw their away game against Switzerland in
    Group 1 of the Euro 2024 qualifiers. The visitors dominated the game and even
    got the upper hand two-nil, but our footballers managed an unexpected comeback
    and levelled the scoring towards the end of the game. In the other Group 1
    matches, Belarus secured a 2-1 win against Kosovo and Israel also obtained a
    2-1 victory against Andorra. Switzerland tops the table in Group 1 and is
    followed by Romania, the first two positions, which ensure qualification for
    the final tournament in Germany.








    MEETING During the International Paris Air Show Le Bourget earlier this week,
    Romanian Defence Minister Angel Tîlvăr had a meeting with General James B.
    Hecker, commander of the Allied Air Command in Europe. The Romania-USA
    Strategic Partnership is one of the main pillars of the national policy of
    security and defence together with NATO and EU membership’, Minister Tîlvăr recalled.
    Among other things, the Romanian minister voiced his appreciation for the US
    contribution to ensuring defence and deterrence on the Allied eastern flank
    mainly through the deployment of troops and capabilities to Romania as well as
    for the support offered to Romania so that the country can purchase F-16
    fighters from the Norwegian army. Also in Paris, the Romanian Defence Minister
    participated in a Conference entitled European Air and Missile Defence and held
    talks with Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant.




    (bill)

  • May 23, 2023

    May 23, 2023

    STRIKE Romania’s teachers are in the second day of their
    strike and trade unions say they won’t give up their protest until the
    coalition government PNL-PSD-UDMR comes with a credible solution to their
    claims. Although teachers aren’t satisfied with the offer made by the
    authorities, Prime Minister Ciuca has called on them to go back to schools and at
    the same time invited representatives of parent-student associations for a new
    round of talks over the situation in Romania’s education system. In another
    development, the Senate in Bucharest on Monday endorsed the new education laws,
    which are to be promulgated. According to the political parties in the ruling
    coalition, the new measures for the undergraduate and university education are
    going to reform the system. However, the opposition believes the amendments are
    not going to solve the existing problems.








    TALKS
    Romania’s Foreign Minister Bogdan Aurescu jointly with his Spanish and Polish
    counterparts, Jose Manuel Albares Bueno and Zbigniew Rau, respectively, is
    inaugurating the trilateral format Romania – Spain – Poland during a meeting to
    take place in the Spanish city of Valencia. According to a communiqué of the
    Romanian Foreign Ministry, the beginning of this trilateral dialogue represents
    a materialization of the close cooperation between the three countries at the
    EU and NATO levels in accordance with the similar and interconnected strategic
    interests, even if they are at different extremities of the European continent.
    Furthermore, each of the three countries has special responsibilities at the EU
    and NATO borders, the sources say. The agenda of the trilateral talks includes
    the top priorities of the Spanish presidency of the European Union Council, the
    upcoming two summits of the European Political Communities in Chisinau on June
    1st and Granada on October 5th, the strategic resilience
    and the EU enlargement, the migration, the consolidation of the Schengen
    region, as well as the cooperation in terms of energy security. In the field of
    security and cooperation inside NATO, the participants will also focus on other
    issues such as the management of the consequences of Russia’s aggression war in
    Ukraine, the support for that country and the other partners affected by the
    Russian aggression, especially the Republic of Moldova, the priorities of the
    NATO summit in Vilnius this year, the challenges facing the eastern and
    southern vicinity of the Black Sea, the Baltic Sea and the Mediterranean.








    PROTEST Scores of farmers from Romania have gone to Brussels
    to participate today in a protest rally of farmers and associations staged by
    the so-called enlarged Visegrad Group. Farmers are disgruntled by the serious
    problems and imbalances affecting the agrifood sector in Central and Eastern
    Europe against the background of the war in Ukraine. The meeting is being
    attended by 200 participants from six countries, Romania, Poland, Hungary, the
    Czech Republic, Bulgaria and Slovakia. 50 of these participants are coming from
    Romania, representatives of the Alliance for Agriculture and Cooperation AAC
    have announced. According to them the situation is serious and farmers in the
    aforementioned countries are presently facing plummeting prices and a sharp
    drop in the demand for cereals and seeds caused by the imports of cheap cereals
    from Ukraine although these shipments have initially been bound for third
    countries or the traditional buyers of Ukrainian products.






    COUNCIL The Romanian Defence Minister Angel Tîlvăr is in Brussels to participate in the
    Foreign Affairs Council in its defence configuration. The Romanian official
    will be also participating in the meeting of the European Defence Agency. High
    of the FAC agenda is the EU support for the invaded Ukraine as well as the
    recent initiatives over the joint defence purchases and the revitalization of
    the industrial capabilities of the member states. The EU High Representative
    for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell is expected to be presenting
    the latest developments in the EU’s operational commitments and the headway in
    the Permanent Structured Cooperation initiative also known as PESCO. NATO
    Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg will be participating in a working lunch
    which has high on the agenda the EU-NATO cooperation on various levels,
    especially in the area of providing a joint response to the challenges of the
    present security environment.


    (bill)

  • The EU supports the stability of the Republic of Moldova

    The EU supports the stability of the Republic of Moldova

    The head of the Romanian diplomacy, Bogdan Aurescu has
    hailed the political agreement reached by his EU counterparts for setting up a
    sanctions regime in order to counter the destabilization actions against the
    neighboring ex-soviet Romanian-speaking Republic of Moldova.




    He said that Romania is already working with the
    authorities in Chisinau on the first list of people to be sanctioned. Created
    on a part of the eastern Romanian territories annexed in 1940 by the Stalinist
    Soviet Union, the little republic, which got its independence in 1991, has been
    described by pundits as the most vulnerable neighbour of the invaded Ukraine. The threat level is on the rise. And causing violent
    events would prove a turning point in the present context, said this month Ana
    Revenco, Foreign Minister in the pro-Western government in Chisinau. According
    to her, ‘it is a certain fact that Russia has stepped up its efforts to
    destabilize the situation in the Republic of Moldova not without the efforts of
    the fugitive oligarchs.




    All the elements of a hybrid war such
    as false bomb alerts, cyber attacks, illegally funded protests, energy
    blackmail have proved to be a great challenge for the entire Interior Affairs
    system – she told Radio Chisinau. The pro-war propaganda, the incitement to
    hatred and misinformation are parts of the same hybrid war and are aimed at weakening
    the resistance of the citizens.




    Against this background, Foreign
    Minister Bogdan Aurescu said that any
    measure taken to bolster the security of the Republic of Moldova is also
    beneficial to Romania, and the EU’s decision to quickly put together a
    sanctions regime will be an instrument very important in the process of strengthening
    the resilience and security of the neighboring state in the context of the
    actions masterminded by Moscow.


    In turn the EU High Representative for Foreign Policy Josep
    Borrell says that the Republic is one of the most affected states by the war in
    Ukraine and Brussels has earmarked 40 million Euros to support its defence
    capabilities.




    Also this month the Budget Commission with the
    European Parliament has endorsed the 145 million euros financial assistance for
    the Republic of Moldova. The Romanian MEP Siegfried
    Mureșan, the head of the delegation of the EU Legislature for the relations
    with Chisinau has underlined that it is necessary that the macro-financial
    assistance be endorsed without delay by the European Parliament and the money
    reach the Republic of Moldova in due time, by the end of the year.




    According to him, the Republic of
    Moldova is an EU-accession candidate and we must help it overcome all the
    challenges it is presently facing and carry on its European integration. The
    final voting on this package in the European Parliament is most likely due next
    week.


    (bill)

  • April 21, 2023

    April 21, 2023

    TALKS Romania will not ban the import of Ukrainian grains unilaterally and will wait for the European Commission to implement measures aimed at supporting farmers in Central and Eastern Europe, the country’s Minister of Agriculture, Petre Daea, said on Friday. According to him, Romania and Ukraine will consult weekly regarding the expected volumes of grain, in an attempt to limit imports. At the end of a meeting held in Bucharest with his Ukrainian counterpart, Mykola Solsky, Petre Daea said that Romania stands in solidarity with farmers from Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria and Slovakia, but the rules must be made together. In turn, Mykola Solsky thanked the minister for the sincere and constructive dialogue as well as the Romanian people for the sincere support he has felt for the past two years. The situation we are in now requires some very quick decisions – added the Ukrainian official. The two ministers also tackled the cereal crisis online, a couple of days ago, when Petre Daea briefed his Ukrainian counterpart on the serious situation farmers are facing in Romania and informed him about the measures taken in relation to the transit of Ukrainian cereals.




    BILL Government in Romania is expected to present next
    week a draft emergency ordinance regarding the efficiency of public spending.
    This will also include other fiscal-budgetary measures, which must not be
    perceived as austerity measures, Finance Minister Adrian Câciu has said.
    According to the country’s Prime Minister, Nicolae Ciucă, curbing budget
    expenditures is aimed at being within the deficit limits at the end of the year
    and is not going to affect investments and salaries. The Romanian official also
    made an appeal to the big taxpayers urging them to pay their debts to the
    state.






    DEFENCE The Romanian
    Minister of Defence Angel Tilvar is today attending the meeting of the Contact
    Group for Ukraine, presently underway in Ramstein, Germany. According to a
    communique by the Ministry of Defence, the meeting of the already established format,
    on the support the international community is providing to the Ukrainian
    partner, proves to be another opportunity to exchange ideas on the security
    situation created by the war the Russian Federation is presently waging on that
    country and to identify new ways of supporting the Ukrainian partner. According
    to Reuters, the German Minister of Defence, Boris Pistorius, has rejected a
    quick decision on Ukraine’s membership at NATO. Kyiv wants to join the
    North-Atlantic Alliance but the country’s entry either into NATO or the EU is
    not going to be discussed at the aforementioned meeting in Ramstein. NATO’s
    Secretary General, Jens Stoltenberg has extended an invitation to president
    Zelensky for the NATO summit in Vilnius in July, which will have high on the
    agenda, the country’s NATO accession as well as solid security guarantees for Kyiv.







    HOSPITALS The Romanian Minister of Health, Alexandru Rafila, on Thursday signed the financing contracts through the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR) for a new hospital infrastructure. Thus, military hospitals in the country, as well as others in the capital Bucharest and the city of Constanta, in the south-east, will benefit from new wards and pavilions. At the same time, a tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment center is to be built in Bucharest. The general objective of the PNRR is the development of Romania by carrying out essential programs and projects, which support resilience, the level of preparedness for crisis situations, the ability to adapt and the potential for growth, through major reforms and key investments with funds allocated by the European Commission within the mechanism.


    (bill)

  • April 11, 2023 UPDATE

    April 11, 2023 UPDATE

    NATO
    Romania’s National Defence
    Minister Angel Tîlvăr and
    Chief of Staff, General Daniel Petrescu will be meeting in Bucharest on
    Wednesday Admiral Robert Bauer, chair of the NATO Military Committee, who is
    paying a visit to Romania over April 11th and 14th . According to a communiqué
    by the Ministry of Defence, talks will be focusing on the security situation in
    the Black Sea area as well as on NATO’s missions and operations. On Tuesday,
    the Defence Ministry and the Chief of Staff talked to the commands of the
    structures deployed to various operation theaters in Kosovo and
    Bosnia-Herzegovina and with the Romanian troops currently doing missions in
    Bulgaria, Lithuania and Poland. The Romanian troops presented the assessment of
    the security situation in their areas and the stage of their missions. Your
    efforts are contributing to our peace, to everybody’s peace actually,
    particularly at this time when our region has been deeply troubled by the
    Russian invasion in the neighboring Ukraine, the Defence Minister says.








    VISIT The European Commissioner for internal market Thierry Breton will
    be paying a visit to Bucharest on Wednesday, the European Commission
    Representation to Bucharest has announced. The European Commissioner will be
    having talks with Prime Minister, Nicolae Ciuca and the president of the
    Chamber of Deputies, Marcel Ciolacu. The EU official will be also visiting the
    future headquarters of the European Cybersecurity Competence Centre jointly
    with the Minister of Research, Innovation and Digitization, Sebastian Burduja.
    Also on Wednesday, Breton will be visiting two major plants specialized in
    equipment and gears for the defence industry in southern Romania.






    DEFENCE
    Romania continues to act firmly, united and efficiently alongside its allies
    and partners to promote security and stability in the Black Sea region, an area
    of strategic importance for Euro-Atlantic security. The announcement was made
    by president Klaus Iohannis in a statement released after a meeting of the
    Country’s Supreme Defence Council which he chaired today in Bucharest. The
    fundamental aspect remains national security and supporting Ukraine and the
    Republic of Moldova contributes directly to the consolidation of Romania’s
    security, the statement also writes. Maintaining a consistent and
    multidimensional support for the neighbouring Ukraine, as part of NATO and the
    European Union, is of critical importance for ensuring the success of efforts
    to defend this state. The meeting also analysed the development of Romania’s air
    force. According to the statement, the modernisation of the air force will
    continue with the purchase of latest generation F-35 aircraft. The achievement
    of robust, credible, interoperable, flexible and efficient air defence
    operational capabilities aimed both at fulfilling the commitments deriving from
    the NATO and EU membership and at discouraging possible aggression, is an
    essential condition for fulfilling Romania’s defence policy objectives, the
    statement also reads.

    IMF The IMF has revised the forecast for
    Romania’s economic growth this year from an initial estimate of 3% down to
    2.4%. According to the new IMF calculations published on Tuesday, Romania is
    expected to register a 3.7% growth next year. The IMF believes that inflation
    in Romania will this year stay around 10.5% after a 13.8% last year and price
    hikes will significantly slow down only in 2024, when the inflation rate is
    expected to be under 6%.

    (bill)

  • Inflation drops

    Inflation drops

    The annual inflation rate will continue to decrease in Romania at a sustained pace in the coming months, the National Bank estimates. The Central Bank officials say, however, that uncertainties and risks remain in the context of the war in Ukraine, and also of the fiscal policy in Romania, which should reconcile the need to reduce the budget deficit with support measures for the population and the economy. The Central Bank decided to maintain the monetary policy interest rate at the level of 7% per year, so that, in the coming months, loan interest rates should not increase. The amount of currency in circulation, the exchange rate, market interest rates, and other levers used to achieve economic policy targets depend on this indicator. It is the first meeting of the BNR management when the monetary policy interest rate is kept unchanged, given that it has continuously increased since November 2021.



    Financial analyst Adrian Codirlaşu says that the decision had been anticipated and that it would not have a significant impact on the interest rates charged by banks: Basically, no monetary policy decision has been made, which was widely expected by the markets too. Therefore, the impact on the evolution of interest rates on the money market is extremely low. We see that the money market interest rate is on a downward trend, but the ROBOR index will not drop below 6. Therefore, the long maturities might continue to decrease once the disinflationary process is confirmed. The consumer loan reference index – IRCC in this quarter is at its maximum value. As of the next quarter, there will already be a slight decrease, from 5.98 maybe to 5.93-5.94. It will not go significantly below 6 this year. It will probably decrease more next year, when the Central Bank will probably operate the first interest rate decrease.



    According to current assessments, the annual inflation rate will probably accelerate its decline in the coming months, but a series of uncertainties and risks persist. Adrian Codirlaşu mentioned the two main ones: The war remains a main risk, which can still bring negative surprises in this region or even in the whole EU. OPEC Plus, i.e. OPEC plus Russia, announced that they are reducing the amount of oil, with the aim of increasing the price on the international market. This will be reflected in inflation if the price remains high, or, if this operation succeeds and the price of oil really increases. So, the energy issue remains a vulnerability, not to mention the uncertainties related to war.



    Uncertainties and risks are also generated by the turbulences in the banking systems in the United States and Switzerland, which could have adverse effects by affecting the economies of developed states and the perception of risk in Central and Eastern Europe, with an impact on financing costs. (LS)

  • World War One in Romania

    World War One in Romania


    Much has been written and, surely, more will still be written about World War One, the Great War as it had been dubbed at that time, and that, because the deflagration was something the world had not seen up to that moment. It was a tremendous mobilization of resources and people, made for the ideas of the age, for convictions and for utopias. And that, because the most eccentric ideas, before they are materialized, are oddities people get enthused with, when they deal with such ideas, yet being at once overcautious about them and rating them as forms of utopia. Everything that occurred in the aftermath of World War One, in 1918, would have been considered, before 1914, the year of the outbreak of the war, unachievable.



    In the great conflict, Romania took sides with the English-French-Russian Entente, in 1916. The Romanian army, in 1916, fought on World War Ones longest front line, stretching north of the Carpathian ridge to the south of the Danube and the shores of the Black Sea. The Romanian army eventually conceded defeat, in 1916. With the support of the Russian army and the French military mission lead by general Berthelot, the Romanian army put up a successful resistance to the German and Austro-Hungarian armies, in 1917, who were advancing on the front line, in 1917. In 1918, in the wake of the Entente emerging as winner, the Old Romanian Kingdoms unification was possible, with the territories of the neighboring empires, with a predominantly Romanian-speaking population. For posterity, the year 1918 went down as a year of triumph, a year of celebration and the commemoration of all Romanians sacrifice for Greater Romania.


    Savoring the victory of 1918 left little, if any, room for commiserating with the defeated, who lost almost everything. Austro-Hungary was dismantled and reduced to the territories where the ethnic populations of the two successor states, Austria and Hungary, were predominant. However, the real winners are those who find the time and the willingness to consider their opponents sufferance, to look, through the eyes of the losers, at how much they themselves had to suffer for victory. To that end, the volume edited by the Hungarian historians Nándor Bárdi and Judit Pál and titled “Over the Trenches. How the Hungarians of Transylvania experienced the Great War and the Trianon.” is a collection of documents of the time.



    The historian Daniel Cain told us that, for the Romanians, the beginning of the war that led to the final victory was a much too optimistic one, with very little doubt as regards the real situation,



    “I shall make reference, if I may, to an article that was a singular voice in the Old Kingdom press in late 1914 and early into 1915. It is an editorial published in a business magazine and also an attempted answer to those who were dead set on Romanias entering the war: fine, we advance into Transylvania, we make Greater Romania. What would our administrative model be, for those living in Transylvania? Do we have the required administrative experience to replace, for instance, the elite of the Transylvanian towns? It was a one-of-a-kind article, at that time, as there were extremely boisterous other articles targeting the necessity and the light-mindedness of a decision to be taken, for the Romanian Army to cross the Carpathians. “



    The light-mindedness with which people cause real tragedies is typical for our minds and motivated by our good intentions. Human beings are self-delusional, believing, for instance, that a war ends up quickly, without much effort. It was the mindset of that particular generation and, as history has revealed, it was also the mindset of the generations to come.



    Historian Daniel Cain:



    “In order to illustrate that light-mindedness with which people viewed the war in the summer of 1916, in Bucharest there were two major incidents that occurred prior to Romanias entering into the war: an explosion at the armys Arsenal and another explosion at the ammunition storage in the Dudesti district. The following day, the press and mainly the Adevarul daily said measures had to be taken, because there were the spies who did it and 300 people were sacrificed, it was exactly the number of people who had to be sacrificed for the accomplishment of the national ideal, once the Carpathians had been crossed. So, in 1916, a great part of the public in the Old Kingdom was firmly convinced that Romanias entering into the war would be no more difficult than a walk.”



    Here is historian Daniel Cain once again, this time highlighting the good points of a thought-provoking volume, a book where we can find the same experiences that are typical for wartime. Its just that theyre being viewed from the other side.



    “It practically offers several answers to several questions, it provides an extremely varied image of what, first and foremost the experience of the war mean, for the ordinary people who fatefully felt the pressure of those trying times. Here we have testimonies of experiences that mainly boil down to uncertainty, to the uncertainty of tomorrow, to fear. Just put yourselves in the shoes of those living in the border localities, where, all of a sudden, the next day they see another army marching into their locality. And what they see is a change, a withdrawal of the local administration, a replacement of the local administration, only to see that, in a couple of days or in a few weeks time, the former state of things would again be put in place.”



    The volume “Over the trenches… is more than an invitation to reading. It is an urge to view a glorious year, such as 1918 was for the Romanians, from the other side, the side of the defeated ones, it is an urge, for winner and losers alike, to share the sufferance. (EN)


  • March 21, 2023

    March 21, 2023

    TALKS Russian
    president Vladimir Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping are currently having
    talks in Moscow. Economic cooperation is high on the agenda on the second day
    of the Chinese President’s three-day visit to Moscow. Yesterday, the two
    leaders tackled the war in Ukraine and the two sides are expected to sign two
    major agreements on expanding the strategic bilateral cooperation and
    partnership. According to sources in Moscow, the talks’ agenda also includes technical-military
    cooperation between the two sides, amid the West’s fears that Beijing could
    supply weapons to Russia for the war the latter is presently waging on Ukraine.
    According to experts, the Chinese president’s visit is important for president
    Putin who can now prove that Russia isn’t internationally isolated. China
    hasn’t condemned the war in Ukraine but has been engaged in peace talks and at
    the beginning of his visit president Jinping has underlined China’s neutral
    stand.








    CUT Last year Romania
    managed to slightly curb the number of road accidents by 200 as compared to
    2021. Fatalities from road accidents were also reduced by 145 and the number of
    wounded by 100. In 2022 Romania reported 47 hundred accidents and 1,630
    fatalities. 37 hundred people were also severely injured. According to the
    Romanian Police General Inspectorate, these have been the lowest figures in the
    past decade. Road traffic police are these days conducting a series of
    preventive activities on the high-risk sections of the country’s road network.








    DAY Numerous events have been announced in
    Romania on the World Poetry Day marked on March 21. The National Museum of
    Literature in Bucharest has scheduled a series of public lectures, exhibitions
    and shows in libraries and education units as well as several outdoor events
    focusing on poetry. At the Ipotesti Memorial in north-eastern Romania, The Mihai
    Eminescu National Study Center is staging the traditional poetry marathon
    involving the participation of almost 20 authors. The National Museum of
    Literature in Iasi, eastern Romania is also staging a poetry marathon.








    PLAN Romania is one of the 17 EU members to have endorsed the EU
    joint weapon-purchase plan, which will enable the EU nations to jointly
    purchase weapons amid growing appeals from Ukraine for more military support.
    According to EU officials the initiative will allow the EU to replenish arms
    that have already been provided to Ukraine. The plan has been drawn up by the
    European Defence Agency in an attempt to connect the weapon demands of the EU
    members and Ukraine and the European arms industry. The programme has two lines
    of procurement, one for the 155 mm howitzer shells for a period of two years
    and for other types of ammunition for a period of seven years. The plan’s third
    component is focusing on raising the production capabilities of some weapon
    producers in the EU.




    (bill)

  • EU approves joint ammunition procurement plan

    EU approves joint ammunition procurement plan

    On Monday the European Union
    approved a EUR 2 bln plan to procure and supply ammunition to Ukraine, sources
    in Brussels announced. The 3-stage plan is designed to supply Ukrainian forces
    with at least one million 155-millimeter artillery shells in the coming 12
    months, and to replenish member states’ stockpiles, some of which are depleting
    quickly.




    Ukraine’s foreign minister Dmytro
    Kuleba, who attended the meeting of his EU counterparts via conference call, has
    welcomed the support. More artillery ammunition for Ukraine as fast as
    possible. This will bolster Ukraine’s capabilities on the battlefield, Kuleba said
    in a Twitter post.




    The plan, which is to be signed off
    by EU leaders at the summit on March 23-24, answers an urgent request made by
    Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy early
    this month.




    EUR 1 bln will be used to reimburse
    EU members that immediately supply Ukraine with ammunition from their own
    existing stockpiles, at EUR 1,000-1,300 per shell. The current price for such
    ammunition is EUR 4,000 and growing. Another EUR 1 bln will be used to place
    joint ammunition orders for Ukraine.




    The contracts are due in September,
    and the goal is to shorten the deadline for purchase and delivery to 6-8 months.




    A third stage of the plan concerns
    increasing production capacities with 12 EU weapons producers, to restock member
    states and to carry on supplying the Ukrainian forces. The EUR 2 bln will be
    earmarked under the European Peace Facility, an inter-government fund created
    by the member states outside of the EU budget and used since the start of the
    war to supply weapons to Ukraine.




    Seventeen of the 27 member states,
    plus Norway, will take part in the programme in a first stage, and Romania is
    one of them. It is a historic decision, said the EU diplomacy chief Josep
    Borrell, who came up with the initiative. The framework, outlined by the European
    Defence Agency, is flexible and allows us to replenish national military
    stockpiles and to help Ukraine, he emphasised.




    Also on Monday, the US announced
    authorising a further USD 350 million in military aid to Ukraine, which
    includes ammunition for U.S.-provided HIMARS and howitzers. Russia alone could
    end its war today. Until Russia does, we will stand united with Ukraine for as
    long as it takes, the US secretary of state Antony Blinken said on Monday. (AMP)

  • The War in Ukraine and Human Rights Observance

    The War in Ukraine and Human Rights Observance

    Bucharest reconfirms Romania’s firm and unflinching
    support for the independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of the
    neighboring Ukraine, invaded by Russian troops – Romanian Foreign Minister
    Bogdan Aurescu has said before the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.
    Romania’s determination to make a solid contribution to peace, development and
    human rights observance is stronger than ever. Human rights are universal,
    inalienable, indivisible and interconnected so that there is no human dignity
    without human rights, Minister Aurescu went on to say. The head of the
    Romanian diplomacy has recalled the recent resolution by the UN General Assembly,
    which condemns the war Russia is presently waging on Ukraine. He underlined
    that we must make tireless efforts to hold the Russian Federation accountable
    for its war crimes in Ukraine and to offer compensations to the large number of
    victims.

    According to its Foreign Minister, Romania values the efforts of the
    UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to document the cases of sexual violence
    against women during the armed conflict in that country as well as other cases
    of blatant violations of human and POW rights. Ukraine’s victory must be
    defined by Ukraine itself – Aurescu says, because it is its legal and moral
    right. We, on our part, must provide multilateral support to strengthen
    Ukraine’s resilience against the Russian aggression. We must have a consistent
    international dialogue and coordination for the post-war reconstruction of
    Ukraine based on an ample plan in keeping with the realities on the ground -
    Aurescu added.


    As early as April 2022, the
    famous human rights organization, Human Rights Watch (HWR), announced that it had
    documented numerous cases in which Russian troops violated the rights of the
    civilians in the occupied areas in Ukraine.


    And the situation
    worsened in the months that followed. Brief executions, rapes, forced
    deportations and situations in which children were taken away from their
    families have increased at a geometric rate.


    Last month the respected
    organization also cautioned Ukraine against the apparent use of antipersonnel
    landmines by its forces in the fights for the city of Izium. According to Steve
    Goose, director of the Arms Division at Human Rights Watch, Ukrainian forces
    appear to have extensively scattered landmines around the Izium area, causing
    civilian casualties and posing an ongoing risk.


    Russian forces have
    repeatedly used antipersonnel mines and committed atrocities across the
    country, but this doesn’t justify Ukrainian use of these prohibited weapons,
    the HRW official has also said.


    (bill)