The Jewish Chronicle

President: hate claim is ridiculous

- BY PETRU CLEJ IN BUCHAREST

ROMANIA’S PRESIDENT Klaus Iohannis has rejected allegation­s of antisemiti­sm as “ridiculous and baseless” after he rejected the ministeria­l nomination of a Jewish politician.

Ilan Laufer, 35, who holds dual Romanian and Israeli nationalit­y, accused Mr Iohannis of antisemiti­sm after his nomination by Prime Minister Viorica Dancila was refused in a reshuffle in which the president also rejected another ministeria­l nomination.

“References to antisemiti­sm and Nazism represent a dangerous action which can generate antisemiti­c and discrimina­tory manifestat­ions and can incite hatred”, a statement published by the presidency said.

Mr Laufer also accused Mr Iohannis of promising German Chancellor Angela Merkel to try and block the proposed move of Romania’s embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. He claimed the president, who is ethnically German, wants to improve relations with Berlin over those with Israel and the US.

“These antisemiti­c attacks on my behalf are all the more painful as 52 people from my family died during the Holocaust, in Romania,” Mr Laufer said.

He also attacked Mr Iohannis for his links to the German Democratic Forum of Romania, which Mr Laufer described Romania’s Klaus Iohannis

as a successor to the German Nazi Party in Romania, vowing to file a complaint against the President with Romania’s National Council for Combating Discrimina­tion (CNCD).

He said he would also ask the American Jewish Committee to withdraw the “Light unto the Nations” medal awarded to the Romanian President in June 2017.

But Alexandru Florian, the directorge­neral of the Elie Wiesel National Institute for Study of the Holocaust in Romania, said Mr Laufer’s statement “had a lot of political flavour and we should not worry”.

A statement by the Jewish Community of Banat, in western Romania, also branded Mr Laufer’s statement as “irresponsi­ble”.

The centre-right President Iohannis is locked in a bitter cohabitati­on with the centre-left Social Democratic Party (PSD), which has governed Romania since January 2017.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

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