Tag: world

  • Writer Nora Iuga, the subject of a documentary film

    Writer Nora Iuga, the subject of a documentary film

    One of the most successful Romanian films last year
    was Nora, written and directed by Carla-Maria Teaha. The first foray into
    documentary film-making from Teaha, who has previously worked as an actor and
    radio journalist, the film follows Nora Iuga, one of the most important writers
    in this country, who turned 93 years old on 4th January. Released in
    2023 at the Transylvania International Film Festival and also screened at
    Anonimul and Astra Film Festival, Nora creates a touching portrait of
    this charismatic writer and poet who made her debut in 1968 with a
    book of poems (Vina nu e a mea), received a number of awards from the Writers’
    Union and has remained very active, publishing an autobiographical
    novel (Hipodrom) in 2020 and another book of poems in 2023 (Fetiţa strigă-n
    pahar, Nemira).

     

     

    Shot over the course of four years, the film also
    captures Nora Iuga’s fascinating inner life as she has retained her
    youth and contagious exuberance, as well as the special friendship
    between her and the director, who accompanies Iuga at the Frankfurt
    Book Fair. We spoke to Carla-Maria Teaha about how she created
    the documentary film and the enthusiastic response of the public:

     

     

    I didn’t have a certain script in
    mind, especially for our trip to Frankfurt. From the very beginning I
    wanted the dialogue to be created by speaking freely with Nora. Starting
    from what would appear to be mere chit-chat, my intention was
    to get Nora Iuga to tell her stories, because along with other qualities,
    she is a fascinating story-teller and the camera loves her. This is why I never
    felt the need to introduce other characters that would speak about her. As this
    is my first film and I didn’t have a lot of experience in this area, I relied a
    lot on my intuition and I wanted to show Nora Iuga as I see her. I decided I
    wanted it to be a film about this Nora Iuga even if I would fail, so I based it
    on the chemistry between us and the things that I find touching about her. And
    what’s fascinating is that people were able to relate to me, to this image I
    had of her. Deep down I hoped this would happen, I hoped Nora Iuga’s charm
    would have the same effect on the public that she had on me. Moreover, I worked
    very hard on this film. I was brimming with joy at the reaction of the
    audience, when, at TIFF, the film received standing ovations after the first
    screening, on June 14 last year. People also stayed for the Q&A session,
    nobody left. And somehow that very strong impact the film had on the audience
    did not diminish at all, after the screening in theatres people stay in there a
    little longer and applaud, even though we’re not speaking about a special event
    and we are not there with them to have discussions. I am very happy because of that, I am happy
    because film had such an impact and because it has done its job, I am happy it
    touches people. I really thought it was just as normal for Nora Iuga’s fans to
    be keen on watching the film, but I am also glad that even those who didn’t
    know her or were unfamiliar with her work, fell in love with her. So many
    people told me that, having watched the documentary, they bought her books,
    searched for interviews with her, they were even looking for info about her. It
    is wonderful that, through this film, we succeeded to bring fil aficionados and
    reader together, these two bubbles somehow met, which is great, I think.

     

     

    Before becoming a writer, Nora Iuga wanted to become
    an actress, so the documentary made by Carla Maria-Teaha made Nora Iuga’s dream
    come true.

     

    To tell you the truth, I wanted
    to become an actress ever since I was in high-school. I ‘ve always wanted to
    become an actress, perhaps it is something that comes from my family, my
    parents were artists and so were my grandparents. My mother was a ballerina,
    father, a violinist, one of the grannies was an opera singer, a grandparent was
    a stage director, so I never thought of myself as taking a career path which
    was different from that of an actress. I have always dreamed of that, what’s
    most astonishing is the fact that I have never ceased to want to become an
    actress, even after the great actor Radu Beligan flunked me at the Drama School
    admission exam, telling me my elocution was not good enough. I personally do
    not think there is a problem with my elocution, other people didn’t tell me
    that either, yet I cannot question Radu Beligan either. Now, returning to the film
    made by Carla Maria Teaha, as days go by, it comes as something clearer and
    clearer to me that it was all about a miracle, a very old dream of mine came
    true just now, after a lifetime.

     

     

    Mircea Cărtărescu heaped praise on Nora Iuga’s most
    recent poetry volume. Fetita striga-n pahar is hitherto the peak
    of Nora Iuga’s poetry and one of the most powerful poetry books I have read
    recently. It is like a shrapnel exploding in your face, spreading splinters,
    shards, rough pieces of metal, of memory, of brain, of quotes, of any kind of
    stuff suitable to write on your skin the judgement of a fragmented, abused
    beauty .

     

  • RRI Sports Club

    RRI Sports Club

    For Romania’s
    women’s handball team, the World Championship held these days in Denmark,
    Sweden and Norway came to an end. The Romanians finished on 12th place,
    after concluding the main group III stage on the 3rd place. Coach Florentin
    Pera’s students lost to Denmark and Germany, which finished on the top 2
    positions and moved on to the quarter-finals. Romania won all the other group
    matches, against Chile, Serbia, Japan and Poland, but this was not enough.




    Romania
    could have finished on a higher place in the final ranking, had they not lost
    their 3rd match in the world competition with a 16-goal defeat to Denmark.
    Because of its poor goal average, Romania was taken over in the final ranking
    by Brazil, Hungary and Slovenia, which came out 9th, 10th
    and 11th, respectively.




    Under these
    circumstances, the Romanian players’ chances to qualify for the pre-Olympic
    tournaments are now null. Basically, the World Championship in Scandinavia sends
    its winners straight to the 2024 Olympics, with the next 6 places in the
    standings securing a ticket to the pre-Olympic qualifiers due in April.




    Of the
    quarter-finalists, France, which hosts next year’s Games, and defending
    champions Norway, are already qualified for the Paris Olympics. Taking part in
    the pre-Olympic tournaments are also the Czech Republic, Montenegro, Sweden,
    Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands. And since one of these teams is set to
    win the World Championship, this will free an extra spot for the pre-Olympics
    qualifiers. This spot should have been taken by Brazil, which finished 9th,
    but because this team is already qualified thanks to their win of the
    Pan-American Games, its place was taken by Hungary.




    As for
    Romania’s performance at the World Championship, the progress made by the team
    since coach Florentin Pera joined the staff is quite notable. Although star
    player Cristina Neagu missed most of the matches because of an injury, the
    Romanian team played well and was on a par with the other participants, except
    for Denmark. Excellent performances came from Eliza Buceschi, who was the best
    player of the team in all the 4 matches won by Romania. Goalkeepers Daciana
    Hosu and Diana Ciucă also put up good performances, making up for the absence
    of Iulia Dumanska. (AMP)

  • Sports Weekend

    Sports Weekend


    Two Romanian football clubs stand chances of playing in this years Europa Conference League group stage. Farul Constanţa and Sepsi Sfântu Gheorghe have qualified into the play-offs, after winning matches away from home.



    In the return leg of the preliminary round 3, Farul beat Flora Tallinn 2-0, after 3-0 on home turf. In the play-off, Farul will take on the Finnish side HJK Helsinki. Sepsi Sfântu Gheorghe, the Romanian Cup winners, Friday defeated Kazakhstans vice-champions Aktobe, 1-0, after a draw, 1-1 in the first leg. They are facing the Norwegian team Bodø/Glimt in the play-off.



    The 3rd Romanian team that played on Thursday in the Conference League qualifiers, FCSB, was kicked out of the competition after losing 0-2 away from home to the Danish side Nordsjælland, and a blank draw last week in the first leg.



    Also in football, this weekend matches are scheduled counting for the 6th round of the Romanian SuperLeague. Two games on Friday, pitting Petrolul Ploieşti against FC U Craiova 1948 and Universitatea Craiova against UTA, will be followed on Saturday by Oţelul Galaţi vs Botoşani and Dinamo Bucharest vs FC Voluntari. Two more matches are scheduled for Sunday in Bucharest: Rapid vs champions Farul Constanţa, and FCSB vs Poli Iaşi. The round ends on Monday with the last 2 matches: Sepsi vs Hermannstadt and Universitatea Cluj vs CFR Cluj. Top of the ranking are currently FCSB, with 12 points out of 4 matches, followed by Universitatea Craiova, with 11 points in 5 games.



    The World Athletics Championships begin on Saturday in Budapest. Romania takes part in the competition with 16 athletes, and the target set by the Romanian Athletics Federation is qualification in 3 finals. Last year, in the World Championships in Eugene, Oregon, Romanias best performances were a 6th place in hammer throw for Bianca Ghelber, and a 7th place in discus throw for Alin Firfirică.



    Also on Satuday, Romanias rugby team play their last match ahead of the World Cup in France. The Romanians are facing Italy away from home, in San Benedetto del Tronto. In the first test matches this summer, Romania lost 31-17 to the US in Bucharest, and 56-6 to Georgia, in Tbilisi. The first match for Romania at the World Cup is against Ireland, in Bordeaux, on 9 September. (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 26, 2023 UPDATE

    July 26, 2023 UPDATE

    HEAT Wednesday was a new day with extreme heat in Romania. The capital
    city Bucharest and several counties in the south and south-east were subject to
    a code red alert for temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius and a
    temperature-humidity index above the critical 80 units. Code orange and yellow
    alerts were also in place elsewhere in the country. On Tuesday the extreme
    temperatures disrupted railway traffic and caused road traffic restrictions. On
    the other hand, violent storms were reported in the west, north and centre of
    the country, where substantial damages were reported. On
    Thursday, the temperature is expected to drop significantly, to highs between
    19 and 28 degrees Celsius.




    PROTEST Romanian construction workers Wednesday picketed the government
    headquarters to protest the Cabinet’s decision to scrap the tax facilities
    granted to the employees in this sector. The head of the National Trade Union
    Bloc (BNS), Dumitru Costin, said the proposed amendments to the Fiscal Code
    affect not only the construction sector, but other categories of employees as
    well. The BNS and the Familia General Federation of Trade Unions came up with a
    set of measures to avoid the scrapping of tax facilities as of September 1,
    including a new collective bargaining agreement for the sector and a gradual
    elimination of the fiscal facility, in keeping with the roadmap agreed on under
    the National Recovery and Resilience Plan as of 2025. They also suggest adjustments
    to budget appropriations for the investment projects funded by the government
    or from EU funds, as well as a salary policy for this sector for the
    forthcoming years able to ensure balanced salaries, especially in the private
    sector.


    MEETING The Romanian
    foreign minister Luminiţa Odobescu Wednesday had talks with her French
    counterpart, Catherine Colonna, about the security situation at the Black Sea.
    In a Twitter post, Odobescu described the dialogue as very good. Bilateral
    cooperation was reconfirmed on this occasion. We have emphasised our joint
    support for Ukraine and the R. of Moldova, as well as our determination to
    consolidate security and resilience at the Black Sea, the Romanian diplomacy
    chief said in her post.


    DIPLOMACY The foreign
    minister of the Republic of Moldova, Nicu Popescu, Wednesday requested a
    limitation on the number of Russian diplomats accredited to Chişinău. He said
    the country has been for several years the target of hostile policies on
    Russia’s part, and that some of them were completed via the Russian Embassy
    there. Ambassador Oleg Vasnetsov was summoned to the Moldovan Foreign Ministry
    for explanations, after a media report revealed that the Russian diplomatic
    mission had installed high-performance espionage and interception equipment on
    its rooftop. The media in Chişinău mentioned 28 satellite dishes and telecoms
    devices, while individuals tied to Russian intelligence services were seen on
    the buildings. The authorities in Chisinau decided that the two countries’
    embassies would have equal numbers of diplomatic personnel, specifically 10 diplomatic
    positions and 15 administrative, technical and support posts, Moldpres reports.
    Consequently, the staff of Russia’s embassy in Chişinău will be reduced from 84
    to 25.


    NATO The NATO
    secretary general Jens Stoltenberg convened a first NATO – Ukraine Council
    meeting at ambassador level on Wednesday, at the request of Kyiv. The meeting
    focused on consultations on recent developments, with participants discussing
    the transport of Ukrainian grain via the Black Sea, the NATO spokesperson Oana
    Lungescu said. Ukraine’s request came after Russia terminated the so-called
    grains deal and started attacking the Ukrainian port infrastructure. Also on
    Wednesday, the head of the press office for the southern Ukrainian defence
    command, Natalia Humeniuk, said Russia was already using Shahed-type drones
    assembled in Russia.




    SWIMMING The Romanian swimmer David Popovici Wednesday qualified into
    the final of the 100m freestyle race at the World Championships in Fukuoka (Japan). Popovici, the defending world champion in
    this event, also holds the world record, set last year at the European
    Championships in Rome. The 100m freestyle final is scheduled for Thursday. On
    Tuesday, Popovici, also a former world champion in the 200m freestyle event,
    finished the competition’s final on the 4th place. (AMP)

  • Sports Roundup

    Sports Roundup

    Romania finished the 2023 World Rowing Under 23 Championships held in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, with 2 wins. On Saturday, the Romanian womens quadruple sculls team comprising Emanuela-Ioana Ciotău, Alexandra Ungureanu, Cristina Drugă and Patricia Cireş, won the gold. The next day, in the double sculls race, Andrada-Maria Moroşanu and Iulia-Liliana Bălăucă also won the gold medals. These results placed Romania on the 6th place in the nations ranking, which was topped by Italy with a total of 9 medals, 5 gold, 3 silver and 1 bronze.



    The Romanian tennis player Ana Bogdan won the WTA 125 tournament in Iaşi, which had EUR 100,000 in total prize money. In the final on Sunday, she defeated another Romanian, Irina Begu, 6-2, 6-3, to win the competition in Iaşi for the second year in a row. Bogdan, 30, seed no. 2 in the tournament and currently no. 49 WTA, won the match in 1 h and 24 minutes. Begu, 32, seed no. 1 and no. 31 in the world, won EUR 6,960 and 95 WTA points. Ana Bogdan takes home EUR 13,040 and 160 WTA points. In the same tournaments doubles final, the Romanians Irina Bara and Monica Niculescu were defeated by Veronika Erjavec and Dalila Jakupovic (Slovenia), 6-4, 6-4.



    The World Swimming Championships continue in Fukuoka, Japan. David Popovici, the defending world champion in the 100 and 200m freestyle events, entered the competition on Monday morning. He qualified into the semifinals of the 200m race, with the final scheduled for Tuesday.



    This weekend also saw matches counting towards the second leg of the Romanian football Super League. On Friday Sepsi OSK Sfântu Gheorghe won 1-0 on home turf against FC U Craiova 1948, while CFR Arad defeated the local team UTA 3-1. On Saturday, Farul Constanţa beat FC Voluntari 4-1, and FCSB won the derby against Dinamo, 2-1. On Sunday, Hermannstadt outplayed Poli Iaşi 3-1 away from home, with Rapid Bucharest winning the match against Universitatea Cluj 3-0. Three teams are top of the current ranking, with 6 points each: Farul, CFR and FCSB. (AMP)

  • Sports roundup

    Sports roundup




    At the 2023
    ICF Canoe Spring World Cup held in Szeged, Hungary, Romania won 3 medals.
    Cătălin Chirilă won the canoe single 500m and 1,000m races, and Ilie Sprincean and
    Oleg Nuţă won the canoe double 1,000m race. In the competition in Szeged, Romania
    was represented by 9 athletes, 2 women and 7 men, and came out 3rd
    in the medal table.




    Romania has
    left empty-handed from the World Judo Championships in Doha, Qatar. The
    Romanian participants performed modestly, with the best result reported for Lucian
    Borş – Dumitrescu, who reached the eighth-finals of the 66 kg category. The
    last medals for Romania in a world judo championship were won in 2015, in
    Astana, Kazakhstan, by Andreea Chiţu, in the 52 kg category, and by Corina
    Căprioriu, in the 57 kg.




    CSM Lugoj won
    their first Romanian cup in women’s volleyball. The team from Lugoj Sunday won
    the final against CSM Târgovişte, 3-1, in Piteşti. In Saturday’s semis, CSM
    Lugoj beat Volei Alba Blaj, the defending champions and trophy holders, 3-2. The
    athletes from Lugoj thus conclude a very good season, in which they won the Cup
    Winners Cup, the Romanian Cup and played the Challenge Cup final.




    This
    weekend saw matches counting towards the play-off / play-out stage of Romania’s
    football SuperLeague, round 8. In the play-off, Rapid Bucharest drew at home against
    Sepsi Sfântu Gheorghe, 0-all. Another tie, 1-all, came on Saturday in the match
    pitting Universitatea Craiova against Farul Constanţa. On Sunday, in the derby
    of this round, played on the National Arena in Bucharest in front of a crowd of
    over 40,000, FCSB beat CFR Cluj 1-0. Top of the standings at present are Farul,
    with 47 points, followed by FCSB, one point behind.




    In the play-out
    matches, on Friday FC Botoşani defeated Voluntari on home turf, 2-0. On Saturday,
    Hermannstadt beat Petrolul Ploieşti 1-0, and Universitatea Cluj outplayed Chindia
    Târgovişte, 2-0. On Sunday, UTA Arad won 2-0 against Mioveni, and FC U Craiova defeated
    FC Argeş, 2-1. CS Mioveni is certain to be relegated to a lower league, one
    round before the end of the play-out stage, while struggling to avoid
    relegation are also FC Argeş, with 21 points, and Chindia, with 22. In the last
    round, this coming Friday, FC Argeş take on Petrolul Ploiesti, and Chindia face
    FC Voluntari. (AMP)

  • Sports roundup

    Sports roundup




    At the 2023
    ICF Canoe Spring World Cup held in Szeged, Hungary, Romania won 3 medals.
    Cătălin Chirilă won the canoe single 500m and 1,000m races, and Ilie Sprincean and
    Oleg Nuţă won the canoe double 1,000m race. In the competition in Szeged, Romania
    was represented by 9 athletes, 2 women and 7 men, and came out 3rd
    in the medal table.




    Romania has
    left empty-handed from the World Judo Championships in Doha, Qatar. The
    Romanian participants performed modestly, with the best result reported for Lucian
    Borş – Dumitrescu, who reached the eighth-finals of the 66 kg category. The
    last medals for Romania in a world judo championship were won in 2015, in
    Astana, Kazakhstan, by Andreea Chiţu, in the 52 kg category, and by Corina
    Căprioriu, in the 57 kg.




    CSM Lugoj won
    their first Romanian cup in women’s volleyball. The team from Lugoj Sunday won
    the final against CSM Târgovişte, 3-1, in Piteşti. In Saturday’s semis, CSM
    Lugoj beat Volei Alba Blaj, the defending champions and trophy holders, 3-2. The
    athletes from Lugoj thus conclude a very good season, in which they won the Cup
    Winners Cup, the Romanian Cup and played the Challenge Cup final.




    This
    weekend saw matches counting towards the play-off / play-out stage of Romania’s
    football SuperLeague, round 8. In the play-off, Rapid Bucharest drew at home against
    Sepsi Sfântu Gheorghe, 0-all. Another tie, 1-all, came on Saturday in the match
    pitting Universitatea Craiova against Farul Constanţa. On Sunday, in the derby
    of this round, played on the National Arena in Bucharest in front of a crowd of
    over 40,000, FCSB beat CFR Cluj 1-0. Top of the standings at present are Farul,
    with 47 points, followed by FCSB, one point behind.




    In the play-out
    matches, on Friday FC Botoşani defeated Voluntari on home turf, 2-0. On Saturday,
    Hermannstadt beat Petrolul Ploieşti 1-0, and Universitatea Cluj outplayed Chindia
    Târgovişte, 2-0. On Sunday, UTA Arad won 2-0 against Mioveni, and FC U Craiova defeated
    FC Argeş, 2-1. CS Mioveni is certain to be relegated to a lower league, one
    round before the end of the play-out stage, while struggling to avoid
    relegation are also FC Argeş, with 21 points, and Chindia, with 22. In the last
    round, this coming Friday, FC Argeş take on Petrolul Ploiesti, and Chindia face
    FC Voluntari. (AMP)

  • RRI Sports Club

    RRI Sports Club


    Romanias national rugby team concluded its spring season with a victory. In the final for the 3rd place of the continental competition Rugby Europe Championship, Romania beat Spain 31-25. Romania scored 4 tries, thanks to Marius Simionescu, Cristi Chirica, Gabriel Pop and Gabriel Rupanu. Paul Popoaia also scored through a penalty kick and a conversion kick, and Vlăduţ Popa added 2 penalty kicks to Romanias performance.



    Gabriel Pop, at his first match for the national team, was designated the best player of the game. The 25-year old athlete is currently playing for Dinamo Bucharest.



    The final tournament hosted by the Spanish city of Badajoz ended with the Rugby Europe Championship final, in which Georgia beat Portugal 38-11, to win the competition for the 6th time in a row.



    The 2 finalists were in fact the only teams to have defeated Romania, which was hardly a surprise given their better places in the world rankings. At the moment, after the matches in Badajoz, Georgia ranks 11th in the world, Portugal comes 16th, and Romania 19th. Moreover, Romania played against these teams away from home.



    The national team had mixed performances this year. There have been good matches, with accurate and even spectacular moments, but also weak periods, with mistakes that enabled their opponents to score tens of points. Major corrections are necessary in this respect, particularly given the fast approaching World Cup, scheduled this autumn in France.



    Romania will play their first World Cup match on 9 September, against Ireland, in Bordeaux, followed by a game against defending world champions South Africa, on the 17 September. Next comes the match against Scotland, scheduled to take place on 30 September in Lille, the city which will also host Romanias last game, against Tonga, on 8 October. (AMP)


  • RRI Sports Club

    RRI Sports Club


    Romanias national rugby team concluded its spring season with a victory. In the final for the 3rd place of the continental competition Rugby Europe Championship, Romania beat Spain 31-25. Romania scored 4 tries, thanks to Marius Simionescu, Cristi Chirica, Gabriel Pop and Gabriel Rupanu. Paul Popoaia also scored through a penalty kick and a conversion kick, and Vlăduţ Popa added 2 penalty kicks to Romanias performance.



    Gabriel Pop, at his first match for the national team, was designated the best player of the game. The 25-year old athlete is currently playing for Dinamo Bucharest.



    The final tournament hosted by the Spanish city of Badajoz ended with the Rugby Europe Championship final, in which Georgia beat Portugal 38-11, to win the competition for the 6th time in a row.



    The 2 finalists were in fact the only teams to have defeated Romania, which was hardly a surprise given their better places in the world rankings. At the moment, after the matches in Badajoz, Georgia ranks 11th in the world, Portugal comes 16th, and Romania 19th. Moreover, Romania played against these teams away from home.



    The national team had mixed performances this year. There have been good matches, with accurate and even spectacular moments, but also weak periods, with mistakes that enabled their opponents to score tens of points. Major corrections are necessary in this respect, particularly given the fast approaching World Cup, scheduled this autumn in France.



    Romania will play their first World Cup match on 9 September, against Ireland, in Bordeaux, followed by a game against defending world champions South Africa, on the 17 September. Next comes the match against Scotland, scheduled to take place on 30 September in Lille, the city which will also host Romanias last game, against Tonga, on 8 October. (AMP)


  • February 13, 2023 UPDATE

    February 13, 2023 UPDATE

    UN The Romanian foreign minister Bogdan
    Aurescu will be a main speaker on Tuesday in New York at the open debate of the
    UN Security Council on Threats to international peace and security:
    Sea-level rise: implications for international peace and security. Participants
    will discuss the risks posed by the rise in sea levels as a result of climate
    change and will explore ways to tackle these risks as part of the global
    security architecture. Romania’s presence in the UN Security Council
    consolidates Bucharest’s efforts to promote a rule-based international order
    and its role as an actor involved in the management of vital global problems,
    the Foreign Ministry says.


    MOLDOVA Moscow
    plans to force a change of the political power in the R. of Moldova in
    the forthcoming period, through violent actions
    designed to destabilise the country, Moldova’s president Maia Sandu said. According
    to her, Russia allegedly intends to use diversions, attacks on institutions and
    hostage taking. The plan was uncovered with the help of intelligence received
    from Kyiv, among others, Maia Sandu added. ‘The goal of these actions is to upset
    constitutional order, to replace the legitimate power in Chişinău with an
    illegitimate one, which will leave our country into the hands of Russia, to
    stop the European accession process and to ensure that Moldova can be used by
    Russia in the war against Ukraine,’ Maia Sandu said. Last Thursday in Brussels
    the Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke to EU leaders about such a
    plan put together by Russia.


    NATO Romania’s defence minister, Angel Tîlvăr, is taking part on Tuesday
    and Wednesday in Brussels in the meeting of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group
    and a meeting of the NATO defence ministers. The Allied defence ministers
    convene as part of the regular meeting schedule, and talks will primarily focus
    on continuing support for Ukraine, on the implementation of the decisions taken
    last July at the NATO Summit in Madrid and on preparing the decision package
    for the forthcoming Summit in Vilnius. The meeting begins on Tuesday night with
    an informal working meeting on security developments one year after the start of
    Russia’s war of aggression in Ukraine. Invited to attend are also the defence
    ministers of Sweden, Finland and Ukraine, and the EU High Representative for
    Foreign Affairs and Security Policy.


    VISIT The Minister-President of Bavaria, Markus Soder, who is on a
    visit to Bucharest, Monday reiterated support for Romania’s Schengen accession,
    emphasising that over the past few years the country made substantial progress
    in fighting corruption and structural reforms. We support Romania on its path
    towards Schengen accession. It is very important that we, in Europe, understand
    that here in particular, given the situation with Ukraine and Russia, the
    challenges are at an entirely different level, he added. Markus Soder also
    voiced his appreciation for the support given by Romania to the Ukrainian
    refugees. Markus Soder was received in Bucharest by president Klaus Iohannis and
    PM Nicolae Ciuca. The 2 ministers signed a joint Statement on consolidating
    bilateral relations, which also stipulates the resumption of the works of a
    joint Romania – Bavaria governmental committee.


    ECONOMY Romania’s economy is expected to grow by 2.5% in 2023 and by
    3% in 2024, with the inflation rate standing at 9.7% this year and 5.5% next
    year, according to the European Commission’s winter forecast made public on
    Monday. According to the EC, the implementation of the National Recovery and
    Resilience Programme should contribute to massive investments in Romania, driving
    the economic growth this year.


    WRD Monday was World Radio Day, established as such by UNESCO in 2011.
    February 13 marks the first broadcast by the United Nations’ radio station,
    back in 1946. The theme of World Radio Day this year was Radio and
    Peace. On this occasion, Romanian artists showed their solidarity with
    Ukraine. At 9:30 a.m. on Monday, all Radio Romania channels aired the famous
    song Heal the World, released by Michael Jackson in the early 1990s. The
    broadcast of this song on World Radio Day is part of a series of events organised
    by Radio Romania to mark one year since the start of the war in the
    neighbouring Ukraine. (AMP)

  • December 19, 2022

    December 19, 2022

    SCHENGEN The president of the European Parliament Roberta Metsola is
    on a 2-day working visit to Bucharest as of today, with a support message for Romania’s
    Schengen accession efforts. Today, Roberta Metsola is scheduled to have
    meetings with president Klaus Iohannis, PM Nicolae Ciucă and the speakers of
    the Chamber of Deputies and Senate, Marcel Ciolacu and Alina Gorghiu, and will
    address a joint Parliament meeting. On Tuesday, Roberta Metsola will have talks
    with young Romanians as part of an event called ‘Together we are Europe,’
    organised by the European Parliament Office in Romania in a partnership with
    the Law School of the University of Bucharest. According to the institution, during
    their dialogue with Metsola the young participants will be able to find out
    about the benefits of the European parliamentary democracy, ways to influence
    European policies, why it is important for them to get involved in protecting
    European democracy and how the decisions and policies of the European
    Parliament impact Europeans’ day-to-day lives.


    VISIT The Romanian foreign minister, Bogdan Aurescu, is on a 2-day
    official visit to Chişinău, at the invitation of Moldova’s deputy PM and
    minister for foreign affairs and European integration, Nicu Popescu. For 2 days,
    Bogdan Aurescu will have consultations with his counterpart, will be received
    by the president of the R. of Moldova Maia Sandu, and will have talks with PM Natalia
    Gavriliţa and with the parliament speaker Igor Grosu. They will discuss aspects
    related to countering the war of aggression waged by the Russian Federation
    against Ukraine, as well as topics related to cooperation in the field of
    energy security, stepping up sectoral cooperation, economic cooperation and the
    assistance measures taken by Romania to the benefit of the R. of Moldova. A
    major topic for discussion will be Moldova’s progress in its EU accession
    efforts, after the country was granted the accession candidate status in June
    2022, and Romania’s concrete support in this respect.


    ENERGY EU energy ministers convene today in Brussels in an attempt
    to reach an agreement on a natural gas price cap, in the context of the rise in
    energy prices triggered by the war in Ukraine. Last week, they failed to reach
    consensus on this topic. The participants will also try to come up with a
    general approach on a proposed reduction of methane emissions in the energy
    sector. The draft regulation requires oil, natural gas and coal operators to
    measure, report and check methane emissions. Moreover, the EU energy ministers
    will try to reach an agreement with respect to the proposed REPowerEU directive,
    which modifies the EU legislation on renewable energy, energy efficiency and
    the energy performance of buildings. The proposal aims to step up the use of
    renewable energy. On the other hand, the Czech presidency of the EU Council
    will present a report on the progress made with respect to the natural gas
    package, which includes a proposed directive and a proposed regulation on
    single market norms for gas from renewable sources, natural gas and hydrogen.


    COMMEMORATION In Timişoara, western
    Romania, events carry on marking 33 years since the anti-communist revolution
    of December 1989. The events highlight the courage and sacrifice of the
    Revolution heroes, and the need for the younger generations to carry on the
    spirit of freedom. After the marches, religious services, exhibitions, film
    screenings and roundtables organised in the previous days, today a pilgrimage
    will be held at the monuments making up the Revolution Memorial. Short reels made
    by young artists will also be screened in schools, and the traditional Rockford
    revolution festival is also scheduled for today. Also today, the members of
    the bereaved families are leaving for Bucharest to retrace the route on which
    the bodies of 43 revolution participants from Timisoara were sent for
    incineration. The events devoted to the 33 years since the Revolution will
    culminate on Tuesday, December 20, Victory Day, when Timişoara was declared the
    first city free of communism in Romania. The uprising against the communist
    regime in Romania began in Timişoara on December 16, 1989 and spread to
    Bucharest and other cities in the country. Over 1,000 people died and some
    3,000 were wounded in the clashes that took place on that occasion.


    FOOTBALL Argentina is the world’s new football champion. In the
    final of the Qatar tournament on Sunday, Argentina defeated the previous
    champions, France, after penalty shootouts. This is the 3rd world
    championship won by the South Americans, after the title in 1978 and the one in
    1986. The next world championship, held in 2026, will be hosted jointly by the
    US, Canada and Mexico. (AMP)

  • December 9, 2022

    December 9, 2022

    SCHENGEN Romania’s and Bulgaria’s bid to join the Schengen
    free-movement area may be included on the agenda of the European Council
    meeting next week, at the request of the president of Romania, Klaus Iohannis,
    political sources in Bucharest said. I am convinced we will reach the
    accession of Romania and Bulgaria during this mandate and this will be my
    priority, Ylva Johansson, the European Commissioner for Home Affairs, said in
    her turn. The statement comes after on Thursday at the EU Justice and Home
    Affairs Council meeting, Austria opposed Romania’s entry.


    AMBASSADOR The
    Romanian foreign ministry announced that following Austria’s veto regarding
    Romania’s Schengen accession, the country’s ambassador to Vienna, Emil
    Hurezeanu, was recalled for consultations by minister Bogdan Aurescu. The
    embassy will be headed by an interim charge d’affairs. According to diplomatic procedure,
    the decision is an indication of Romania’s firm disagreement with Austria’s
    position and also of the deterioration of current relations with that country.


    BUDGET The draft state budget
    and social security budget of Romania were passed by the government and have
    been forwarded to Parliament for discussion. The ministries set to receive more
    funding include the defence, agriculture, transport, development and education.
    Less money than this year will be earmarked for energy, judiciary and public
    healthcare. The two bills also stipulate a 10% increase in public sector
    salaries, a 12.5% increase in pension point value and an increase of the
    national minimum wage to approx. EUR 610 per month. AUR party in opposition
    already announced it would table amendments because it disagreed with the draft
    budget.


    WORKERS Another 100,000 non-EU citizens will be given access to the
    Romanian labour market next year. The figure decided by the government is
    similar to the one approved for 2022, and it is intended to cover the labour
    deficit in sectors like constructions, hospitality, protection and guard
    services, road transport and trade.


    INVESTMENTS Net investments in the Romanian economy in the 3rd
    quarter of the year reached EUR 8 bln, up 13.3% compared to the corresponding
    quarter of last year, according to unaudited data made public by the National
    Statistics Institute today. For the first 9 months of the year, the figure is
    around EUR 19 bln, up 4.5% since 2021. Major increases were reported in
    constructions and heavy industry. According to the National Statistics
    Institute, net investments are expenditure incurred with creating new fixed
    assets or with developing, upgrading and rebuilding existing ones, and with the
    transfer of ownership on existing fixed assets.


    GAUDEAMUS The 29th edition of the Gaudeamus Book Fair organised by Radio
    Romania is under way in Bucharest until Sunday. The event brings together 200
    participants and a variety of editorial products on different formats, for all
    ages and areas of interest, including music and educational games. The line-up
    features 600 different events and related projects. As a first, the fair also
    has special areas dedicated to interactive activities for young visitors. All
    stands are also available online on the gaudeamus.ro website. The fair’s
    honorary president this year is poet Ana Blandiana.


    FOOTBALL The FIFA 2022 World Cup in Qatar has reached the
    quarter-final stage. Two matches are scheduled for today, pitting Croatia
    against Brazil and the Netherlands against Argentina. On Saturday, Morocco
    takes on Portugal and England is facing France. (AMP)

  • December 7, 2022

    December 7, 2022

    BUDGET
    The finance ministry has made public the draft state budget of Romania for next
    year. The document is based on an estimated GDP growth of 2.8%, an 8% inflation
    rate, a growing number of employees and a declining 2.7% unemployment rate. The
    ministries set to receive less money include the energy, justice and public
    healthcare, whereas the defence, development, transport and education
    ministries will receive substantially higher budget appropriations. The ruling
    coalition made up of the Social Democrats, and Liberals and the Democratic
    Union of Ethnic Hungarians in Romania intends to endorse the draft budget tomorrow
    and send it to Parliament the next day, for discussion next week.


    SECURITY Romania has constantly worked to
    identify solutions to enhance security at the Black Sea, the Romanian foreign
    minister Bogdan Aurescu said in Ankara on Tuesday, when he had
    a meeting with his Turkish counterpart, Mervlut Cavusoglu. The two officials
    discussed the best avenues for cooperation, both at bilateral level and within
    the NATO framework. They finalised and agreed on the text of the political
    declaration setting up the Romania – Turkey High Level Strategic Cooperation
    Council, organised as a regular meeting of the two countries’ governments and
    focusing on strategic areas of mutual interest, which will be launched in 2023.
    Another topic approached in the meeting was cooperation in the energy sector,
    recognised by both officials as a priority, particularly in light of the recent
    challenges. An agreement was reached to strengthen joint efforts to ensure the
    security of Romania’s energy supplies by transiting Turkish territory. Also,
    the multidimensional effects of the war in Ukraine have been analysed, with
    special attention paid to the refugee crisis and food security.


    JUSTICE The Romanian justice minister Cătălin Predoiu will
    take part in the meetings of the Justice and Home Affair Council and General
    Affairs Council of the European Union, between December 7th and 14th.
    According to a JHA Council news release, on the sidelines of the two meetings the
    justice minister will also have meetings in Brussels and Luxembourg with
    counterparts from other member countries and EU officials. At the JHA Council
    Mr. Predoiu will present Romania’s position with respect to the EU judicial
    instruments and policies in the judiciary currently on the Council’s agenda. The
    home affairs section of the Council is scheduled to make a decision regarding
    the accession of Romania, Bulgaria and Croatia to the Schengen area.

    ECONOMY The GDP of the European Union saw a 0.4% growth and
    that of the Euro-zone a 0.3% increase in the 3rd quarter of this
    year compared to the previous quarter, with the most substantial growth rates
    reported for Ireland, Cyprus, Malta and Romania, according to data released on
    Wednesday by Eurostat. The economic growth rate in Ireland was 2.3%, and in
    Cyprus, Malta and Romania 1.3%. The most substantial decline is reported for Estonia
    (negative 1.8%), Latvia (negative 1.7%) and Slovenia (negative 1.4%). Among EU
    member countries, the most significant annual growth rate is reported for
    Ireland (10.6%), Croatia (5.5%), Cyprus (5.4%), Malta (5.2%), Portugal (4.9%) and
    Romania (4.7%), the only negative rates being reported for Estonia (negative 2.3%)
    and Latvia (negative 0.4%).

    OIL Global oil
    prices dropped to the lowest level this year, in spite of the estimates of some
    international experts that expected the EU and G7 ban on Russian crude and the
    cap on crude prices to trigger market turbulence. In Romania, the lowest petrol
    price is EUR 1.3, and diesel is sold for EUR 1.54. On the other hand,
    neighbouring Hungary is facing a fuel crisis caused, according to AFP, by the
    price cap introduced by Viktor Orbán’s government a year ago. The fuel shortage
    comes in the context of a 30% decrease in imports as foreign companies cut down
    their sales to Hungary as a result of the price cap, the country’s association
    of independent petrol stations said.


    GAUDEAMUS The 29th
    edition of the ‘Gaudeamus’ Book Fair, organised by Radio Romania, kicked off in
    Bucharest today. Until Sunday, 200 participants will be exhibiting releases in
    various formats, addressing all age brackets and fields of interests, as well as music and educational games. 600 events have been announced in addition to
    various related projects. As a novelty, 2 areas have been arranged within the
    Fair, for interactive activities targeting the youngest visitors. Pavilions are
    also available online on gaudeamus.ro. The honorary president of this year’s
    edition is the writer Ana Blandiana.


    FOOTBALL In the FIFA
    World Cup in Qatar on Tuesday, in the round of 16, Portugal smashed Switzerland
    6-1, while Morocco scored a surprising win against Spain 3-0 on penalties. In the
    quarter-finals on Friday, the Netherlands will be up against Argentina, and
    Croatia takes on Brazil, while on Saturday England will be facing defending
    champions France and Morocco will take on Portugal. The semis are scheduled for
    December 13 and 14, and the final on December 18. (AMP)

  • October 27, 2022 UPDATE

    October 27, 2022 UPDATE

    TALKS At the end of the visit he paid to Brussels Romanian Prime
    Minister Nicolae Ciuca announced he agreed with the president of the European
    Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, that it is possible to replace the 9.4% GDP
    cap for pension expenses within Romania’s National Plan of Recovery and Resilience
    with another indicator, which takes into account the World Bank survey and with
    a financial discipline indicator. At the same time, the Prime Minister also
    held talks with the EU commissioner for transports, Romanian Adina Valean,
    after he had earlier met the delegation of the Romanian MEPs. Besides his
    official agenda, on Wednesday he met Romanian and Belgian business people. The
    talks the Romanian official held in Brussels focused on Romania’s accession to
    Schengen. Ciuca said that all his interlocutors had underlined the support
    Romania enjoys to continue and complete the process of entering Europe’s border-free
    area.

    MONEY The European Commission on Thursday paid the 2.6 billion
    Euros of the first request submitted by Romania as part of the Mechanism of
    Resilience and Recovery and the money is already in Romania’s accounts, the
    Ministry of Investment and European projects has announced. The sum, made up of
    1.8 billion Euros in grants and 0.8 billion in loans, has become available
    after Romania has met the 14 required objectives. ’27 October 2022 is a
    historic day for Romania, as it’s not only the moment confirming the
    appreciation of the consolidated efforts at the governmental level but also the
    proof that we have started off on the road of reforms in the fields of sustainable
    mobility, curbing carbon-dioxide emissions, education and healthcare’, field
    minister Marcel Bolos says.










    RATE The unemployment rate in Romania stood at 2.88% in late
    September, 0.03 down as compared to the same period last year. According to
    data published by the National Agency for Employment, the number of the jobless
    is on the rise compared to the previous month; these are mainly people with
    ages between 40 and 49 and less than 5% of them boast a university degree.








    DAY Orthodox Christians, who are in the majority in
    Romania, on Thursday celebrated St Dmitry the New, the protector saint of
    Bucharest. The Patriarchal Cathedral has been home to the saint’s relics since
    1774. Dmitry the New was a monk born in the 12th century in the
    village of Basarbovo, near the Bulgarian city of
    Ruse. The legend has it that after his death, the monk appeared in the dream of
    a sick young woman indicating the place where she would find his grave and that
    if she touched his body she would recover. The villagers dug out the place
    indicated in the dream and found the unaltered body of the monk.






    PRICES Energy prices are to decline by 11% next year
    according to a World Bank projection. The slower pace of world economic growth
    and the COVID restrictions in China may lead to a deeper fall, the World Bank
    also notes. Energy prices will still be 75% higher than the average of the last
    five years. The level of global debt, which exceeds 300 thousand billion
    dollars, must be kept in check, or more people will face poverty. The World
    Bank head David Malpass told the BBC that supporting and stimulating economies
    was the best solution during the pandemic, but that the consequences of those
    expenses are beginning to appear in the form of a rise in inflation and
    interest rates. Any future support, including helping people cope with energy
    bills, must be clearly targeted, he recommended.

    (bill)