Tag: war

  • February 28, 2023 UPDATE

    February 28, 2023 UPDATE

    HUMAN RIGHTS In his speech before the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on
    Tuesday, Romania’s Foreign Minister, Bogdan Aurescu, reiterated Romania’s firm
    and unflinching support for the independence, sovereignty and territorial
    integrity of Ukraine. The Romanian official underlined the fact that ‘tireless
    efforts must be made to hold the Russian Federation accountable for the war
    crimes in Ukraine and offer compensations to the large number of victims.’ Aurescu
    also spoke about the latest earthquakes that severely affected Turkey and Syria
    and recalled that Romania was among the first countries to offer humanitarian
    assistance.






    DECORATIONS On the Civil Protection Day on Tuesday, Romanian president Klaus
    Iohannis awarded decorations to the servicemen, firefighters, paramedics and
    volunteers who participated in the international humanitarian mission in Turkey.
    According to Iohannis, Civil Protection represents a major component of the
    national security and in the past decade the Romanian state has made
    significant efforts to buy state-of-the-art equipment and provide professional
    training to those who work in this field. The results obtained were also
    superior and the professionalism of the Romanian rescuers was also acknowledged
    and appreciated at international level whenever they got involved in rescue
    operations abroad, president Iohannis went on to say.






    WAR
    Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, has admitted that the situation in
    Bakhmut, a city besieged by Russian invasion forces, is getting more difficult
    by the day. The enemy is systematically destroying anything that can be
    used to reinforce our defenses, Zelensky said, who labeled Ukrainian
    servicemen involved in this battle true heroes. As early as last
    summer, Moscow’s troops have been trying to take Bakhmut, a key strategic
    settlement that has become a symbol of the battle for the entire Donbas region.
    In a statement to the Russian television, the head of pro-Russian separatists
    in Donetsk, Denis Pushilin, claims that all access routes to the Ukrainian
    fortress in Bakhmut are in firing range. Previously, the owner of
    the Wagner PMC, Yevgeny Prigozhin, announced his mercenaries had captured the
    village of Yahidne, just north of the city.


    (bill)

  • February 24, 2023 UPDATE

    February 24, 2023 UPDATE

    Ukraine. Ukraine will do everything in its power to win, says president Volodymyr Zelensky, one year after the beginning of the Russian invasion. We endured and did not let ourselves be defeated, reads the Kyiv leaders message, released to the public on Friday. He declares himself convinced that 2023 will be the year of victory and thanks all Ukrainians for their courage. For their part, the leaders of NATO and the European Union say that they will continue to support Ukraine from a political, economic and military point of view, for it to regain its territorial integrity, in accordance with the principles of international law. They condemn Russia not only for its attack on Ukraine, but also for its irresponsible nuclear threats and its use of food and energy as weapons in the hybrid warfare. NATO officials are calling on Russia to immediately stop the war and withdraw from the occupied territories, in accordance with the resolution adopted by the United Nations on Thursday. Reuters notes that the war in Ukraine has become one of attrition, and both sides are suffering increasing losses. Russia is controlling around a fifth of Ukrainian territory



    Support. President Klaus Iohannis sent a message on Friday, one year after the start of Russias war against Ukraine, in which he states that Romania will continue to support Ukraine and the Ukrainian people for as long as necessary. “This battle must be won by Ukraine, and Russia must be held accountable for the crimes committed and the lives destroyed. Dear Ukrainian people, you are not alone! You have a reliable friend in Romania, who is supporting you in this unjust battle! It is our responsibility, of us all, to contribute to the victory and build a better future, in peace! Romania stands and will continue to stand by Ukraine!”, said the Romanian president in his video message. He also thanked the Romanian people for their solidarity with and empathy for their Ukrainian neighbours. Prime minister Nicolae Ciucă said the Romanian people, who are strongly attached to the values of the European Union and the North Atlantic Alliance, will continue to support the objective of peace and freedom in Ukraine, a country that has become the outpost of the fight to defend the democratic world. In another move, the Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies, Marcel Ciolacu, visited the 57th Air Base Mihail Kogălniceanu in the south-east of Romania on Friday. “Romanians, Americans, Italians and French train together, carry out missions together, eat together and share each others culture, like a big family. An unshakable wall that protects Romania and the entire Eastern Flank of NATO. We will never accept the invasion of a sovereign state”, Ciolacu later wrote on Facebook.



    Resolution. Romanian foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu said on Thursday at a special meeting of the UN General Assembly in New York that Bucharest wants peace for Ukraine but that at the moment the hostilities are at an alarming level, with no signs of diminishing, with unimaginable suffering for the civilian population and drastic and long-term consequences. According to a statement from the Romanian foreign office, minister Bogdan Aurescu also said the hybrid warfare conducted by Moscow and further intensified by fake news, disinformation and malign influences seeks not only to destabilize the region and the most vulnerable states, but also to undermine their unity, mutual trust and solidarity. Minister Aurescu recalled that Romania supports the creation of a special tribunal to prosecute the crime of aggression against Ukraine. He welcomed the adoption, by overwhelming majority, of a resolution entitled “Principles of the Charter of the United Nations underlying a comprehensive, just and lasting peace in Ukraine” in which the UN General Assembly condemns Russia for its invasion of Ukraine and calls for the cessation of hostilities and the withdrawal of troops.



    Cooperation. Romanian Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă expressed his appreciation for the excellent cooperation between Romania and the European Commission within the European Civil Protection Mechanism, during a meeting he had on Friday with Janez Lenarcic, the European Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management , on a working visit to Bucharest. During the discussions, the excellent cooperation in the management of Ukrainian refugees and humanitarian aid to the neighboring country was appreciated, and the need to develop disaster resilience and civil protection capabilities both at the EU level and in the neighboring states was stressed. The European Commissioner participated in Bucharest in the ministerial round table with the theme Understanding and communicating existing and future risks: Ensuring evidence-based communication and preventing mis- and disinformation, organized by the Department for Emergency Situations.



    Concert. To mark one year since Russias war in Ukraine, violinist Alexandru Tomescu, cellist Răzvan Suma and pianist Sînziana Mircea together with Radio Romanias orchestras and music choirs will give a special performance on Saturday at Radio Romanias Concert Hall entitled “Life in a Suitcase”. Ukrainian-born flutist Mariia Velia, a second-year student at the University of Music in Bucharest, is also invited to perform. Organised by Radio Romanias culture channel, the concert aims to highlight the drama of the millions of people who were forced to leave their country, taking with them nothing but a suitcase. Also in connection with the first anniversary of the war in Ukraine, the foyer of Radio Romanias Concert Hall on Thursday hosted the opening of an exhibition of photographs by Ilie Pintea, the special correspondent in Ukraine of Radio Romanias news and current affairs channel. Entitled “Ukraine – faces of war”, the exhibition stays open until the end of March. (MI)

  • February 23, 2023

    February 23, 2023

    MOLDOVA The president of the Republic of Moldova, Maia
    Sandu, is in Bucharest today for a working visit. According
    to the Presidency, political talks between
    presidents Klaus Iohannis and Maia Sandu are part of the comprehensive and
    close cooperation at bilateral and European level, and confirm Romania’s clear
    and firm support for Moldova and its resilience. Projects of shared strategic
    interest will be discussed, concerning fields like energy, transportation, healthcare,
    education and IT&C, with a focus on initiatives designed to connect Moldova
    with the EU, to the benefit of its citizens. The 2 officials will also discuss
    the progress of Moldova’s EU accession efforts and Bucharest’s support in this
    respect, and will exchange opinions on security challenges and ways to mitigate
    the economic, social and humanitarian effects of Russia’s aggression in
    Ukraine. In Bucharest, Maia Sandu will also have meetings with PM Nicolae Ciucă
    and the Chamber of Deputies speaker, Marcel Ciolacu.


    DIPLOMACY The Romanian
    foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu is taking part today and on Friday in the
    events organized by the United Nations to mark 1 year since the start of Russia’s
    war of aggression against Ukraine. Today he is scheduled to speak at the 11th
    special emergency session of the UN General Assembly, convened in order to
    adopt a resolution aimed at restoring comprehensive, just and lasting peace in
    Ukraine. Romania is a co-sponsor of the resolution. On Friday, the
    Romanian foreign minister will speak at a minister round-table of the UN
    Security Council, with Ukraine again in the focus of attention. The
    Romanian official will present Bucharest’s efforts to support the over 3.6 million
    Ukrainian refugees who have crossed into Romania and to facilitate the transit
    of nearly 13 million tonnes of grains from Ukraine. He will also reiterate
    Romania’s firm support for the integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine and his
    country’s commitment to an active contribution to international peace and
    security.


    TRAVEL Over 151 companies from several countries are
    taking part in the spring edition of the Romanian Tourism Fair that begins in
    Bucharest today, offering up to 50% discounts on holiday packages and special
    promotions for luxury destinations. The event promotes the most interesting and
    profitable tourist offers in Romania and abroad. The 10 participating countries
    include Bulgaria, Cyprus, Egypt, Greece, Israel, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Turkey
    and Hungary.


    EARTHQUAKE A new earthquake measuring 3.9 in magnitude was reported in
    Gorj County, south-western Romania on Wednesday night, according to the National
    Physics of the Earth Research and Development Institute. On February 13, a 5.2
    tremor was reported in the same area, followed the next day by a 5.7 earthquake.
    Seismologists announced that over 800 aftershocks followed the quake on
    February 13, but their number and magnitude declined in the following period. The
    region of Oltenia is known for a weak to moderate seismic activity, with very
    rare events over 5 on the magnitude scale.


    FOOTBALL CFR Cluj, the only Romanian team still playing
    in the European competitions, takes on Lazio Rome today on home turf in the play-offs
    for the Conference League eighth-finals. A week ago, in the first leg, the Romanian side lost 0-1, after
    a modest match in spite of their opponents being one player down for 75 minutes.
    Last season the Romanian champions left Conference
    League in the group stage, whereas Lazio reached the eighth-finals of Europa
    League. (AMP)

  • Positions on Ukraine

    Positions on Ukraine


    One year into the invasion of Ukraine, Putins Russia is changing nothing, even in terms of rhetoric. Speaking before the countrys political elite, Putin reiterated the claim that the attack on Ukraine was a response to an alleged Western plan against Russia. Kyiv would have prepared for a military offensive in Donbas anyway, last spring, Vladimir Putin claimed.



    While admitting that Russia was going through a difficult period, Vladimir Putin still described his country as the stronghold standing up against the Western decadence that seeks to rob the Russian people of their resources and to make them suffer. The West, the Russian president went on to say, has turned Ukraine into an anti-Russian project. And, he warned, the further into Russia Western weapons will hit, the more Moscow will be forced to remove these threats at its borders.



    Putin announced the suspension of the New START treaty with the US on the reduction of strategic nuclear weapons and warned that Moscow may resume nuclear tests.



    As for the waves of sanctions hitting the Russian economy, the Kremlin leader argued that it cannot be brought to its knees. Moreover, the sanctions purportedly created opportunities for autonomous development.



    Whereas Putins address in Moscow targeted a domestic audience that needs convincing that the West is an intractable enemy for Russia, the US president Joe Bidens speech in Warsaw was intended for the entire world, or at least the part of the world that loves freedom.



    Biden praised Ukraines resilience and reiterated his countrys and its Western allies unwavering support for Ukraines sovereignty and independence. Biden accused the Russians of extreme brutality and crimes against humanity. He reaffirmed the commitment of the US to the NATO collective defence clause. “We will be strong, we will be united. Ukraine will never be a victory for Russia,” the US leader promised.



    On the other hand, Biden dismissed Moscows claims that the West was plotting to attack Russia. “This war was never a necessity; its a tragedy. President Putin chose this war. Every day the war continues is his choice,” the US president said, and added that the war would be ended if Russia stopped invading Ukraine, but that if Ukraine stopped defending itself against Russia, it would be the end of Ukraine. This is why together we must make sure that Ukraine can defend itself, Biden argued.



    Attending the speech was also the president of the Republic of Moldova, Maia Sandu, and president Biden asked the public to give her a round of applause, praising Chişinǎus path to EU membership and the peoples resolve to live in freedom. (AMP)


  • Change of government in Chișinău

    Change of government in Chișinău

    The Prime Minister of the Republic of Moldova, the pro-Western Natalia Gavrilița, has announced her resignation. President Maia Sandu thanked her for what she called the enormous sacrifice and efforts to lead the republic in a period marked by so many crises. Gavrilița had been at the helm of the Moldovan government since August 6, 2021, after the Action and Solidarity presidential party (PAS) had won the early parliamentary elections by a considerable margin, obtaining 63 of the 101 deputy mandates. With the resignation announcement, Gavrilița said that the republic was entering a new stage, in which security would be a priority. She will be replaced by the presidential advisor for security issues, Dorin Recean. A former interior minister between 2012 and 2014, Recean is the secretary general of the Supreme Security Council of the Republic of Moldova.



    The political change comes against the background of the Russian invasion of neighboring Ukraine and of the hybrid war that decision-makers in Chișinău say Russia is waging against their republic. ‘All the teams subordinated to the Interior Ministry are prepared to intervene in case of contextual changes, in the border area or inside the Republic of Moldova’ the Interior Minister Ana Revenco said just before the prime minister resigned, and also after the president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, had stated in Brussels that Russia was planning to destabilize the political situation in Chișinău.



    All the elements of a hybrid war, such as false bomb alerts, cyber-attacks, illegally financed protests, energy blackmail, were, last year, a great challenge for the entire Internal Affairs system, minister Revenco told Radio Chișinău. She also adds that these threats continue in 2023, ‘which is why we are always on duty, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.’ The pro-war propaganda, incitement to hatred, disinformation, parts of the same hybrid war, are meant to weaken the resilience of citizens – warns the interior minister of the pro-Western Government of the Republic of Moldova. And the Security and Intelligence Service (SIS) announced that it had detected destabilizing activities.



    “Based on the information presented by our Ukrainian partner and on internal data, we confirm that we have identified activities aimed at weakening and destabilizing (the Republic of) Moldova”, the SIS says in a statement, specifying that it cannot give more details, so as not to compromise the ongoing investigations. The Republic of Moldova is, like Ukraine, a candidate for joining the European Union, a condition that requires the implementation of extensive reforms. And the political analysts in Chișinău write that, beyond the security stakes of the change of government, there are indications that the real causes of the change are related to the slow pace of the reforms carried out by the Gavriliţa team and to the internal tensions within the Power. (LS)

  • Challenges in Cybersecurity

    Challenges in Cybersecurity

    The military conflict caused by Russia in neighboring
    Ukraine takes place in cyberspace too. Some researchers are saying that we are
    talking about the biggest war of the cybernetic era, and the most significant
    escalation on both sides.

    Early in the conflict, Moscow launched an impressive
    number of destructive attacks against dozens of Ukrainian networks, managing to
    damage the Viasat satellite network, and cause grief for Ukraine’s defenses. A
    few weeks in, the pace of such attacks went down, and right now, almost a year
    into the war, the main cybernetic activity that Russia carries out in relation
    to Ukraine is intelligence gathering. In addition to challenges caused by the
    war, China’s technological advance, and the pandemic, which moved a lot of
    activities online, are as many reasons for cyberscurity to be more and more of
    a reason for worry.

    In this geopolitical context, with so many uncertainties,
    things are sure to stay the same, with organizations at all levels being more
    and more exposed to the threat of cybercrime. The global costs of cybercrime
    are expected to go up by 15% per year until 2025, and amount to more than 10
    trillion dollars a year, as seen in a report by Cybersecurity Ventures, much
    higher than the cumulative profits of drug trafficking worldwide. The new kinds
    of online fraud will become more elaborate and harder to detect, as computer
    crime perpetrators are moving towards using artificial intelligence tools,
    according to the National Cybersecurity Directorate in Bucharest. The security
    of institutions is under careful care by experts and authorities, but regular
    users are much more exposed, and need assistance to fend off the many kinds of
    attacks they are vulnerable to.

    Among the most widely used fraud attacks for
    stealing personal data are phishing attacks by e-mail, which ask for
    identifying data through spurious offers, the National Cybersecurity
    Directorate in Bucharest warns. At the same time, many misleading messages are
    also disseminated on social media and search engines, as explained for Radio
    Romania by Mihai Rotariu, the head of communication for the directorate, who
    provided a few examples:


    Mihai Rotariu: As we begin this year, we see an increase in attempts at
    online fraud. As usual, the attackers are using the context we are in, and are
    trying to take advantage of commercial discounts associated with winter. More
    to the point, they are launching phishing campaigns using the visual identity
    of popular brands, which are usually more active during this period. We are
    talking about commercial banks, retailers, some online services, and delivery
    services. We have even witnessed fraud attempts using the image of some public
    institutions, such as the police, the fiscal authority, or even Europol. Most
    phishing attacks occur by e-mail, but they can be propagated through social
    media or text messaging, SMS, and the goal of attackers is to harvest personal
    data, be they financial or authentication data, mainly by redirecting the
    potential victim to cloned websites. These are sites that look like the real
    ones, but have a slightly different address, and are in another domain. Which
    is vital to pay careful attention to the name and security status of a websites
    where we use personal data.


    It is no secret that attackers are relying more and more
    on artificial intelligence, enhancing and automating their activities, adapting
    to the context better, and having a better rate of success. However, we should
    not panic, says Mihai Rotariu:


    Mihai Rotariu: If we have cybersecurity routine, and good online
    hygiene, we should not panic, because we can sidestep about 90% of attacks.
    When I am talking about routine, I am referring to forming reflexes when acting
    online, formed just like the ones in real life. For instance, when we cross the
    street, we look right and left and check the traffic light. This is the case
    with links we access too. We don’t click on a link from an unknown source
    before running a check on the source, using a security solution. At the same
    time, we have to know clearly that most companies that offer online services,
    especially banks, would never send e-mails with links for updating or verifying
    authentication data. You should never go to websites for, let’s say, online
    banking through a link sent by SMS or e-mail, or through sponsored ads, you
    should only use the smartphone app. We also recommend you enter the website
    address manually in your Internet browser, taking care not to end up carelessly
    on such cloned sites. You should pay close attention to the exact name of the
    domain, because attackers substitute digits for letters, and if we rush through
    the process we could be fooled into thinking we are on the original site, but
    in fact we are on the cloned site. Last but not least, pay close attention to
    offers online that look too good to be true.


    Mihai Rotariu added that we should always check with the
    company purporting to make the online promotional offers before acting on the
    purchase. (C.C.)

  • Challenges in Cybersecurity

    Challenges in Cybersecurity

    The military conflict caused by Russia in neighboring
    Ukraine takes place in cyberspace too. Some researchers are saying that we are
    talking about the biggest war of the cybernetic era, and the most significant
    escalation on both sides.

    Early in the conflict, Moscow launched an impressive
    number of destructive attacks against dozens of Ukrainian networks, managing to
    damage the Viasat satellite network, and cause grief for Ukraine’s defenses. A
    few weeks in, the pace of such attacks went down, and right now, almost a year
    into the war, the main cybernetic activity that Russia carries out in relation
    to Ukraine is intelligence gathering. In addition to challenges caused by the
    war, China’s technological advance, and the pandemic, which moved a lot of
    activities online, are as many reasons for cyberscurity to be more and more of
    a reason for worry.

    In this geopolitical context, with so many uncertainties,
    things are sure to stay the same, with organizations at all levels being more
    and more exposed to the threat of cybercrime. The global costs of cybercrime
    are expected to go up by 15% per year until 2025, and amount to more than 10
    trillion dollars a year, as seen in a report by Cybersecurity Ventures, much
    higher than the cumulative profits of drug trafficking worldwide. The new kinds
    of online fraud will become more elaborate and harder to detect, as computer
    crime perpetrators are moving towards using artificial intelligence tools,
    according to the National Cybersecurity Directorate in Bucharest. The security
    of institutions is under careful care by experts and authorities, but regular
    users are much more exposed, and need assistance to fend off the many kinds of
    attacks they are vulnerable to.

    Among the most widely used fraud attacks for
    stealing personal data are phishing attacks by e-mail, which ask for
    identifying data through spurious offers, the National Cybersecurity
    Directorate in Bucharest warns. At the same time, many misleading messages are
    also disseminated on social media and search engines, as explained for Radio
    Romania by Mihai Rotariu, the head of communication for the directorate, who
    provided a few examples:


    Mihai Rotariu: As we begin this year, we see an increase in attempts at
    online fraud. As usual, the attackers are using the context we are in, and are
    trying to take advantage of commercial discounts associated with winter. More
    to the point, they are launching phishing campaigns using the visual identity
    of popular brands, which are usually more active during this period. We are
    talking about commercial banks, retailers, some online services, and delivery
    services. We have even witnessed fraud attempts using the image of some public
    institutions, such as the police, the fiscal authority, or even Europol. Most
    phishing attacks occur by e-mail, but they can be propagated through social
    media or text messaging, SMS, and the goal of attackers is to harvest personal
    data, be they financial or authentication data, mainly by redirecting the
    potential victim to cloned websites. These are sites that look like the real
    ones, but have a slightly different address, and are in another domain. Which
    is vital to pay careful attention to the name and security status of a websites
    where we use personal data.


    It is no secret that attackers are relying more and more
    on artificial intelligence, enhancing and automating their activities, adapting
    to the context better, and having a better rate of success. However, we should
    not panic, says Mihai Rotariu:


    Mihai Rotariu: If we have cybersecurity routine, and good online
    hygiene, we should not panic, because we can sidestep about 90% of attacks.
    When I am talking about routine, I am referring to forming reflexes when acting
    online, formed just like the ones in real life. For instance, when we cross the
    street, we look right and left and check the traffic light. This is the case
    with links we access too. We don’t click on a link from an unknown source
    before running a check on the source, using a security solution. At the same
    time, we have to know clearly that most companies that offer online services,
    especially banks, would never send e-mails with links for updating or verifying
    authentication data. You should never go to websites for, let’s say, online
    banking through a link sent by SMS or e-mail, or through sponsored ads, you
    should only use the smartphone app. We also recommend you enter the website
    address manually in your Internet browser, taking care not to end up carelessly
    on such cloned sites. You should pay close attention to the exact name of the
    domain, because attackers substitute digits for letters, and if we rush through
    the process we could be fooled into thinking we are on the original site, but
    in fact we are on the cloned site. Last but not least, pay close attention to
    offers online that look too good to be true.


    Mihai Rotariu added that we should always check with the
    company purporting to make the online promotional offers before acting on the
    purchase. (C.C.)

  • January 24, 2023 UPDATE

    January 24, 2023 UPDATE

    UNION Romanians on Tuesday celebrated the union of the historical provinces
    of Moldavia and Wallachia, a political event, which took place 164 years ago,
    in 1859, under the leadership of ruler Alexandru Ioan Cuza. The move was the
    first step in the process of creating the Romanian modern state, process
    completed back in 1918. Military and religious services were staged by the
    Ministry of National Defence jointly with central and local authorities at the
    monuments devoted to the union of the Romanian principalities. Wreath laying
    ceremonies were held at the monument of the Unknown Soldier. Present at the
    event, Romanian president Klaus Iohannis said that the successes achieved back
    in 1859 are a lesson of responsibility for all those who are building the
    European, modern and democratic Romania. He reiterated the appeal to use all
    the instruments available to complete all the reforms Romania needs and to
    eradicate the malfunctions, which are still affecting this process. Thousands
    of people took to the streets of Iasi, in eastern Romania, to participate in a
    series of events on this occasion. The country’s Prime Minister Nicolae Ciuca
    and the president of the Chamber of Deputies Marcel Ciolacu also participated
    in these events. In his public address on this special occasion, Prime Minister
    Ciuca said the roots of the European Romania can be found in the union
    completed 164 years ago – an authentic example of the unity of the Romanians,
    which paved the way for the emancipation and modernization of the state. In his
    opinion, the responsibility of the political class and the state institutions
    is to honour this act of uniting the Romanian nation. Religious services were
    held in Orthodox churches around the country on this occasion.






    UKRAINE Several high officials in Ukraine on Tuesday announced their
    resignations amid high-level corruption allegations during the war with Russia,
    France Press reports. Deputy Defence Minister, Viacheslav Shapovalov, and the
    deputy head of Ukraine’s presidential office, Kyrylo Tymoshenko are among the
    high officials to have stepped down. Deputy prosecutor General Oleksiy
    Symonenko also resigned amid allegations about a holiday he spent with his
    family in Spain after Ukraine’s National Security and Defence Council had banned
    state officials from leaving the country during martial law. Amid all these
    allegations, which threaten to dampen the West’s enthusiasm to help the
    government in Kyiv, president Zelensky has pledged to launch a staff shake-up
    in the central and local administrations including at top level. Ukraine’s
    endemic corruption has been overlooked since the beginning of the Russian
    invasion, but fighting the scourge is one of the key conditions for the country
    to join the European Union.






    EU Security,
    prosperity, the democratic values and the rule of law are the priorities of the
    Swedish presidency of the European Union presented by the country’s Foreign
    Minister Tobias Billstrom before the European Parliament on Tuesday. Billstrom
    has condemned the unprovoked, brutal and unjustified aggression of Russia
    against Ukraine and has mentioned the EU’s Swedish presidency will have as one
    of the objectives to carry on the political, military, economic and
    humanitarian support for Kyiv in spite of the Moscow’s attempts to cause
    division among the Europeans. Billstrom believes that sanctions are an
    extremely effective instrument through which the bloc can help Ukraine win the
    war. The programme of the EU’s Swedish presidency includes roughly two thousand
    formal meetings in Brussels and Luxembourg as well as 150 informal meetings
    hosted by Sweden.






    G7+ Romania’s Foreign
    Minister Bogdan Aurescu on Tuesday participated in the G7+ videoconference
    where he stood for an increased assistance for Ukraine in the context of the
    present winter challenges. Aurescu said that Romania would continue to support
    Ukraine jointly with the partners sharing the same visions and objectives. The
    G7+ conference was co-chaired by the US secretary of state Antony Blinken and
    the Foreign Minister of Japan Hayashi Yoshimasa. High on the agenda was the
    situation of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, which suffered massive and
    repeated attacks from the Russian Federation as well as the stage and prospects
    of the support granted to Ukraine by the international community to handle the
    results of these attacks and increase its resilience at society level.
    According to Foreign Ministry sources, the head of the Romanian diplomacy mentioned
    the success of this format launched in Bucharest in November 2022 on the
    sidelines of the NATO Foreign Ministers meeting. Aurescu says that the repeated
    large-scale attacks against the Ukrainian civilian infrastructure is a blatant
    violation of the international humanitarian law and their aim is to break the
    resilience of the Ukrainian society, something the international democratic
    community cannot allow to happen.






    HOLIDAY Students are going back to school on Wednesday after the mini-holiday
    celebrating the union of the Romanian principalities. State employees also had
    a four-day holiday, which most of them decided to spend on the mountain resorts
    of the Prahova Valley. Brasov and Sibiu in central Romania as well as Oradea in
    the north-west were the cities, which reported most of the reservations.




    (bill)

  • January 9, 2023

    January 9, 2023

    SCHOOLS
    Schools and kindergartens reopened in Romania today after the winter break,
    among seasonal flu and viral respiratory infection alerts. The authorities call
    on parents not to send their kids to school if they have symptoms. The
    education and health ministries have taken measures and issued guidelines to
    prevent the transmission of respiratory viruses.


    GOVERNMENT The government of Romania is
    considering a number of projects for the forthcoming period, which have already
    been agreed on within the ruling coalition, the PM Nicolae Ciucă announced.
    Healthcare, education and investments, including the targets and benchmarks
    undertaken under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan, are the main areas
    to receive special attention. The government posted for public debate a draft resolution
    on master’s, Ph. D, post-doctoral and research grants abroad. In terms of
    healthcare system improvements, the proposed measures include hospital
    revamping using EU funds.


    UNEMPLOYMENT The unemployment
    rate in Romania dropped slightly, from 5.5% in October to 5.4% in November,
    according to data made public today by the National Statistics Institute. The
    number of unemployed people aged between 15 and 74 estimated for November 2022
    was 447,700, down from the 453,200 reported for the previous month and from the
    450,000 reported for November 2021. The unemployment rate is 0.9% higher among
    men (5.8% for men and 4.9% for women). Unemployment among youth under 24
    remains at a worrying 22.9%, the INS warns. The number of unemployed people
    aged 25 to 74 accounted for 74.3% of the total number estimated for November
    2022.


    CULTURE The first event in the series devoted to Timişoara – European
    Capital of Culture in 2023 takes place today, when the vice-president of the
    European Commission, Margaritis Schinas, will hand over this official title in
    a ceremony held at the Acropolis Museum in Athens. This year, the city of Timişoara
    in western Romania is one of the 3 European capitals of culture, alongside Elefsina
    in Greece and Veszprém in Hungary. The official opening of the event is
    scheduled for February 17 to 19, and throughout the year as many as 50 shows,
    concerts, exhibitions and other cultural events will bring together more than
    2,500 artists from Romania and abroad. Timişoara is included in a top of the best places to visit put together
    by the British daily The Independent. The publication
    recommends Timişoara’s Baroque buildings and historical squares, as well as art
    exhibitions, classical music concerts and jazz festivals. The mayor Dominic
    Fritz said this year’s priority is to attract both tourists, and investors.


    BORDERS As many as 302,000 people and over 75,000
    vehicles crossed into and out of Romania on Sunday. More than 92,700 people entered
    Romanian territory, including 6,880 Ukrainian nationals. This brings the total
    number of Ukrainian citizens having entered Romania since February 2022 to over
    3.27 million.
    Border checks are conducted efficiently at all checkpoints, in line with the
    national and EU legislation, and the Border Police are working at full
    capacity, the authorities announced.


    UKRAINE Wars like the one in Ukraine, where civilian areas are
    subjected to indiscriminate destruction, are a crime against God and
    humanity, Pope Francis said on Monday. In his annual speech to diplomats
    accredited to the Vatican, the Pope spoke about the war in Ukraine, with its
    wake of death and destruction, with its attacks on civil infrastructures that
    cause lives to be lost not only from gunfire and acts of violence, but also
    from hunger and freezing cold. Meanwhile, Ukrainian forces are withstanding constant
    Russian attacks on Bakhmut and other towns in the east of Donbas, the Ukrainian
    authorities announced today. Bakhmut is holding out against all odds,
    president Volodymyr Zelensky said in his Sunday address. The nearby town of
    Soledar is also holding out, Although there is even more destruction there and
    it is extremely hard, he added.


    TENNIS The Romanian player Sorana Cîrstea (43 WTA) was defeated today by Beatriz Haddad Maia of Brazil (156 WTA), 7-6, 6-1, in
    the first round of the Adelaide International 2 (WTA 500) tournament in Australia.Another
    Romanian, Irina Begu, will play in the main draw against Australia’s Storm
    Hunter. Begu reached the semi-finals of the Adelaide International 1(WTA 500), where
    she lost to the winner of the tournament, Arina Sabalenka of Belarus. (AMP)

  • Domestic Events of 2022 in Review

    Domestic Events of 2022 in Review

    War in Ukraine, security crisis at Romania’s borders, prompt allied response



    After two years in which it monopolized the newscasts, the novel coronavirus is outclassed, in 2022, by the new Russian imperialism of Vladimir Putin, with the start of Russias illegal and unjustified war against its former vassal from the Soviet period, Ukraine. Together with its European Union partners and NATO allies, Romania firmly condemned the Russian aggression and coordinated its actions with them to face ‘the most serious threat to Euro-Atlantic security in recent decades, as the aggression is described in the declaration adopted at the end of the NATO meeting of the foreign affairs ministers held in Bucharest in November. Russia, the declaration shows, bears the full responsibility for this war, a blatant violation of international law and of the principles of the UN Charter, and its unacceptable actions, energy blackmail and reckless nuclear rhetoric undermine the rules-based international order. Any attack against the Allies will receive a united and determined response, the NATO states renewed their commitment. The actions that followed the Russian invasion were aimed at consolidating the eastern flank, the most exposed, of which Romania is also a part. The United States has boosted the number of troops sent to the territory of its strategic partner. Around 5,000 allied soldiers are currently in Romania, most of them from the USA, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy and Canada. A NATO battle group was established a few months after the start of the conflict, by transforming the allied multinational elements within the NATO Response Force, and France took over the role of framework nation.



    Energy crisis, inflation, measures to support the population



    Romania participated, from the very first moment, in the international support effort for Ukraine and continues to advocate for maintaining this support, at all levels. The Romanian authorities were praised for the way in which they acted in relation to the Ukrainian refugees and for the role they played in facilitating the transit of cereals from Ukraine to world markets. On the other hand, the Romanian authorities had to manage internal crises that the conflict generated or amplified. In line and in coordination with the European partners, Bucharest has diversified its energy sources in order to decrease its dependence on Russian gas. The government also adopted measures to compensate and cap gas and electricity bills, as the bills risked becoming unbearable for a population whose incomes were devoured by inflation that rose to 17% and endangered the existence of many companies. The budget for next year maintains the measures for capping energy bills, stipulates aid for the most vulnerable categories and allocates money for increasing pensions and the minimum wage.



    CVM monitoring lifted, Schengen accession postponed



    The European Commission proposed, towards the end of the year, the lifting of the Cooperation and Verification Mechanism monitoring for Romania, established upon the country’s EU accession in 2007, in order to monitor the reform of the judiciary. The adoption of the justice laws, repaired, to a good extent, after the damage caused to the legislation in the field by the social-democratic government between 2017-2018, had a big say in this decision. The same European Commission found that Romania meets, like Bulgaria, the technical conditions for joining the Schengen free travel area and recommended the EU states to speed up the accession of the two. The European Parliament, for its part, voted a resolution with a similar message. The support of the community institutions and the member states, including the Netherlands, which, in the past, was an intransigent opponent of Romanias and Bulgarias Schengen accession, was, however, blocked by the unexpected and obstinate refusal of Austria. The fact that Romania is not on the route of the illegal migrants flow, which was confirmed by the official data provided by Frontex Agency, and the reports of the Commission, which attest to Romania’s positive results in protecting the Union’s external border and in controlling illegal migration, did not matter. Vienna’s veto in the Justice and Home Affairs Council in December blocked Romanias Schengen accession which had been waited for 11 years. The gesture led to the souring of diplomatic relations between Bucharest and Vienna. Against the background of frustration and indignation, many people, including some leading politicians, called for a boycott of Austrian companies. President Klaus Iohannis called for calm and disagreed with any such boycott. At the last EU summit in 2022, he made an appeal for unity and solidarity, reiterating that Romania deserves its place into the Schengen Area.



    Sentences in the COLECTIVE file



    After almost 7 years since the fire at the Bucharest club Colectiv, which killed dozens of young people who had come to enjoy a rock concert, the court established the guilt and the punishments. The former mayor of the sector where the club that burned down was located received a 4-year sentence for abuse of office, reduced by half compared to the one received in the court of first instance. In his case, the judges eliminated the aggravated element of the crime of abuse of office. The owners of the club received prison sentences between 6 and almost 12 years, and the firefighters from the Inspectorate for Emergency Situations who checked the Colectiv Club without taking the legal measures regarding compliance with fire regulations, were definitively sentenced to 8 years and 8 months in prison. The court decided that some of the convicts should pay compensation of tens of millions of Euros to the families of the victims and the survivors. The latter say that the main culprit for the lost lives is the Romanian state, with its public systems unable to develop antibodies against corruption, indolence and administrative incompetence.



    Popovici, the new star of world swimming



    2022 in sports was a good year, with successes in rowing, kayak-canoeing, table tennis, athletics and weightlifting. However, in 2022 Romanian sports gave much more, namely a name for history, David Popovici. The high school student from Bucharest was the winner of the Junior and Senior World and European Championships in the 100m and 200m long course swimming events, and in Rome he set a new world record in the 100 meter freestyle. The sports press talks about the Popovici phenomenon, and the famous Swimming World magazine designated him the swimmer of the year. Instead, a former world number one, the Romanian tennis player Simona Halep, received, in 2022, the news of a provisional suspension after she was detected positive in an anti-doping control carried out at the US Open. The double grand slam winner, considered a model of integrity in sports, began, according to her own words, the most difficult match of her life, one for the truth, in which she struggles to prove that she is innocent. (LS)

  • The EU is consuming less natural gas

    The EU is consuming less natural gas

    The natural gas consumption in the European Union decreased by more than 20% in August, September, October and November this year, compared to the average for the same period from 2017 to 2021, shows data published by the Statistical Office of the European Union (Eurostat). Natural gas consumption has decreased in most Member States, but differently. In 18 countries, gas consumption fell by more than the target of 15%, in some countries even by more than 40%. The most significant decline was registered in Finland (almost 53%), Latvia and Lithuania. Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Romania and Estonia reported decreases of over 30%. Six EU members, even if they have reduced their consumption, have not yet reached the 15% target.



    Moreover, natural gas consumption increased in Malta and Slovakia. The objective is a 15% reduction of gas consumption between August 2022 and March 2023, compared to the similar average of the last five consecutive years, in order to stop the dependence of the EU bloc on fossil fuels from Russia and to stop feeding with money Kremlins war industry. Between January and July 2022, natural gas consumption in the European Union varied between 1,938 petajoules (PJ) in January, a colder month, and 785 PJ in July, indicating an overall monthly decline even before the 15% reduction target was set. August was the month with the lowest consumption: 708 PJ, compared to the 823 PJ average for the period 2017-2021.



    On the other hand, the European energy ministers reached an agreement on Monday on capping the price of natural gas, after several weeks of discussions on a package of emergency measures that have created divisions among member states, in an attempt to respond to the energy crisis. According to documents accessed by Reuters, it was agreed that the capping will be triggered when the quotes at the gas hub in Amsterdam reach 180 Euros per Megawatt-hour (MWh) for three days. The same document shows that the capping could be triggered starting from February 15, 2023 and, initially, it will not apply to ‘over the counter’ type transactions (outside the market).



    The European Commission on Tuesday held a round table involving the participation of high-level industry representatives to support activity within the EU Energy Platform towards joint gas procurement, which is scheduled to start in 2023. Attending were representatives of 33 companies from the member states and the contracting parties to the Energy Community. The objective of the Platform is to contribute to the coordination of gas purchases, while using the EU’s negotiating and political power to ensure the supply of energy from reliable partners at sustainable prices for the EU citizens and businesses. (LS)

  • Romania’s ancient history, re-eenacted

    Romania’s ancient history, re-eenacted

    The population of the Getae and the
    Dacians, in antiquity, had reportedly inhabited the territory between the
    Danube, the Black Sea, the Carpathian Mountains and the intra-Carpathian basin.
    Evidence of their material culture has been unearthed in several archaeological
    sites. The artefacts that have been found so far even date before the time Dacia was conquered by the Romans, but also after that period of time and
    after the ensuing merger of the Dacian and the Roman civilizations. The weapons
    that have been found among the excavated artefacts hold pride of place with
    respect to the most valuable evidence that usually helps archaeologists get
    the picture of the Getae and the Dacians’ standards of progress as compared to
    those of the Romans.


    The Romans’ presence in the Lower Danube
    dates from the first century B.C. Quite a few of the Getae and Dacian tribes
    had entered the orbit of the Roman civilization. However, there were tribes
    that rejected such a merger of simply refused to be Roman subjects. The most
    rebellious Dacian king was Decebalus of the late first century AD. His state
    was located in the central-south-eastern part of today’s Romania, in the Southern
    Carpathians’ Sureanu Mountains. In the wake of two wars, 101-102 and 105-106 AD, waged by
    Emperor Trajan, Decebalus, the Dacian King was overpowered, beheaded, and his
    kingdom was conquered. Therefore, the Dacian-Roman synthesis emerged, which historians
    describe as the act underlying the formation of the Romanian nation.


    Established in 2007, the Terra Dacica Aeterna Association is made of
    a group of enthusiasts who stage re-enactment performances and promote the Getae
    and the Dacian culture. Dacia, the last frontier of the Roman era is the
    title of an exhibition and at its opening, Andrei Duduman of the aforementioned
    Association dressed himself in a Dacian’s apparel and presented the Dacians’ weapons,
    in a bid to provide a clear picture of the weapons Dacians and Romans used when
    they fought each other 1900 years ago. Andrei Duduman:

    We have the Dacian warrior, some sort of heavy infantry chieftain. For the Dacian warrior, the
    key visual item was the shield, whose design is inspired by the models on the
    column, they can be admired in the lapidarium as part of Romania’s Museum of National
    History. The second very important element is the sword, of a Celtic pattern,
    whose sheath is decorated with motifs that can be found on the famous Dacian
    matrix unearthed in Sarmizegetusa.
    Another item, crucial for the protection of the warrior, is the chain mail
    shirt. In our case, it is a chain mail shirt, a riveted one, perfect for a more
    affluent warrior, a richer one. The riveting made the shirt more resistant. The
    chain mail shirt provided protection from strikes, cuts, but les so in the case
    of stabs. It was especially designed to protect the warrior from cuts. I wear a
    Spangenhelm-type of helmet, of Sarmatian inspiration. It was made of metal
    segments, held together by stripes and rivets. As for the civilian part of my
    apparel, so to speak, I wear some silver jewels, the famous Dacian nails, in
    our case, there is only three of them. As far as I know, helmets with 5, with 7,
    with 9 nails have also been excavated, their number varies according to the resources and means of
    those wearing them. I also have several glass beads, and, of course, some
    rings, also made of silver, they are replicas of original artefacts. A very important
    item, an insignium of a Dacian nobleman, was the Sicca, the famous Dacian Sicca,
    a dagger.


    In turn, Lucian Vulpe played
    the part of a Roman legionnaire:


    With the
    Dacians, the gear was somehow non-standardized, having all sorts of decorations,
    without any gear resembling the others, yet with the Romans, everything was
    standardized. The Roman army was a professional army, everybody dressed and
    fought the same. The standard Roman legionnaire’s only key weapon was the
    gladius, an Iberian weapon, originating from Spain, which oftentimes was used
    not only in duels, but it was effective at thrusting. It was used in thrusting
    as in battle, many legionnaires had to close ranks and there was not enough room
    for them to move. Each legionnaire was protected by a lorica segmentata. It was a flexible, very mobile body armor, made of plate sheet segments, very easy to recondition during a fight. He also had a helmet which
    protected him very well from the Dacians’ curved or straight weapons. After the
    First Dacian-Roman War, the Roman helmet was reinforced, two iron bars were added
    in the middle, to help the legionnaires defend themselves against the Dacian Falx
    (sword). Completing the gear is the Roman shield, mostly decorated
    with wings and on which the name of the legion was inscribed, in our case the 5th
    Macedonica Legion, stationed in Turda. His footwear was made of caligae, the classic
    Roman sandals, whose pattern could vary. In the case of a centurion, they were
    more abundantly decorated and more performing than those of the ordinary
    legionnaires. They also had a tunic and a cloak, known as the Pennula, protecting
    the Roman soldiers from the rain or helping them to keep warm.


    With their weapons and their
    apparel, the Dacians and the Romans came back to life at Romania’s National
    Museum of History. In today’s world, the aficionados of the distant past have rendered flesh and blood to this long-forgotten world. (EN)

  • The Republic of Moldova – collateral victim of the war

    The Republic of Moldova – collateral victim of the war

    Ever since the beginning of Russia’s war against Ukraine, the Republic of Moldova – the poorest state in Europe – has been a collateral victim. On the one hand, the ex-Soviet Republic must be cautious about its own pro-Russian population and, in parallel, it has to manage the problem of the Russian-speaking separatist region of Transdniester – a powder keg that is all the more dangerous in this extremely tense context. On the other hand, compared to the small number of its inhabitants, the Republic of Moldova has received the largest number of Ukrainian citizens. Not to mention the economic crisis that has been added to the refugee crisis. Chisinau’s commercial relations with the East have been affected, and it had to redirect its exports to other destinations – to the West or to the Arab states. The most serious is, however, the energy crisis, given Moldovas dependence on Russian gas and Ukrainian electricity. Tuesdays Russian bombings in Ukraine have had repercussions on the electricity supply of the Republic of Moldova.



    Dozens of localities and many consumers, including the capital Chisinau, have been temporarily left without electricity: one of the power lines that ensure the transport of electric power in the Republic was automatically disconnected, as a safety measure, which led to a massive blackout in almost the entire country. Although Chisinau did not specify which power line was affected, it seems that it is the Isaccea-Vulcăneşti-Chisinau high-voltage power line, through which the Republic of Moldova receives electricity from Romania and which crosses the Ukrainian territory. Tuesday’s situation calls attention to the vulnerability of Moldova’s energy system. Until recently, the small republic has purchased the needed electricity from Ukraine and from the Cuciurgan plant, located in the Transdniester region. Now, it can no longer import electricity from Ukraine, whose energy infrastructure was seriously destroyed, and since November 1, it no longer receives electricity from Cuciurgan either, after the Gazprom consortium halved gas supplies to the Republic of Moldova.



    What is the solution? The authorities in Chisinau identified it by connecting to the European energy system ENTSO-E and by purchasing energy from Romania, which delivers to Moldova up to 90% of what it needs. On Tuesday, after the massive blackout, the energy supply in the Republic of Moldova was restored. However, there remains the fear that the scenario might be repeated at any time. Works are currently under way on an air line for direct electricity transport from Romania to the Republic of Moldova. But the project is to be finished in the next 2 or 3 years.

  • October 28, 2022

    October 28, 2022

    POPULATION Between July 2021 and July 2022, Romania lost over
    100,000 residents, according to data released today by the National Statistics
    Institute. From over 22
    million people with permanent residence in Romania, the number dropped to 21.9
    million. The urban and female population make up a majority, accounting for 56.2%, and 51.2% of the total,
    respectively. The average age was 42.1 years
    old, 0.1 years more than on July 1, 2021. Population ageing is also
    significant, as the proportion of old people has increased and the share of
    youth aged up to 14 has decreased slightly. The NSI data refers to individuals
    with Romanian citizenship and permanent residence in Romania, and it may
    include migrants as well. According to the Institute, in 2060 Romania may have between 16.3
    million inhabitants, in an optimistic scenario, and 12.5 million, in a
    pessimistic scenario.


    SOCIAL The government of Romania will simplify procedures for the
    migrants who work in Romania. A bill discussed in today’s Cabinet meeting
    stipulates a reduction in the number of documents required when migrants seek
    to change jobs. The government also intends to increase the number of
    education units in which students can receive hot meals from 350 to 450. And,
    under a separate emergency order, the government plans to create the legal
    framework for pensions valid in all EU member states. Based on EU standards,
    this kind of pension will primarily benefit citizens with employment contracts
    in several EU countries and who want a customised pension product with
    identical operation standards in all member states. The government is also
    working on a bill allowing Romania to pull out of an international convention
    on scientific information exchange, signed in Moscow in 1969.


    SCHENGEN PM
    Nicolae Ciucă was on an official working visit to Brussels, where he was
    promised full support for Romania’s Schengen accession. Positive signals were
    also received with respect to the lifting of the Cooperation and Verification
    Mechanism. The Romanian PM discussed the topics with the president of the
    European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, while the justice minister Cătălin
    Predoiu, who accompanied him to Brussels, had talks with the EC vice-president
    Vera Jourova and with the EU commissioner for justice, Didier Reynders.
    Romania’s and Bulgaria’s Schengen accession may be included in the agenda of
    the Justice and Home Affairs Council meeting of December 8-9, 2022.


    PENSIONS
    Pensions in the Romanian public system may be raised as of January 1, 2023,
    with authorities planning the increase to be at least 10%. One of the
    obstacles, namely the pension expenditure ceiling stipulated under the National
    Recovery and Resilience Plan, would be replaced by an indicator related to
    budget capacity and other financial discipline criteria, the PM Nicolae Ciucă
    announced in Brussels. He had talks in this respect with the European
    Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, with technical details to be defined
    by experts.


    UKRAINE The International Atomic Energy
    Agency is set to visit 2 Ukrainian sites this week at Kyiv’s request, as the
    Russian president Vladimir Putin accuses Ukraine of destroying evidence that it
    was preparing a dirty bomb. Previously, Putin had requested an IAEA mission as
    soon as possible. According to him, Ukraine is planning to use radioactive
    weapons and to claim subsequently that Russia had launched a nuclear attack. Meanwhile, the Pentagon is sending Ukraine a new military and aid
    package amounting to USD 275 mln, to help efforts to drive Russian forces away
    from key areas in the south of the country. On the other hand, the US defence
    secretary Lloyd
    Austin Thursday warned Vladimir Putin that a nuclear attack would prompt a significant
    response from the international community. The US official said Russia using
    this type of weapons or even speaking about it was dangerous and irresponsible.
    Meanwhile, clashes continue in Ukraine, with Russian forces launching over 30
    drones in the past couple of days, and the Ukrainian Army destroying 23 of them,
    according to Kyiv. Since February, Russia has launched 4,500 missile attacks
    and over 8,000 air raids over Ukraine, president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said. (AMP)

  • 8 months of war in Ukraine

    8 months of war in Ukraine

    The illegal aggression
    of the Russian Federation, a member of the UN Security Council, against Ukraine
    is a flagrant violation of the principles and norms of international law, the
    Romanian foreign minister said, 8 months after the outbreak of the war in
    Romania’s neighboring country. According to Bogdan Aurescu, this aggression triggered
    the worst crisis since the end of the Second World War.




    The consequences are
    multiple, both regionally and globally, through the negative impact on
    security, fundamental human rights, global sustainable development, as well as
    on energy, food and financial security, the head of Romanian diplomacy pointed
    out. Since the beginning of the war in Ukraine, Minister Aurescu said, Romania
    has provided humanitarian support to the millions of refugees who have crossed
    the national borders. A report published by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs 8
    months after the start of the war shows that, during this time, over 2.6
    million Ukrainians have transited Romania and over 86,500 have chosen to stay
    on Romanian territory.




    Humanitarian measures
    included, among other think, the establishment of mobile camps in the counties
    in the border areas, the granting of free access to medical services,
    education, public transport and the labor market. The Romanian government has constantly
    responded to Kyiv’s requests and offered, among other things, fuel, medicine,
    food and emergency health care. Through the international humanitarian hub in
    Suceava (northeast), which became operational in March, Romania has facilitated
    56 humanitarian transports from countries such as Italy, France, Bulgaria,
    Austria, Slovenia, Cyprus, Greece or Germany.




    The Ministry of
    Foreign Affairs also recalls that Romania has been extensively involved in
    facilitating the transport and transit of Ukrainian grains to international
    markets. The complex measures for the enhancement of transit
    capacities, including the logistics capacities of the ports of Constanţa (on
    the Black Sea) and Galati (on the Danube), have allowed, until now, the export
    of over 5.2 million tons of Ukrainian grain, adding to over 5.5 million tons of
    other goods produced in Ukraine.




    On a diplomatic level,
    Bucharest has been an active part of the multilateral efforts to condemn the Russian
    aggression, including the illegal annexation of Ukrainian territories, while, as
    regards international law, Romania supports the creation of a mechanism for holding
    accountable those responsible for the crime of aggression committed in Russia’s
    illegal war against Ukraine. (MI)