Thursday, September 06, 2007

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Electoral ecumenism


The President of Romania Traian Basescu seems to be going on with his typical populism in search for the clergy's support. He is taking the third Reunion of Christian Churches taking place in Sibiu, the European City of Culture in 2007, as an opportunity.
Yesterday morning he participated at the prayer preceding the first session of this third European Ecumenical Assembly. The first prayer attended by all the Christians these days in Sibiu had taken place Tuesday evening in the City Square, where the President had spent just a few minutes, taking the opportunity to see to his hobby: talk to the crowd. (...)
In the opening of yesterday's session the attendants kept silent for a few minutes to commemorate the recently deceased Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church, a great European personality in the world of Christians. Bartholomew I, the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, a spiritual leader of 300 million Orthodox Christians all over the world, outlined the historical importance of the ongoing event in the sermon he delivered in the Metropolitan Cathedral of Sibiu last Tuesday and he congratulated the Romanian Orthodox Church, the local Church and the city.
Spiritual demagogy
In yesterday's speech President Basescu described the Ecumenical Assembly in Sibiu as a token of faiths' solidarity and one more hope for unity, outlining Romania was privileged to house an event vital to the Christian Churches' common action and to Romania's responsible approach to its fundamental spiritual values.
He argued: "Today it is more necessary than ever to shape room for common reflection on the role Churches can play in our societies, in keeping with their religious missions and in order to develop interChristian and interreligious dialogue, cultivate respect for humans' dignity and for the nature the faithful take for God's creation. I knew you started in Rome and continued in Wittenberg a pilgrimage making preparations for this assembly, meant to celebrate the diversity of traditions within European Christianity. The third European Ecumenical Assembly is taking place in Sibiu, a true model of collaboration of cultures and religious cults. It is the first time a country mostly Orthodox, a country that made preparations for today's event due to the historical visit that Pope John Paul II paid here in 1999. To all of us this is a token of solidarity between faiths and renewed hope for unity".

D.E.
Ziua Joi 6 Septembrie 2007 http://www.ziua.net/english

President Basescu accused of inappropriate view


Danish MEP Jens Peter Bonde addressed the Parliament of Europe against the President of Romania Traian Basescu, criticizing his idea to hold the national referendum on the uninominal vote system at the same time with the election of MEPs in Romania.
The MEP argues in his letter to the Conference of Presidents in the Parliament of Europe that such a decision may twist the meaning and the progress of the first election of MEPs to be held in Romania. The Conference of Presidents is a group made up of the heads of political groups in the Parliament of Europe and it is the institution deciding on the agenda.
It is to be reminded that President Basescu has recently demanded Romanian political parties to decide on the uninominal vote or he will summon a referendum to take place in November 25, the very day of the election of MEPs in Romania. But according to European recommendations, no other scrutiny should be held the day when the election of MEPs is due.
The Euro-skeptic Danish MEP, a member of the independent democrat group, wants the Parliament of Europe to express view on President Basescu's initiative in order to explain to Romania that the significance of the first election of MEPs in this country would thus be harmed.

Liliana Ionescu
Ziua Joi 6 Septembrie 2007 http://www.ziua.net/english

Hands and trick


Adriean Videanu, the Democrat mayor of Bucharest, is a failure. Bucharest is a real pell mell. The countdown left till elections is fatal to him. He isn't standing the smallest chance to prove by March 2008 that he has accomplished his missions. Traian Basescu, his guru, the man who helped him take over the City Hall and bring his male and female advisers and businessmen along, is even worse now, because he is the one in fact responsible for it. Videanu's tremendous failure can cost Basescu his second mandate as President. It would also harm the Democrat Party and the way to parliamentary elections. But to kick Videanu out cynically, which they were intending to do about a fortnight ago, is no solution, for Basescu will be blamed for it anyway. Therefore the only scenario available is a trick of the Basescu kind.
The topper has recently reached the table and the head of state has taken the bunny out of it. He has actually produced a SF idea: mess is reigning over Bucharest not because the mayor is an unskilled yesman fond of fraud, but because the system isn't good. This is how Basescu has caught two bunnies at a time. While trying to save Videanu's honor, he has accounted for his own lack of skill proved at the time when he was a general mayor of Bucharest. And therefore the main state official in charge of protecting the law has offended the law, more exactly the normative document settling Bucharest affairs (structure of districts, multiple authorities and so on), elaborated about 80 years ago. He has claimed no one can do real work here because there are too many authorities disturbing each other. And according to the boss in Cotroceni Palace, the solution would be one single man to hold all the administrative power. In such case, the great strategist would have power to do and undo things and thus rebuild Bucharest to make our dreams come true.
But if we take a closer look, the bunny taken out of the topper turns into a dragon. Not even Ceausescu, when giving directions about everything, did dare think about doing away with the districts of Bucharest. They anyway exist in the capital city of the presidential republic of France, whose Constitution Basescu has been struggling to imitate. But Paris is, was and will be divided in districts. The city authorities there and the main politicians have concluded it can be no other way. And, thank God, the City of Lights has survived. It has survived without mayors like Crin Halaicu, Victor Ciorbea, Viorel Lis, Traian Basescu or Adriean Videanu.
It is so puzzling to realize out of the blue that Bucharest can't be ruled as long as it is divided into districts, after Basescu was a mayor twice and although he is in power a third time, via his yesman. It is puzzling that he should be blaming the law. Maybe in his attempt to save some of his own honour and some of the Democrat Party's honour he will ask for some referendum on the issue.
Given these, how will the uninominal electoral campaign for the City Hall of the most important Romanian city take place ? Will it open by a denial of the system ? Or has it opened already ? Has the President of all Romanians already started his campaign for Bucharest by any chance, acting like an anti-system politician ? If so, he has committed hands. He has touched the ball with the hands, trying to fool both the arbitrator and the spectators and sneak the ball into the goal. But I'm afraid this isn't working any more. Videanu has mentioned it a lot of times that only when his mandate as general mayor of Bucharest is over the others may reach conclusions. He has specified his mandate is a "4-year one". These 4 years will soon be over. And what will there be left ? Another failure of Basescu's, one he can no longer blame on others. This works in case we ignore the fact that the President's man is a criminal, but one proved so only by the press so far. And there is no presumption of innocence.

Sorin Rosca Stanescu
Ziua Joi 6 Septembrie 2007 http://www.ziua.net/english

Pickpockets' castle

Watch your bags and pockets: while Romanian pickpockets are haunting Europe, Romania has turned into a target for foreign thieves cartels.
According to the Police archive, in 2007 thefts have been more numerous than ever, with hypermarkets as favorite places. The Police managed to catch a gang of Czech pickpockets just because they were too greedy, although it was their first action.
The thieves are informed, given accommodation and taken to the location by heads of the Romanian underground world, who are part of a very well working European cartel.
An operative group is made up of 3-5 individuals and the group spends 5 days at most in a city and 1 month at most in a country before being moved. When working abroad, Romanian pickpockets get the same treatment.
In Bucharest there take place 10 thefts every half an hour on an average. Cards are broken in just a few seconds, before the victim gets to announce the bank. When the prey is substantial, pickpockets use extreme violence even in the parking areas of supermarkets guarded by security companies. The Police have sent under cover agents to supermarkets these days. A retired pickpocket tells ZIUA: "In Bucharest there are no more than 10 people who control it. The press has reported on some, but in vain, nothing is happening." (...)

I.G.
Ziua Joi 6 Septembrie 2007 http://www.ziua.net/english