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02.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
US media consultant Mario Garcia, also known as the ‘newspaper doctor’ said yesterday in a debate at the American Cultural Centre that the written press will not die if it quickly adjusts to new technologies and young readers, who require a new way of receiving information.

“I cannot speak of funerals for the written press. If we continue to complain, the written press will die. On the contrary, if we continue to write adjusting our products to the new, then it will go on living,” Garcia said. The debate, called “Future of written press and the written press versus online media,” was organized by the US Embassy. Talking about how the written press can get through the economic crisis, Garcia underlined that the online media has radically changed journalism. He underlined however that no media can kill another and that neither televisions nor radios will be able to destroy the written press. Adding that he does not yet have a full picture of...

02.02.10 | by: Andreea Marinas | in: homenews
The civil servants protested yesterday, being discontent with the cancellation of posts, decrease of revenues. Today, the teachers from Spiru Haret Union will picket the Education Ministry.
Imagine
About 45,000 civil servants throughout the country were yesterday on strike for two hours. They are ready to go also on general strike if their problems are not solved. The public servants are unhappy with the decrease of their revenues and the cutting of the posts. The warning strike took place between 8.30 and 10.30. In the two hours, the activity was paralyzed in several institutions, such as city halls, county councils, tax divisions.

The community officers were also on warning strike yesterday. They said that after their bonuses were cut off, many of them have salaries below RON 1,000.

“A warning strike of two hours has been held today, at the beginning of the working hours with the public. Then, on February 9, we shall picket the Ministry of Labour and the Ministry of Interior, and if nothing is settled, on February 12 we are going to call general strike on undetermined period of time,” Romel Neagu, president of the National Federation of the...

02.02.10 | by: Dan Sapos | in: homenews
The National Authority for the Protection of the Family and of Children’s Rights (ANPFDC) has asked the National Drug Agency and the Cantacuzino Institute to point out what are the legal procedures for testing the A/H1N1 vaccine on children and how the minors are selected.

‘We have asked for information on the procedures involved in these cases, we have asked to be told whether the parents are offered compensations, how the children are selected and whether the company that does that is authorized,’ Izabela Popa, the spokesperson of ANPFDC, stated for Mediafax.

Popa explained that the request was made on the basis of the European Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine, a convention ratified by Romania in 2001 and that points out that a minor lacks the capacity to consent to a medical intervention and that the intervention cannot take place without the agreement of the legal guardian. Likewise, the minor’s opinion has to be taken into...

02.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Romania’s Embassy to Athens has been monitoring the case of Greek cargo ship M/V Filitsa and its crew including a Romanian national that had been kidnapped at sea by Somali pirates, and kept in touch with his family, while keeping full discretion over the case in order not to endanger negotiations with the kidnappers and the life of those kidnapped, Romania’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MAE) was reported by Agerpres as stating at the press agency’s request.

International media reported Monday that Greek cargo ship Filitsa and its 22 crew, among whom a Romanian, had been freed by Somali pirates in exchange for a ransom paid by the ship’s owner.

‘MAE opened relevant procedures once it had been informed by the Greek company owning the ship about the Filitsa M/V cargo ship and its crew having been kidnapped at sea by Somali pirates November 16, 2009. The owner company confirmed that a Romanian was part of the ship’s crew of 22...

02.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
The policy of Romania - R. of Moldova rapprochement announced by Romanian President Traian Basescu during a visit to Chisinau makes the British worry, fearful of a new wave of immigration from Eastern Europe, this time represented by Moldovans who will be granted Romanian citizenship, the Daily Express relates. ‘Tens of thousands of citizens from Moldova – Europe’s poorest country – will soon be granted rights to live and work in the UK and other EU states as part of a controversial Bucharest policy offering Romanian citizenship,’ the Daily Express reads. Romanian President Traian Basescu reaffirmed his earlier pledge to offer EU rights to Moldovans, due to historical links, during a state visit to the impoverished former Soviet state last week. He announced the creation of a new citizenship agency to fast-track the one million applications the Romanian government has already received to go alongside a new nationality law granting citizenship in just five...

02.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
The Prosecutor General of Romania Laura Codruta Kovesi said in an interview with RFI that the Prosecutor’s Office of the Supreme Court (High Court for Cassation and Justice) does not investigate people based on their political affiliation. The reaction comes after Senate speaker Mircea Geoana accused ANI of acting on political command. The National Agency of Integrity (ANI) asked the Prosecutor’s Office to probe the PSD leader for irregularities in his wealth statement. ANI took a similar stance in the case of Liberal Eugen Nicolaescu, but also of Democrat-Liberal Sorina Placinta. The head of the Public Ministry, Kovesi declared that there are “real chances” for the European Commission to cease monitoring the Romanian justice, because “real progress” has been made, and “the efficiency increased.”

“I can only speak on behalf of the Public Ministry and DNA (National Anti-corruption Department), but I can tell you that we...

02.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Romania to send more troops in the Balkans and Afghanistan in 2010

President Traian Basescu’s letter on the participation of Romanian troops in the theatres of operations in Afghanistan was presented in the plenary session of the Chamber of Deputies by its Speaker Roberta Anastase on Tuesday.

In his letter, the president shows that, further to its various international commitments, in 2010 Romania will continue to participate with troops in overseas missions, on the theatres of operations in the Balkans and Afghanistan, in NATO, UN and EU-led actions.

‘Taking part in these missions to our country is a good opportunity of showing its solidarity with its allies and of continuing the policy of establishment as a reliable member of the international community. The staff participating in overseas missions will have the technical equipment and armament necessary for carrying out their missions, specific for each particular theatre of...

02.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Representatives of five district authorities, Mayor Sorin Oprescu and the Bucharest Prefect talked about changing the stray dog law in Bucharest in order to prevent them from going back in the street after being sterilized. After the monthly meeting of the district mayors with the general mayor on Tuesday, the prefect of Bucharest said that one of the matters discussed had been the issue of abandoned dogs, following reporting by the ‘Matei Bals’ Institute of November 2009 suggesting that a total of 10,000 people were attacked by stray dogs.

‘There is a very clear will and the mayors seem to agree we need to change the law using the tools that we have Atanasoaei said. According to him, the mayors of the Bucharest districts will send their proposed legislative modifications to the Prefecture. Prefect Mihai Cristian Atanasoaei also said ‘he was for immediate and firm action even if that could be unpopular’ and explained the intention was that,...

02.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
A future law might force journalists to submit statements of interests in the future, to the National Integrity Agency (ANI). The idea is promoted by PDL Senator Iulian Urban, as part of an effort to make the press more transparent and eliminate suspicions about journalists being involved in electoral campaign activities, in the administration boards of various companies, or in party activities other than those related to media. Urban already filed with the Senate’s Legal Commission an amendment to the ANI Functioning Law, which provides that all journalists must submit statements of interests.

“I can see no reason why journalists, those who form the public opinion, those who manifest themselves in the public space, should oppose submitting statements of interests, if we talk about making journalistic activity more transparent in Romania. This is by no means a wealth statement, because they are paid with private money. (...) We had many suspicions, especially of...

02.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Romanian to be charged with murder committed in Dublin

A Romanian citizen will be charged with murdering, last Thursday, a Romanian woman in Dublin. According to the Irish Examiner newspaper, the main suspect in the case is the vice-president of the PDL Hunedoara County Organization, Marian Mihalache. Loredana Pricajar, aged 34, was brutally stabbed 20 times with a knife, with wounds on the body, neck and head, then her attacker allegedly tried to commit suicide.The murder was the consequence of a dispute in the couple, as Pricajar broke away with the man, who could be the author of the assault, Irish Police sources announced. The suspect, aged about 40, was taken to the St. Vincent Hospital and he might appear Tuesday in the Dublin District Court. The woman was living in Ireland for several years, where she worked as a nurse in a foster home. Her former partner allegedly was a lawyer. The Romanian woman was found mortally stabbed, last Thursday, in an apartment of the...

03.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
The Suceava County Council (CJ) wanted to build an ice statue depicting Elena Udrea for the inauguration of a ski slope, but Gheorghe Flutur, the president of the Council, labeled the idea ‘suicidal,’ ‘very stupid’ and ‘fantasy’ and promised sanctions against the ones responsible for it, ‘Gandul’ daily informs. Gheorghe Flutur, the President of CJ Suceava, flew into a rage when he heard director Dragos Juravle’s idea of building an ice statue depicting Elena Udrea and placing it at the base of the ski slope in Gura Humorului. In Flutur’s opinion this is ‘very stupid’ and ‘a suicidal idea.’ ‘Nobody will build any statue, I do not approve this way of thinking. I will demand explanations from the one that came up with it and I will sanction him for such fantasies. This cannot be; this is suicidal.’ Flutur stated for ‘Gandul’ daily. The daily adds that Flutur went on to say that the...

03.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
The National Broadcasting Authority (CNA) warned the public television channel on Tuesday over a stunt gone wrong in the show “Danutz SRL” live on Sunday evening. During a martial arts demonstration with swords in the show, Holograf band guitarist Romeo Dediu suffered a head injury. The show Danutz SRL is run by Dediu’s Holograf colleague, leading man Dan Bittman.

“CNA gave a public warning to the Romanian television for the fact it broadcast a show that contained a certain degree of violence at an hour when children have unrestrained TV access. This circus act, with swords and knives, ended badly, with a negative impact on the public and especially on children,” CNA head Rasvan Popescu said.

He said that beyond the warning handed out to TVR1, the Broadcasting Authority will try to warn TV channels about the possibility of such incidents emerging during live shows.

Another Holograf band member, Iulian Vrabete, meanwhile said...

03.02.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Young people between 15 and 20 years old are more disappointed with what society and its values have to offer, more individualistic and less willing to assume social responsibility, more radical and intolerant, according to a survey run by GfK Romania.

The survey, conducted in Bucharest at the end of 2009, has the purpose of putting together a portrait of today’s young generation, the so-called ‘Converse’ generation of trend-setters, according to a press release from GfK. The results of the survey were compared to a similar poll run by the company in 2005. The survey shows that young people between 15-20 years old in Romania are very sensitive about how they are perceived by those around them, especially by those in the same group they hang out with, wishing to impose their personality and stand out. “The eternal generation gap remains valid. They want to be taken into consideration by the grown-ups, they want to be listened to and valued, even...

06.09.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Armed robbery at Timisoara betting office

A sports betting office in Timisoara was robbed yesterday by a young man who threatened one of the two female employees with a gun and then took off with RON 17,000, Timis Police Inspectorate spokesperson Emil Matei said, quoted by Mediafax. Both female workers at the betting office were locked in the bathroom by the assailant, who is still being sought by police. “Unfortunately, the only person who could have given information about the attack is the seller, but she suffered severe emotional trauma and was hospitalized. The victim was not assaulted by the thief and sustained no physical injuries,” Matei said.

Baccalaureate pass rate, 50 per cent lower compared to 2009

The graduation rate reported in Bucharest after the second session of the exam and before the filing of grade contestations stood at 40.97 per cent, in contrast to 82.7 per cent in 2009, Marian Banu, spokesperson of the Bucharest School...

06.09.10 | by: Olivia Urban | in: homenews
The Foreign Ministry’s Roma advisor resigns, while Italy starts own evictions.
Some fifty Roma gathered yesterday in front of the French Embassy in Bucharest, fuming against Paris expulsions policy. Most of the protesters were wearing T-shirts reading ‘rom pakivalo’ (respectable Roma, e.n.). Put together by Roma Civic Alliance the spontaneous protest came in reaction to the Immigration Summit held on Monday in Paris that was due to tackle the Roma issue as well. Chanting the already famous French Revolution lines, “Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité!’ the Roma were yelling “Stop Sarkozy!” “Summit of Shame!” “Stop indentation!”

Some tens of Roma also put together a protest in Timisoara as well in front of the Prefect’s Office, raging against expulsion. ‘ Roma= Romanian= European’ or ‘EUR 300, the right to free pass’ were some of the messages written on their banners.

Leonard Bebi, the head of Parudimos Association claims the protest was attended by many of the people who were ‘tricked’ by the French State into leaving the country for a promised sum...

06.09.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
The suspect is reportedly member of a feared underworld clan with political connections.
Repeat offender Daniel Uta, accused of hitting a police officer and leaving him in a coma in a pub in Targoviste, was detained on Monday for 24 hours, being accused of attempted murder, Mediafax informs. Uta was heard by prosecutors for over five hours. According to investigators, during the hearing he did not admit to having committed the crime. On Monday the prosecutors were expected to ask the Dambovita Court for a 29-day arrest warrant on Uta’s name. Uta, member of a crime group known in Targoviste as the ‘Ghenosu’ clan, was caught on Sunday evening in an apartment in Bucharest. According to police sources, before being transported to Targoviste, Uta was taken to Floreasca Hospital in Bucharest because he had consumed hallucinogenic plants. The young man was involved in a violent incident earlier this year too, being accused of hitting the daughter of the head of the police precinct in Pietrosita. The 19-year-old girl was taken to hospital after Uta, her ex-boyfriend, beat and...

06.09.10 | by: Angela Vasilescu | in: homenews
The poor results in the first, eliminatory task of the National Institute of Magistracy (INM) admission competition stand for ‘a mordant failure’, Justice Minister Catalin Predoiu stated at the Council of Magistracy (CSM) meeting held yesterday. In his view, several explanations are possible: candidates had been very poorly trained, questions had been incorrectly conceived, the way in which the recruitment mechanism was used was wrong, the mechanism is faulty or all the above. ‘If we want to deal with the issue, besides the unlocking of vacancies which is quite predictable in the judiciary, we need to see if our HR policies and the way in which we recruit magistrates are correct’, the minister said according to Agerpres.

In plenary sitting, CSM decided with a majority of votes the number of candidates selected for the next stages of the competition would be the one resulting after the first exam and that, on Thursday, the Council would look into the opportunity of...

05.09.10 | by: Angela Vasilescu | in: homenews
A total of 5,537 serious accidents were reported in the first eight months of the year, 12% less than in the first eight months of 2009 when the figure was 6,299, Romanian Police reported by press statement on Saturday. In addition, the number of fatalities also decreased by 17.59 per cent, from 1,666 in the first eight months of 2009 to 1,372 in the analysed period this year.

Unfortunately, last weekend was also full of bad road accidents with deaths and injuries. Sunday morning, a 20-year-old from the County of Dolj was killed and two people ended up in hospital after the vehicle they were in fell into the Jiu River Pass in a very dangerous area. ‘When we arrived there, the men had already been taken by the paramedics and the young woman was found dead in the back seat of the car. Nothing could be done for her’, said ISU Gorj spokesman Mihai Avramescu.

Another accident where people were killed and injured happened in Agigea, Constanta County, Saturday night. One...

05.09.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
A police officer is fighting for his life in Bucharest’s Floreasca Hospital. Underworld member Uta Daniel, the one who brutally assaulted the daughter of the head of the police precinct in Pietrosita commune, hit the police officer with a bottle on Saturday night. According to County Police representatives, police officer Codrut Oprea, who was off duty at the time, was taken to Floreasca Hospital in a state of severe coma. 21-year-old George Uta Daniel, also known as “The Dane,” fled from the crime scene, Mediafax informs. An alleged underworld member in Targoviste, Uta was involved in another violent incident this year back when he was accused of hitting the daughter of the head of the police precinct in Pietrosita. The police officer assaulted now was one of those involved in investigating that case and preliminary investigations show that this event could have been motivated by...

05.09.10 | by: David Ionascu | in: homenews
Thousands of protesters in France, Spain, Italy but also in Hungary raged against Nicolas Sarkozy’s policies of Roma expulsion. 47 per cent of Romanians are against deportations.
Imagine
Tens of thousands protested across France on Saturday against a clampdown on immigrants, launching a week of action over policies on which President Nicolas Sarkozy has staked his political reputation. Demonstrators opposed to measures including repatriation of Roma to Eastern Europe waved flags and placards and chanted slogans including “Stop repression” and “No to Sarkozy’s inhumane policies.” Bands and drums made the atmosphere friendly rather than combative. Critics see expulsions of Roma gypsies as part of a drive by Sarkozy to revive his popularity before 2012 elections and divert attention from painful pension reforms and spending cuts. The president, who says security measures are needed to combat crime, faces a bigger test on Tuesday when workers hold a nationwide strike and protests over the pension reforms, which he says are essential to help cut the budget deficit. “This weekend’s demonstrations will be a first indicator of the country’s mood during this turbulent return...

05.09.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Dr. Adrian Toma, the head of Giulesti Maternity Hospital’s intensive care ward where five newborn babies died in a fire, will be criminally prosecuted, being charged with negligence. “The evidence gathered until now have revealed that the defendant, as head of the newborns’ ward, erroneously managed the existing human resources and failed to take the necessary managerial measures in order to have two medical staff members within the newborns’ intensive care ward as stipulated by law, against the backdrop in which the number of newborns in the ward was constantly surpassing the allowed number,” a release from the prosecutor’s office points out. Five babies died and six were injured in a severe fire that gutted the Giulesti Maternity’s intensive care ward on August 16. Florentina Cirstea, the nurse that was not present in the ward when the fire started has been placed on 29-day remand. Vasile Dima, head of the hospital’s technical service is investigated at large. The maternity...

03.09.10 | by: Adina Popescu | in: homenews
Despite the sudden cooling of the weather in the past days, owing to the intrusion of a cold air mass on Romanian soil, autumn hasn’t settled in to stay. Meteorologists announce the weather will get slightly warmer in the following days. “In September, October even, we may be in for warm spells,” meteorologist Elena Cordoneanu stated, quoted by Realitatea TV. “In this interval, temperatures shouldn’t rise above 28 degrees, as we’re barely reaching 24-25 degrees in the Southern half, and may rise up to 27 degrees in the Danube Plain,” the specialist added. The rest of the country, particularly the North and centre, will remain slightly colder, with the highest temperatures stopping around 20-21 degrees. Rains will also ebb progressively, and we may expect showers only in the North and centre. Next week the weather will continue to get warmer, but only slightly. “Temperatures will amount to about 25 degrees, mostly in the Southern half, on Saturday and Sunday, they may reach 25-27...

03.09.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Three lawyers and one bank director involved in real-estate scams

Organised Crime and Terrorism Investigation Department (DIICOT) – Bucharest prosecutors have heard yesterday 45 persons picked up at the end of several searches conducted in Bucharest and suspected of running real-estate scams. Three members of the Bucharest Bar Association, a chief keeper of records within District 1’s Land Deeds Service, and a bank director are among those charged in this case. According to a DIICOT release, quoted by Mediafax, the members of the crime group have conned ten persons by selling them, with false paperwork, plots of land and buildings for sums ranging from EUR 100,000 to EUR 400,000. The damages are currently estimated at approximately EUR 1 M.

Violent Romanians in Italy

Two Romanians, aged 29 and 26, are charges with murdering a 77-year-old man in Italy. The two broke into the elderly man’s house in order to steal and stabbed the old man several...

03.09.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
By the Government’s Ordinance 18/ 2010, for the rectification of the 2010 state budget, the Minister of Health will be allotted RON 2,960 M for the National Healthcare Fund (FNUASS), the Ministry of Finance announced, in a press release. Hospitals were allotted RON 859,863,000, out of which they are expected to pay overdue loans, which haven’t been paid by June 30, 2010. The rest of the amount will cover the cost of drugs, with or without the patient’s contribution, medical services and medical equipment. At the end of August, the Ministry of Public Finance approved credit lines out of the FNUASS budget, amounting to RON 1 bln, in the first instalment, out of which RON 616.5 M will go to public healthcare units, with bed facilities, and RON 383.5 M to cover medication, with or without the patient’s contribution. In the following days, credits of another RON 947 M will be opened to cover debts for drugs, with or without the patient’s contribution, medical services and medical...

03.09.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Starting September 14, retired airplane pilots, diplomats, MPs and court clerks, along with the staff at the Court of Audits and Parliament will see their pensions significantly reduced, up to levels 20 times lower than those they have received until now, after the recalculation process started by government. The Executive says special pensions being eliminated will create monthly savings of nearly 21 M RON to the state budget. According to data centralized so far by the National House of Pensions and other Social Insurance Rights (CNPAS), the biggest cut was operated to pilot pensions, down from RON 31,827 to 1,957, or from RON 1,928 to 1,839. The former employees at the Court of Audits, with pensions as high as RON 15,081, will now receive RON 2,193. Public servants working at Romania’s Parliament will have their pensions cut from RON 10,523 to 1,742, or from RON 1,466 to 1,397. Diplomats’ pensions will be reduced from RON 14,421 to 2,693, or from RON 12,361 to 2,515, yet, there are...

03.09.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Cristian Olteanu, president of PNL’s District 5 branch, was beaten in the street on Wednesday evening. He is the father of the girl beaten by babysitter Lovinica Dinu. The latter was sentenced on Wednesday for assault. The man is hospitalised within Bucharest’s Emergency Hospital in a serious condition. “He is in a serious condition; he has three skull fractures and cerebral haemorrhage. He could remain hospitalised for longer and could even undergo surgery,” Dr. Bogdan Popescu, spokesperson of Bucharest’s Emergency Hospital, stated for Mediafax.

Cristian Olteanu’s party colleagues claim there are no clues that the assault was politically motivated. Police officers are searching for the perpetrators and have not ruled out the possibility that they might be connected to the babysitter that is displeased with having been sentenced for assault. The Bucharest Court sentenced the babysitter to paying a penal fine of RON 1,000 and RON 1,000 in moral damages. Her case was the first...

03.09.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
The number of victims that suffered injuries in the miners riot on June 13-15, 1990 amounts to more than 1,350 people, according to an indictment-report by the Institute for the Investigation of the Crimes of Communism and Memory of the Romanian Exile (IICCMER), based on the documents of the prosecution indictment, issued at the headquarters of the 21 December 1989 Association, yesterday, Agerpres informs. The concussions of the report also suggest that the youngest victim of the events was only nine years old and that 60 per cent of the victims were inflicted head injuries and that there were four cases of young people who committed suicide following the ill treatments and rapes they suffered while on illegal detention. The president of the 21 December 1989 Association, Teodor Maries, accused the General Prosecutor’s Office of purposefully making no obvious progress in the investigator of the revolution and miners riots cases and said he would see President Traian Basescu on Friday,...

01.09.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Turkish ship sinks near Constanta

A Turkish flag ship loaded with scrap iron sank near the Port of Constanta yesterday, Mediafax reports. Wednesday morning at about 4:30, the ship started to lurch. Two other vessels were sent to the area to rescue the ship, but failed. The 17 sailors onboard were rescued. No one knows for sure what caused the distress, but two options are being considered: adverse weather conditions or the wrong loading of the vessel. The port authorities opened an investigation to determine the cause of the shipwreck.

First autumn day brings first snow in the Retezat Mountain

The first autumn day of the year has also brought along the first snowfall of the season. It snowed in the Retezat Mountain (Hunedoara County) on Wednesday, with air temperatures dropping massively below what it is considered as normal for this time of the year, Agerpres informs. “The coat of snow was 7 to 10 cm thick at 2,000 metre altitude. But this...

01.09.10 | by: Mihai Barbu | in: homenews
Secretary of State Bogdan Aurescu says Romania will not tolerate discrimination against its own citizens, EC calls for Roma integration in both native country and where they choose to settle.
During talks with European Commissioners Viviane Reding (Justice and Fundamental Rights) and Cecilia Malmstrom (Internal Affairs) in Brussels on Tuesday, French ministers defended their controversial crackdown on the Roma minority, insisting that repatriations fully comply with European law.

France has been facing mounting criticism for its decision to demolish illegal nomad camps and repatriate Roma to their countries of origin, mostly Romania and Bulgaria, with left-wing opposition, international human rights groups, EU officials and the UN human rights body voicing concern about the measures.

“I explained the principles on which we acted,” said French Immigration Minister Eric Besson in Brussels after meeting Reding and Malmstrom. “Everything is in total conformity with European law, the 2004 [freedom of movement EU] directive, French law and the republican principles of France,” he said, quoted by ‘The Guardian.’ He added that no collective expulsions were...

31.08.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Imagine
Having assembled the fossilised skeleton of what they believed to be a velociraptor, scientists were surprised to discover in Romania a new species of carnivore dinosaur that lived in Europe 70-80 million years ago, according to a study published Monday, cited by AFP. This biped dinosaur dubbed the ‘Balaurul bondoc’ (stocky dragon) was ‘stocky built’ and had a pair of claws attached to its rear limbs, with which it caught the prey. The animal was 1.80 to 2.10 metre-long, including the tail. “The dinosaur is a new species of predator dinosaur different from what we knew,” Stephen Brusatte, a researcher at the University of Colombia, said. “The dragon could have been one of the largest predators in the European ecosystem at the time, given palaeontologists discovered not a single large dinosaur tooth in over one century of research,” Zoltan Csiki of the University of Bucharest, who co-authored the study, said in his turn. “The fossilised remains of the dragon have been known for more...

31.08.10 | by: Nine oClock | in: homenews
Romanian researchers discovered a type of cells which, together with stem cells, may encourage the regeneration of the heart muscle, after an infarction, Mediafax reports. Specialists at the Victor Babes Institute found serendipitously, while studying cells in the intestine, tiny cells which contribute to organ regeneration.

According to Laurentiu Popescu, the head of the Academy of Medical Sciences, the “telocite” cells were discovered by Romanian scientists, and their existence was confirmed by independent teams in Italy, Germany, the United Kingdom and China. Alongside stem cells, telocites may contribute to the regeneration of vital organs, such as the heart and brain. “If we manage to isolate them, to multiply them together with the stem cells, we may use them efficiently in treating myocardial infarct,” Popescu added.

Telocites are small bodied cells, but with extremely long extensions (akin to the neuronal extensions), present in most body organs. They have...

31.08.10 | by: Mihai Barbu | in: homenews
Romanian ambassador to Paris to take over post next week.
Despite international criticism over its crackdown on Roma minorities, France will move ahead with repatriations and demolition of illegal nomad camps, with Immigration Minister Eric Besson pledging on Monday to increase expulsions of foreign thieves and beggars, according to Mediafax.

In a joint press conference with Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux and Secretary of State for European Affairs Pierre Lellouche, Besson said French authorities had no intention of rowing back on the crackdown, which has provoked concern from the UN, the EU and many leading figures of French society.

Besson’s comments came just hours after the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe joined the global outcry and denounced the Roma expulsions. But despite criticism, France insists that repatriations are fully in line with EU legislation and that the action is the result of keeping to the law – that the EU’s freedom of movement should not be abused, that the “insalubrities”...

31.08.10 | by: Dana Florin | in: homenews
Several other cases of infection reported or pending confirmation. Health Ministry, local authorities call for more measures to contain virus, eliminate mosquito threat.
Two people were killed after being infected with the West Nile virus from mosquito bites, from a total of seven cases of infection confirmed in Romania so far, Health Minister Cseke Atilla told a press conference on Monday, quoted by Agerpres. Three more cases are awaiting confirmation, he said. The two people who died from the virus came from Bucharest and Constanta, were both elderly people. The deaths were reported on August 19 and 22 and were caused by health complications, given the patients’ advanced age and the fact they were suffering from other health problems as well, the minister explained.

“The Health Ministry demanded stepped up actions to prevent the spread of the virus,” Cseke also said. He added that from the total number of infection cases, a small portion, about 15 per cent, risk developing meningitis, which is the most severe effect of West Nile, while the death risk is of one per cent. Health Ministry officials say children and elderly people are most...