Tag: Wippel

  • June 17, 2019 UPDATE

    June 17, 2019 UPDATE

    CONCLUSIONS The EU Council on Monday adopted a series
    of conclusions concerning the EU’s commitment towards regional cooperation in
    the Black Sea area during the proceedings of the Foreign Affairs Council in
    Luxembourg where Romania was represented by its Foreign Minister Teodor
    Melescanu. The Council has reiterated its long-term commitment to promoting
    prosperity, stability and resilience in the Black Sea area. The Council has
    underlined the increasingly strategic importance of the Black Sea region for
    the EU calling for the union’s firmer involvement in regional cooperation
    having as foundation the Black Sea Synergy. At the same time the Council
    remains concerned about the security challenges in the Black Sea. In this
    context, it reiterates that international law observance, including the
    principles of independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity, the UN
    Convention on the law of the sea, including the freedom of navigation as well
    as observance of the EU’s political decisions and its non-recognition policy
    for Crimea are instrumental in the EU’s approach to regional cooperation in the
    Black Sea.










    MOTION MPs in Bucharest on Tuesday are
    expected to debate upon and vote a censure motion the opposition tabled against
    the PSD-ALDE coalition government. According to the document, Romania urgently
    needs a government with a pro-European vision focused on the country’s
    development priorities like education, health, public investment and attracting
    European funds. The signatories of the motion – the National Liberal Party, the
    Save Romania Union, the People’s Movement Party and the Democratic Union of
    Ethnic Hungarians in Romania, say the executive led by the Social-Democratic
    Prime Minister Viorica Dancila must be sacked for the way in which they staged
    the European Parliament election abroad and for repeatedly trying to issue
    emergency ordinances in the justice field. The ordinance needs 233 votes to
    pass and the initiators also needs the support of ProRomania Party led by the
    country’s former Social Democratic Prime Minister Victor Ponta, from the
    national minorities as well as votes from the ruling coalition. The incumbent
    Prime Minister, who is also the interim president of the Social Democrats, has
    called on the latter to attend the debates to ensure the quorum but to abstain
    from voting.










    MAYOR Romanian-born musician Octavian Ursu
    has become the Christian-Democratic mayor of the German city of Gorlitz after
    defeating in the second round of the local election Sebastian Wippel a former
    policeman, representative of the Alternative for Germany. The Romanian mustered
    55% of the votes in the second round of the election. Ursu, 51, graduated from
    the Music Conservatory in Bucharest and left for Germany where he got hired at
    the Gorlitz philharmonics as a soloist. In 2009, he enlisted with Angela
    Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union and in 2010 he took over the municipal constituency
    in Gorlitz. In 2014 he got elected in the legislature of the Federal State of
    Saxony. The Romanian got support from celebrities from Germany and abroad who
    signed a petition urging the citizens to vote against ‘hatred and hostility,
    isolation and discord. Famous movies like ‘Inglorious Basterds’ and ‘Monuments
    Men’ have been shot in Gorlitz.








    CARS
    Over two thirds of the cars registered in Romania in the first five months of the
    year are second-hand purchases. According to the National Directorate for
    Licenses and Registration out of the 240 thousand vehicles registered in
    Romania since January until the end of May, only 60 thousand are new vehicles.
    Nevertheless, the number of new vehicles registered in this period is 20%
    higher than the similar period of 2018. The so-called Rabla programme has
    significantly contributed to this increase as under this programme 30 thousand
    people have so far benefitted from bonuses to scrap their old vehicles. The
    Romanians’ mostly preferred brands are the local Dacia, followed by Volkswagen,
    Skoda, Renault and Ford. At the end of last year Romania had over 8 million
    vehicles registered, 7% higher than in 2017.






    (translated by bill)