China Daily (Hong Kong)

Romania’s political crisis deepens

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in Bucharest

Romania’s political crisis deepened on Friday after a key government ally said an emergency decree that would dilute the government’s anticorrup­tion fight was not constituti­onal.

Ombudsman Victor Ciorbea, who previously backed the government’s ordinance, reversed his position on Friday and said he would tell the Constituti­onal Court that the decree passed overnight on Wednesday to decriminal­ize official misconduct was “not justified,” and the measure risked “taking out of the reach of criminal law almost all the public administra­tion”.

Earlier, Justice Minister Florin Iordache said he stood by the law, defying strong criticism from home and abroad and days of massive protests.

Iordache, who had temporaril­y handed over his duties to a subordinat­e, told reporters on Friday: “I take responsibi­lity for this ordinance.” The ruling center-left Social Democratic Party has defended the decree, which has sparked some of the biggest protests in 25 years.

Romania’s Constituti­onal Court will rule on the legality of the law on Tuesday, the last legal resort to stop it.

Speaking at a European Union summit in Malta on Friday, President Klaus Iohannis called the situation “very complicate­d.”

“We have hundreds of thousands of my Romanians out on the streets, and I trust them. I trust my people,” Iohannis said.

“I believe in Romania... European values have to prevail and this is what I believe will happen. “

Amid strong internatio­nal criticism, US State Department spokesman Mark Toner said the US was “deeply concerned” about recent measures “that undermine rule of law and weaken accountabi­lity for financial and corruption-related crimes.”

We have hundreds of thousands of my Romanians out on the streets, and I trust them.”

Klaus Iohannis, president of Romania

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China