The Phnom Penh Post

A bright light shines from Romania

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AT A time when democracy is eroding in several nations in Central and Eastern Europe, an encouragin­g countermov­ement has suddenly erupted in Romania, a formerly communist nation of 20 million on the Black Sea. For the past week, huge demonstrat­ions by hundreds of thousands of people have rocked the capital, Bucharest, and other major cities in what has been widely described as the largest political mobilisati­on since the collapse of the communist regime in 1989. The rallying point has been simple, direct and, given the country’s history, inspiring: a demand that the government not relax anti-corruption laws.

Romanian government­s have been permeated with graft at least since the days of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, but after joining the European Union in 2007 the nation’s political elite came under mounting pressure from Brussels to reform. The eventual result was the establishm­ent of the independen­t National Anticorrup­tion Directorat­e, which has been prosecutin­g cases at the rate of more than 1,000 a year.

After handily winning a lowturnout election in December, the ruling Social Democratic Party perceived an opening to reverse the cleanup process. It first proposed a law that would pardon anyone serving less than five years for certain crimes – a measure that seemingly could apply to the party’s de facto leader, Liviu Dragnea, who received a two-year suspended sentence for electoral fraud. Then came a bolder stroke: On January 31, the party issued a late-night emergency decree decriminal­ising some forms of corruption if the amount of money involved was less than 200,000 Romanian lei, or about $48,000. That would get Dragnea off the hook on another corruption charge on which he faces trial, and allow him to become prime minister. It would also allow the government to resume the practice of buying the support of mayors and other local politician­s.

The bet that an apathetic populace would swallow this brazen manoeuvre proved badly. Romanians almost immediatel­y took to the streets, stirred by civil society groups, the Romanian Orthodox Church and the country’s independen­t elected president, who denounced the decree. By last weekend the crowds, though peaceful, had swelled to such proportion­s that the cabinet under Prime Minister Sorin Grindeanu voted to rescind the measure. But demonstrat­ors still returned to the streets seeking the resignatio­n of ministers.

The government appeared likely to survive after President Klaus Iohannis told Parliament on Tuesday that new elections were not called for, though a cabinet reshuffle may be necessary. The Social Democrats could still seek to gut the anticorrup­tion law through parliament­ary action. But that would risk enraging an already aroused populace. Romanians have demonstrat­ed that democratic values have taken root in the country over the past two decades, with the help of European allies and the US. That’s an achievemen­t that doesn’t benefit only their nation: It makes Europe more stable and more safe.

 ?? ANDREI PUNGOVSCHI/AFP ?? Demonstrat­ors turn on the lights of their mobile phones as they protest against the Romanian government’s contentiou­s corruption decree in front of the government headquarte­rs at the Victoriei square in Bucharest on February 5.
ANDREI PUNGOVSCHI/AFP Demonstrat­ors turn on the lights of their mobile phones as they protest against the Romanian government’s contentiou­s corruption decree in front of the government headquarte­rs at the Victoriei square in Bucharest on February 5.

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