Romania will endorse Serbia’s steps with the International Court of Justice (ICJ), Romanian President Traian Basescu said. Basescu spoke today in Bucharest to the participants of the annual meeting of Romanian diplomats.
Posts Tagged ‘Romania’
Child thieves
By Sam Bagnall
This World
Across Europe thousands of Roma (Gypsy) children are being forced onto the streets to beg and steal, and law enforcement agencies are seemingly powerless to prevent it.
Cash machines in Madrid are a particular target for street crime. The cardholder is distracted at the crucial moment by one person, allowing a child to dive in, grab the money and run off.
Thirteen-year-old Daniela says she can make 300 euros (£260) from a single successful robbery without any risk of being punished.

"It’s only the police that catch us. They take the money we have on us. They take us to the day centre, and the centre lets us go.
"I give [the money] to my mother so we can go to Romania to build a house. But I hide some of it for myself. I give her 150 euros, and I keep 150."
Madrid police say that 95% of children under 14 that they pick up stealing on the streets are Roma from Romania.
Because the age of criminal responsibility in Spain is 14, there is little they can do.
More than 1,000 Romanian Roma live in just one of the many camps that lie on the outskirts of Madrid.
The conditions are appalling – rats roam freely amid the rubbish, and there is no sanitation.
Every day children from the camp head out into the city to steal and beg, and many are beaten by their minders if they do not return with money.
Organised crime
Nowhere in Europe has there been more controversy over crime in the Roma community than in Italy, where the government recently declared a state of emergency following various high profile crimes blamed on the Roma.
"In a month period, each kid earned about 12,000 euros"
Francesco Messina, Milan police
In Milan in 2007, just after Romania entered the European Union, police noticed a surge in theft and pick-pocketing carried out by Roma children.
They launched a major investigation involving phone-tapping and surveillance, which revealed that a criminal gang was using the children to generate huge profits.
"In a month period, each kid earned about 12,000 euros (£10,500). Then, 12,000 euros times by 50 kids, and if we do the maths, we reached an astronomical amount of money," says Francesco Messina, who led the police operation.
Members of the gang were jailed for up to 14 years in prison for enslaving and exploiting the children, many of whom were discovered locked in a shed when police raided the camp.
The rescued children were taken into care, but the BBC’s This World programme discovered two of the boys had gone back to the streets of Milan, and were stealing again. Even this huge police operation had not saved them from a life of crime.
Discrimination
The roots of the problem lie in Romania, where Roma have faced discrimination and hostility for generations.
The pop star Madonna commented on the problem during a concert in Bucharest last week, and was jeered by the audience.
Poverty among the Roma is widespread. In 2007, Unicef reported that up to 70% of households had no running water.
"The thieving is no longer a national problem – it’s happening on an international scale"
Breliante, underworld boss in Craiova, Romania
Many Roma end up leaving the country in search of a better life in the West. Some resort to begging and stealing.
In Milan, Italy, this resulted in a strong backlash. Some Roma camps have been bulldozed and there calls are heard for all Roma immigrants to be deported.
"The right wing says that Romany Gypsies are just people that exploit their children and women for stealing for begging and maybe there is a bit of a truth in this," says Donatella DeVito, who works for a charity that tries to help integrate the Roma into Italian society.
"But the real problem is that some of the Roma actually beg and steal because that’s the only chance that they have for surviving."
Fabulous villas
While some crime is driven by poverty, a worrying amount is the result of child exploitation, organised by professional criminals.
Breliante is a powerful underworld figure in the Romanian city of Craiova, where many of the Roma criminals in Milan originated.
He told the BBC many of the fabulous villas in the city were built on the proceeds of crime committed all over the world.
Gang bosses traffic people, including children, abroad to beg and steal and get fat on the profits.
But even he believes the sheer scale of the crime has gone too far and will have serious repercussions.
"The thieving is no longer a national problem. It’s happening on an international scale. Our children need to study, because if they carry on like this, if the new generations which grow up now continue in the same way, no-one will have us.
"Our country won’t understand us any longer, the Western countries will chase us away."
Liviu Tipurita, who has made films about Roma and child trafficking for many years, has similar fears.
"My fear is that without immediate help the Gypsy child thieves I’ve encountered in my journey will grow up into hardened criminals," he said. "And the cycle of abuse and exploitation will spiral out of control."
This World will be broadcast on Wednesday 2 September, at 7pm BST, on BBC Two.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Trade surprises
Romania’s trade deficit has shrunk
Romania’s trade deficit has shrunk by three-quarters this year, easing concerns about coverage of the current-account deficit. However there is a question mark over whether the manner in which the trade deficit has been narrowed will mar future output and export prospects. Exports have fallen sharply too, although there are tentative signs that a recovery is at hand, and food and beverage exports have actually risen. Conceivably this is because of the weakening of the exchange rate in the last 6-9 months. However, in the majority of Romanian sectors there are few signs of an output recovery prompted by a more competitive leu.
Romania started 2009 as one of those east European states with a sizeable external financing requirement in relative and absolute terms, in large part because of its trade deficit. Data for the first half of the year show a dramatic turnaround. The current-account deficit in January-June was €2.4bn, compared with €8.9bn in the year-earlier period-73.3% smaller year on year. Foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows into Romania fell 43% year on year in the first half of 2009, amounting to just over €2.5bn. Although this is a large drop, FDI inflows more than covered the current-account deficit and thus eased concerns about a balance-of-payments crisis. …
Madonna’s concert is going to stop traffic!
Literally!
Madonna’s Sticky & Sweet tour will be making a stop in Bucharest, Romania, and local authorities have already planned to shut down the streets for six hours. The concert will be on August 26th and will take place in the famous Izvor Park. All roads leading up to the park will be closed for the [...]
Romania pledges support in ICJ case
Romanian President Traian Basescu said that Romania will support Serbia before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in the Kosovo process. The UN’s highest court is considering whether the unilateral proclamation of independence on the part of Kosovo’s ethnic Albanians last year was legal.
Summer reading
Investigations, analyses and a rediscovered novel
NOTHING happens in eastern Europe during August, save the odd war, coup or financial collapse, so people interested in the region have a whole month to catch up on good books, old and new. This summer brings a crop that should keep even a speed reader busy. “Revolution 1989”, by Victor Sebestyen, offers a digestible and colourful history of that miraculous year. Andrew Roberts’s “The Storm of War”, is a rare example of a British writer giving the second world war’s eastern front proper prominence. “Londongrad: From Russia with Cash,” (pictured below) by Mark Hollingsworth and Stewart Lansley, is a racy and alarming investigation of the effect of Russian money on Britain.
At the more specialist end of the spectrum, Tom Gallagher’s new book about Romania and the EU—subtitled “How the weak vanquished the strong”—gives a bleak and gripping account of how wily ex-communist bureaucrats bamboozled the outside world and swindled their own people. Those who read his previous book, the excellent “Theft of a Nation”, will know what to expect. Espionage aficionados will enjoy the densely written but convincing “Spies” by John Earl Haynes, Harvey Klehr and Alexander Vassiliev, which tells the (true) story of KGB activities in North America. …
Striker must pay €17m fine
New Zealand votes on smacking ban

New Zealanders are voting on whether parental smacking of children should remain a criminal offence.
The so-called anti-smacking law introduced in 2007 has divided the country, prompting the country’s first citizen-initiated postal referendum.
The referendum asks: "Should a smack as part of good parental correction be a criminal offence in New Zealand"
Supporters say the law gives children the same rights as adults, while opponents say it criminalises parents.
The postal vote is open until 21 August.
Parental discipline
However, the result will not be binding on the government.
WHERE SMACKING IS BANNED- Austria, Bulgaria, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cyprus, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Israel, Latvia, Moldova, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden, Ukraine, Uruguay
Source: Endcorporalpunishment.org
The aim of New Zealand’s 2007 law change was to stop people using "parental discipline" as a defence against assault changes.
The move was viewed by many as an important step in combating New Zealand’s high rates of child abuse and murder.
The Vote No campaign said the current law had led to "good families [becoming] victims of unwarranted investigations and even prosecutions by police and… Child Youth and Family [government department]".
It said resources were being wasted on investigations into cases that "simply aren’t abuse".
Supporters of the new law said babies and children have the same legal protection against assault as adults.
The Vote Yes campaigners said that "positive, non-violent, parenting is more effective than corporal punishment, as well as supporting better long-term outcomes for children and for society".
Confusing question
However, critics say the referendum itself is confusing and Prime Minister John Key said the wording was "ambiguous".
COUNTRY BY COUNTRYWhere countries stand on Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children [342 KB]
Most computers will open this document automatically, but you may need Adobe Reader
But the government believes the current law is working well with police prosecuting only serious cases.
The New Zealand Police reviewed cases of smacking since the 2007 law change.
It said it investigated 13 cases between March 2007 and April 2009 – with one prosecution.
The Vote Yes campaign said such figures showed the law had not led to "mass criminalisation of good parents".
Electoral Enrolment Centre manager Murray Wicks said enrolments were up by 11,600 from November’s general election, just topping the three million mark for the first time, the New Zealand Herald reported.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Petkovic beats Olaru to win Gastein Ladies
BAD GASTEIN, Austria (AP) — Andrea Petkovic of Germany captured her first WTA Tour title on Sunday, beating Ioana Raluca Olaru of Romania 6-2, 6-3 at the Nuernberger Gastein Ladies.
The 98th-ranked Petkovic has won eight titles on the lower ranked ITF circuit, but had never before reached a WTA quarterfinal.
“I was hoping to land my [...]
US military deaths in Iraq war at 4,329
As of Sunday, July 26, 2009, at least 4,329 members of the U.S. military had died in the Iraq war since it began in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.
The figure includes nine military civilians killed in action. At least 3,464 military personnel died as a result of hostile action, according to the [...]
David Calleo: European Alarm Over Obama
The authors of “An Open Letter to the Obama Administration from Central and Eastern Europe” are nervous about recent US efforts to repair relations with Putin’s Russia.
Romanian mayor in Nazi dress row

A Romanian mayor has been strongly criticised by Jewish groups after appearing dressed in a Nazi uniform at a local fashion show.
Radu Mazare, mayor of Constanza, appeared with his similarly dressed 15-year-old son at the event.
The Simon Wiesenthal human rights centre called on Mr Mazare to admit he made a mistake, apologise and resign.
Mr Mazare said he had been inspired by the film Valkyrie, about an assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler.
He added that the uniform was a German army one, not that of an SS officer. And, he said, he had attempted to cover up all the swastikas, although he said he had missed a very small one on the belt.
Dr Efraim Zuroff, a Holocaust historian and the director of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre in Jerusalem, expressed "insult and outrage" at the mayor’s appearance.
In a letter to Mr Mazare, he wrote: "It would be hard to adequately describe the depth of the pain that your appearance caused, not only to Jews and other victims of Nazism, but to any person of moral integrity who knows the history of World War II.
"Today it is well-known that the Wehrmacht played an active role in the mass murder of European Jewry and many other innocent victims.

"By dressing in a Wehrmacht uniform, you are expressing totally unwarranted support and nostalgia for an army which committed the most terrible war acts of genocide."
Dr Zuroff suggested Mr Mazare could make amends for his "incredible lack of judgement" by bringing an exhibition on the crimes of the German army to Romania.
Romania was a German ally in 1940 but switched sides just before the war ended.
An international commission chaired by Holocaust survivor and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel concluded in 2004 that the Romanian authorities had killed up to 380,000 Jews in territories under their control.
Nowadays, the Jewish community there numbers between 9,000 and 10,000.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
FM praises Serbs in Romania
Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremić visited Romania yesterday where he held meetings with his Romanian and Hungarian counterparts. He also visited ethnic Serbs in the town of Timisoara, and said the manner in which they were organized could serve as an example to diaspora Serbs everywhere.
Ethnic Hungarians boo Romanian president
Romanian President Traian Basescu was treated to boos and hisses as he spoke during an open university event organized for his country’s ethnic Hungarians. Those gathered in the town of Baile Tusnad reacted negatively to his statement that Romania is a national, united, sovereign and independent state.
Jeremić to meet Hungarian, Romanian FMs
Foreign ministers of Serbia, Romania and Hungary Vuk Jeremić, Cristian Diaconescu and Peter Balazs, are set to meet in Timisoara. They will discuss topics of common interest for the three states, including the political situation in the region, Serbia’s European future and its regional cooperation within the DKMT Euroregion, Romania’s news agency Agerpres reported.
Europe gas pipeline deal agreed
By David O’Byrne
BBC News, Ankara

Four European countries are meeting in Turkey to sign a five-nation agreement for the long-planned 3,300km Nabucco natural gas pipeline.
Once completed, the line will bring up to 31 billion cubic metres of gas a year from the Caspian and the Middle East across Turkey and into Europe.
It will give an important alternative energy supply to Russia, which already meets 30% of Europe’s gas needs.
But much still remains to be agreed on, not least where the gas will come from.
The five countries – Turkey, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Austria – have been working on the Nabucco project with the European Commission for seven years now.
But still the decision to sign the heads of government agreement on 13 July has come as a surprise.
To begin with there is still no clear idea as to what has been agreed.
Turkey and the European Commission are still at loggerheads over how much gas Turkey will be able to take from the line, with Ankara claiming that it might be another six months before a final agreement is reached.
More worrying still, Nabucco still has no guaranteed supply of gas.
Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Egypt are all considered potential suppliers in the long term.
Currently though, only Azerbaijan is in a position to supply the 15 billion cubic metres a year the line needs if it is to be constructed as planned by 2014.
But two weeks ago, Baku agreed to sell some of that gas to Russia, a move many understood as a warning to the Nabucco partners to sort out their differences or look elsewhere.
In the same way, Monday’s signing ceremony is being seen as largely an attempt to persuade Baku that the Nabucco partners can reach an agreement, on some issues at least.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




