Blizzards continued to cause trouble on Romanian roads. Schools remain closed in Bucharest, Calarasi, Teleorman and Galati counties. Dozens of trains were cancelled, sea ports were closed, and many people - even pregnant women - were blocked in their cars
A number of 17 national roads, and the Bucharest-Pitesti and A2 motorways, were closed to traffic on Monday.
Preschoolers and pupils grades 1 through 8 will stay home today too because of inclement weather, the Bucharest School Inspectorate decided yesterday. School classes in Bucharest and 11 of Romania’s counties were also suspended for the same reason Monday. Bucharest School Inspectorate spokesman Marian Banu told Mediafax that, nonetheless, the parents who wish to bring their children to kindergarten today too, as they don’t have anybody to take care of them at home, may do it.
Classes will also be suspended today in the counties of Calarasi and Teleorman, and in Galati County, school classes, primary, junior and senior high, will be closed through Wednesday, according to Antena 3 TV channel.
Extreme weather also forced authorities to close 190 secondary roads in 16 counties.
The worst situation was reported in Calarasi County,...
A recent analysis of the General Romanian Police Inspectorate (IGPR) regarding the “human trafficking” shows that the main reasons for which Romania is lagging behind in terms of combating the phenomenon appear to be the precarious economic conditions and the information level. “The place of our country on the map of the trading of people is given particularly by the bad economic conditions in which some of the persons live and their information level. Fighting human trafficking is an enduring process, starting from the identification of the potential victims and helping them to not fall prey to traffickers, the identification of the traffickers, the probing of the criminal activity, their fast sentencing and, not least, supporting the reintegration of the victims after their trafficking,” according to the analysis made for Nine O’ Clock.zSince, until the passing of Law no. 678/2001 regarding the fight against human trafficking, this deed was not...
SIE chief Mihai Razvan Ungureanu says institution is “one of the best espionage services” in all NATO states.
Romania’s Foreign Intelligence Service (SIE) yesterday marked its 20th anniversary in a special session attended by President Traian Basescu. No details were immediately available about what was discussed in the session, as neither the service nor the president’s office issued any press release to detail the meeting.
Meanwhile in an interview to daily ‘Romania libera’ published yesterday, SIE head Mihai Razvan Ungureanu talked about how much the service has changed in these 20 years, managing to become “one of the best espionage services in all NATO states. “First of all, an entire institution has changed, along with its structure, people, own action philosophy. (…) In 20 years with problems, expectations, some of them unfulfilled and some only partially fulfilled, with both successful and failed projects, SIE has managed to reach a mature age, but this is an energetic adult age,” he said.
Ungureanu insisted that the...
The businessman Sergiu Bahaian, suspect of having commissioned the murder of four persons in Constanta County, was arrested preventively yesterday for 30 days, the decision being made by Constanta Tribunal. Bahaian is charged with instigation to qualified murder and instigation to particularly serious murder, in the case of Ionel Ulezu and Petrica Captalan, and with setting up an organized criminal group and fraud. “Further to the action started on January 16 by the prosecutors from the Division on investigation of organized crime and terrorism – Constanta Territorial Office, DIICOT prosecutors proposed the court, on February 5, to take the measure of preventive arrest of the defendant Sergiu Bahaian for a period of 30 days,” DIICOT shows in a press release remitted on Monday to the media. Bahaian is investigated for the perpetration of the offences stipulated by art. 7 of Law 39/2003 “consisting of the fact that, at the end of 2007, together with Slepac...
Doctor dies of suspected swine flu
Dr. Toth Istvan, 42, of Zalau, died at the Cluj County Hospital late last week of complications from suspected swine flue. The death of Dr. Toth, an infant surgery expert, is held as a great loss for the Romanian medical system. Yesterday’s ‘Adevarul’ daily newspaper reported the head of the Salaj Department of Public Health, Ligia Marincas, having said the doctor was admitted to the Salaj County Emergency Hospital with suspected A (H1N1) flu. ‘The doctor was diagnosed with a respiratory condition. Given he had suspected new flu, he was administered Tamiflu and when his health condition allowed his transportation, he was transferred to a hospital in Cluj, where he died Friday night into Saturday morning of medical complications from suspected new A H1N1 flu,’ Marincas, said, adding the exact cause of death will only be known after a coroner’s examination. Ms. Marincas also said the diagnosis was not...
General Gabriel Gabor, chief of the Human Resources Division of MoD, questioned yesterday as witness in a corruption lawsuit, acknowledged that he interceded with acquaintances for the businesswoman from Vaslui, Maricica Iovita, charged with having given money in order that the businessman Adrian Porumboiu would be investigated.
The General admitted he knew the businesswoman from Vaslui, Maricica Iovita, charged alongside the former prosecutor Ioan Ciofu, and interceded with his “acquaintances” in her favour. Asked by the judges how the businesswoman had asked him to help her, the General declared that he could not help Maricica Iovita directly because he was not a friend of the Interior Minister Vasile Blaga or the deputy prosecutor general of Romania at that time, Marcel Sampetru. In exchange, the general said in front of the Supreme Court that he appealed to his acquaintances, namely another general, Avram Catanici, about whom he knew that he was a friend of...
Dana Nastase, the wife of the former premier Adrian Nastase, went yesterday to the offices of the National Anticorruption Department (DNA), where she was questioned for around one hour in “Zambaccian 1” file. “The case goes on,” Dana Nastase declared to journalists. “This case will not finish,” she continued ironically. In “Zambaccian 1” file, the former premier Adrian Nastase and his wife Dana are charged with corruption deeds. According to investigators, during 2001-2006, making use of the authority and influence resulted from the offices held in the state, Adrian Nastase, former PSD president and former premier of Romania, has allegedly perpetrated several corruption offences, involving also other persons, offences from which he has obtained the amount of RON 48 bln, meaning EUR 1.3 M. In their charge, the prosecutors show how Nastase family arrived to receive goods for the construction of the villas from Zambaccian, Cornu and...
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...
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...
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...
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...
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”...
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...
Over 2,200 children under one year old died in Romania in 2009
Over 2,000 children under one year old died in Romania last year, when the registered mortality rate was concerning. The head of Elias Hospital Obstetrics and Gynecology Department, Prof. Dr. Radu Vladareanu, told a press conference yesterday that a total of 2,230 children under 1 year of age had died in Romania in 2009, accounting for a concerning mortality rate of 10.1 per cent, the highest in Europe. The hospital official noted that 30 per cent of the infants under one year old had died from pneumonia and viral respiratory infections, an unacceptable situation in any other civilised country. According to the doctor, another cause of newborn death is represented by congenital malformations.
Almost 200 foreigners in Romanian prisons
Almost 200 foreign citizens - 42 from Turkey, 27 from R. Moldova and 19 from Bulgaria – are serving time in Romanian prisons, according to...
Meteorologists issued a rain watch which comes in force today in 30 counties, between 2:00 and 20:00. In the aforementioned interval, rain will fall in Banat, Crisana, Maramures, Transylvania, Moldavia and in all mountain areas, and the quantity of water may surpass, on wider areas, 20-25 l/sq m, and, on patches, 40-50 l/ sq m. There will be showers, possibly in torrents, complete with lighting and hail. Wind speed will intensify in all regions, particularly in the mountains. These phenomena will appear more frequently in Western and central regions, for now, and, tomorrow, will move eastwards. In other regions, such phenomena will cover a more limited ground. Later yesterday, hydrologists also issued a flood watch valid for today, between 4 a.m. and midnight, in 12 counties, mostly in the centre and eastern part of the country, according to Realitatea TV....
The Coalition of Chronic Patients’ Organisations (COPAC) accused the National Health Insurance House (CNAS) of recently modifying the price of medicine that they benefited from free of charge and demanded that the change be reverted because it was not previously discussed with patients, Mediafax reported.
CNAS rejects such a possibility, saying that the change is aimed at helping provide wider coverage for free-of-charge treatment.
The row began when CNAS earlier this year published a new list of compensated medicine, which provides that only the costs of cheaper medicine will be partially or totally supported by the health insurance house. As of tomorrow, an additional list of medicine only for chronic patients will come in effect, but working on the same principle – only cheaper drugs will be 100 per cent covered by the CNAS. This gave birth to fears among patients that they would no longer benefit from free treatment. However, CNAS president Lucian Duta insists...
French FM Kouchner admits he considered resigning over Roma repatriation polemic.
The Civic Alliance of Roma in Romania yesterday launched a call for a wide-scale protest against a summit on immigration issues that Paris is planning to host next Monday. According to a press release sent to Agerpres, the protest would be organised simultaneously in several locations, on September 6, starting from 11:30 a.m.
The protest is initiated and supported by the Civic Alliance of Roma and by Roma community leaders in several Romanian counties. “This infamous summit is directed against Roma everywhere. This summit proposes stigmatising the entire Roma people. We are protesting against the French government’s ethnic cleansing policy against Romanian and Bulgarian citizens of Roma origin, against mass expulsions and repressive measures against this entire ethnic group,” the release reads. The Alliance also called for a boycott of all French products and services, so that French leaders are reminded of the fact “fundamental rights are non-negotiable.”
Recently,...
Hearings in the case of the tragedy, in which five infants were killed, continued yesterday at the High Court Prosecutor’s Office, those called to testify including the interim manager of the hospital, Victoria Nicolau.
The Bucharest Court decided, yesterday, that the nurse Florentina Cirstea, charged with manslaughter and causing severe injuries, should remain in custody until the 29 days’ preventive arrest warrant expires. The court debated the nurse’s contestation of the Bucharest Sector 6 Court’s preventive arrest decision in the case of the maternity fire. The nurse, who was to keep watch of the infants on the night of August 16, when the fire started at the intensive care ward at the Giulesti Maternity Hospital, was arrested on August 24 for 29 days. Her lawyer petitioned the court yesterday to allow her investigation out of custody, on the grounds that she couldn’t possibly foresee, as a medical cadre, the occurrence of a fire or of any other unexpected event. At the same time, the lawyer stated that, according to the nurse’s job description, there was no obligation for her to remain, at all times, in the ward. According to the latter, the nurse was under the obligation to keep an eye on...
EUR 6.2 M lottery prize won in Iasi
The EUR 6.2 M top lottery prize was won on Sunday. According to the Romanian Lottery, the lucky ticket was played in Iasi and had a cost of RON 20.5. The ticket consisted of three simple variants and a special draw variant. According to the aforementioned source, the ticket had a cost of RON 20.5. This was the largest prize won this year. The winning numbers were 28, 21, 12, 7, 23 and 11. The top prize was previously won on March 7 and stood at EUR 1.7 M. The largest prize in the Romanian lottery’s history was won on January 27, 2008 and stood at approximately RON 47 M.
Has Dan Diaconescu’s party reached 20 pc?
In a blogary.ro blog post, presidential adviser Sebastain Lazaroiu says he got his hands on a poll indicating some spectacular changes since the spring surveys. “A very recent opinion poll (I am not going to disclose the name of the pollster, if they want to publish the results of the poll they can...
The official says he regrets the accident, willing to ‘answer in front of the law.’
Former Cluj Prefect Calin Platon was detained for 24 hours after being heard by the traffic police yesterday in relation to a car accident he caused, killing a three-month baby and severely injuring his mother. Platon was to be taken to before a court with the proposal to be remanded, on charges of manslaughter, Realitatea.net reported.
After being interviewed by police for more than two hours and a half, he was taken to the Cluj Judge Hall Prosecutor’s Office to be heard by prosecutors as well, Mediafax said.
On his way to the Prosecutor’s Office, Platon told reporters that he deeply regretted “this terrible tragedy and I will answer in front of the law.” He also said that when the accident occurred, he was “blinded by sunlight” and saw the two victims on the pedestrian crossing in front of him when it was too late to hit the brakes. Platon added that he wasn’t speeding at the time.
A spokesperson for the Cluj County Police, Gina Pop, told Mediafax that...
Just one day after the hottest day of the year, autumn is here. Across the nation, yesterday, the tropical air was replaced by a wave of polar air. While meteorologists announce that heat wave temperatures will go down by up to 12C, doctors draw attention such sudden temperature variations are likely to create medical problems, Realitatea TV reports.
Saturday, mercury rose to 39C at Calafat and Bechet, the highest temperature this year. Saturday night however was a different affair, as a cold air front crossed the country, with temperatures going down by 10-12C. That resulted in a sudden drop in temperature in areas struck by heat wave Saturday. “On Sunday, the significant drop in temperature will be felt across the areas where the heat wave hit on Saturday. For example, those places where temperatures registered 38C will now see temperatures as low as 28C,” duty meteorologist Oana Paduraru told Realitatea.net. The cold air front brings with it precipitations and gusty wind,...
Bucharest General Mayor Sorin Oprescu stated on Saturday that, if the assets of the Giulesti Maternity Hospital are placed under sequestration, this would block the activity of the unit. Oprescu voiced hope that the court would reach a “balanced” decision, arguing that sequestration would be excessive, but that, “in the end, it’s up to the judges.” According to Oprescu, there are no hospital assets in the absence of which activity may continue undisturbed. The mayor’s statements come in response to a statement made by Chief Prosecutor Marius Iacob, the coordinator of the investigation in the Giulesti Maternity Hospital fire, arguing that prosecutors are considering precautionary measures related to the hospital assets, which would not affect the operation of the hospital. Prosecutors of the High Court initiated criminal prosecution against the Giulesti Maternity-“Panait Sarbu” Hospital, and sanctions may go as far as dissolving the healthcare unit.
As far as the...
Paris rejects criticism, says repatriations fully comply with EU legislation. Bucharest demands clarifications as to why it was not invited to next Monday’s immigration summit.
A United Nations human rights body rebuked France on Friday for its crackdown on Roma and urged the government to try to integrate members of the EU’s biggest ethnic minority as part of a Europe-wide solution, Reuters reported. The 18 independent experts voiced concern that some of the hundreds of Roma flown to Romania in recent weeks under what France calls a voluntary repatriation programme had not been fully informed of their rights or had not freely consented to returning to their homeland.
“We understand that a state has a right and a responsibility to deal with security issues and issues of illegal immigration. But our view is when you are doing so, it should not be on a collective basis, you should not be targeting a group as a whole,” said Pierre-Richard Prosper, vice-chairman of the U.N. Committee for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD). “There is an appearance of discrimination,” Prosper told a news briefing. Patrick Thornberry, a British committee...
Traffic beneath the Basarab overpass will resume on both lanes on September 15, with the exception of the Plevnei – Gara Basarab perimeter, Bucharest General Mayor Sorin Oprescu stated on Saturday. While visiting the construction site Oprescu pointed out that traffic beneath the overpass will resume on the evening of September 14, with traffic on the overpass itself set to start in January-February 2011. “I don’t want to open it for traffic while still having to put the finishing touches. No! We will open it for traffic at the end of the year like I promised,” the Bucharest General Mayor stated. He added that after the construction works are completed the overpass will be tested for a month’s time. According to him, the sum spent so far this year for the Basarab overpass stands at RON 164 M, with the final cost tending to reach RON 248-250 M by the time it is completed.
Oprescu also talked about the existence of some “brakesmen” that would like to prevent the completion of...
EU foreign policy chief visits Romania’s Expo Shanghai pavilion
High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton yesterday visited Romania’s pavilion at Expo 2010 Shanghai, where she was greeted by Bucharest’s Expo 2010 General Commissioner Ferdinand Nagy and consul Florin Tacu, according to a press release from the Foreign Ministry. Ashton visited a photography exhibition and the museum presenting Romanian history and civilisation inside the pavilion. She also attended a chamber music concert by the Romanian Piano Trio. Ashton “Declared herself impressed with the pavilion’s design, the arrangement of exhibition spaces and the cultural and artistic programmes conducted within the pavilion,” the release said.
Interior Minister presents Schengen accession stage at Salzburg Forum
Minister of Internal Affairs Vasile Blaga presented in the Ministerial Conference of the Salzburg Forum, the stage of...
Romanian-Japanese cooperation to be stepped up.
International cooperation in the area of Japanese studies, as well as a mounting interest in Japanese culture have led to the need to set up a Centre of Japanese Studies with the purpose of supporting research activity in the field. During the opening of the centre – the first of its kind in Romania – centre director Anca Focsaneanu explained to ‘Nine O’Clock’ that the intention of the project was to diversify research studies and train young people in the area of Japanese studies. It is seen as a way to facilitate the exchange of expertise and the establishment of an international reputation by cooperating with prestigious centres and associations of Japanese studies in Japan and worldwide. “The modernisation of Romania is down to studies, and the Japanese department is a highly dynamic one, having come a long way,” the rector of the Bucharest University, Prof. Ph.D. Ioan Panzaru, said. He also noted it was time to develop Romanian-Japanese relations and that the objective of the...
This weekend a new edition of the “National fair of organic, traditional and natural food” awaits Bucharesters with hors d’oeuvre prepared in cast-iron kettles, bread baked on a hearth, Transylvanian salami and sausages, jams prepared in monasteries, Arges County tuica and Maramures cookies. “At this fair of truly traditional products I provoke you to think with a light heart about serious things. What do you crave in autumn? Is there any dish you consider a legend of autumn? If so, tell us about it! One of our cooks will prepare it for you and you will receive a prize if none of them happens to know how to do it,” Daniela Popa, Media Link Businss manager, stated for Agerpres. The fair will also feature a book exhibition organised by the “Romanian Hospitality Association – tradition and evolution.” Ion C. Rogojanu, the president of the association, will present cook books, woodcuts featuring gastronomy subjects, menus authored by some painters and kitchen utensils....