Weekend Herald

Anger grows over Romania’s graft law

Nations send joint letter criticisin­g anti- corruption reforms as protesters take to streets for a third night

- Radu- Sorin Marinas

Romania’s Government has rejected calls to withdraw a decree that critics say marks a major retreat on anticorrup­tion reforms, standing its ground as huge nationwide protests entered a third day.

After 250,000 people took to the streets on Thursday, cracks in government unity emerged yesterday with the resignatio­n of a Cabinet minister and a call from a vice- president of the ruling party for the decree to be rescinded.

About the same numbers of antigraft peaceful demonstrat­ors rallied in dozens of Romanians cities and towns yesterday. Riot police estimated some 80,000 people were gathered in front of the government’s headquarte­rs in Bucharest’s biggest square.

Prime Minister Sorin Grindeanu has the full support of the ruling Social Democrat ( PSD) party, said party leader Liviu Dragnea, who had picked Grindeanu to head the Government after Dragnea himself was barred by a previous vote- rigging conviction.

“The Government and the parties that back it are determined to exercise the executive and legislativ­e power granted by the citizens,” he told reporters after a meeting of senior party officials and Grindeanu.

The order, hastily adopted late on Wednesday, has triggered some of the biggest nationwide demonstrat­ions since the communist leader Nicolae Ceausescu was overthrown by a popular uprising that ended with the death of Ceausescu and his wife in front of a firing squad on Christmas Day in 1989.

Asked if the Cabinet, in power for less than a month, planned to withdraw the decree, Grindeanu said: “No, we don’t.”

Meanwhile anger was growing on the streets.

“I came here to help repair what our rulers have done,” said 31- yearold Carmen Druta, an artist who designs and makes bracelets, while protesting in Bucharest’s main square, where people were shouting “Thieves, thieves.”

Romania, a Nato- member country of 20 million people, is a staunch ally of Washington, with troops in Iraq and Afghanista­n, and hosts a US antimissil­e system. It joined the European Union in 2007, but it has struggled to combat endemic corruption and remains one of the bloc’s poorest members.

The decree would decriminal­ise abuse- of- power offences in which the sums involved are less than 200,000 lei ($ 65,410).

It would potentiall­y put a halt to an ongoing trial of Dragnea on abuse- of- office charges and benefit dozens of other public officials.

Critics say the decree would roll back what progress Romania has made against graft since joining the EU.

The US and the EU’s executive arm, the European Commission, have both expressed concern.

In a statement, the US, Germany, Canada, Finland, the Netherland­s and France said Romania’s Government had undermined “progress on rule of law and the fight against cor- ruption over the past ten years”.

European Commission vicepresid­ent Frank Timmermans urged the Romanian Government to “urgently reconsider” the decree, warning that if it is adopted, it could affect the EU funds that Romania gets.

Romania’s Trade and Business Minister, Florin Jianu, resigned, saying on Facebook that it was the “ethical thing to do . . . not for my profession­al honesty, my conscience i s clean on that front, but for my child”. “How am I going to look him in the eye and what am I going to tell him over the years? Am I going to tell him his father was a coward and supported actions he does not believe in, or that he chose to walk away from a story that isn’t his?”

A Vice- President of the Social Democrats, Mihai Chirica, also broke ranks by calling on the Government to rescind the decree.

Adding to the intrigue, Justice Minister Florin Iordache, architect of the decree, ceded his duties to his deputy until Tuesday.

Pursued by reporters in the corridors of parliament, Iordache said he was merely making time for a parliament­ary debate on the Government’s 2017 spending plan.

“There is nothing surprising in this temporary delegation of my duties,” he said.

President Klaus Iohannis followed Romania’s top judicial watchdog in filing a legal challenge to the decree with the Constituti­onal Court.

The decree is due to take effect in a little over one week.

 ?? Picture / AP ?? An estimated 80,000 people protested in front of the Government’s headquarte­rs in Bucharest’s biggest square yesterday, while other protests were held around the country.
Picture / AP An estimated 80,000 people protested in front of the Government’s headquarte­rs in Bucharest’s biggest square yesterday, while other protests were held around the country.

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