Tag Archives: President Traian Basescu

Romania catches Syrian wanted in abductions

Romania’s president said Friday that Romanian authorities carried out “an unauthorized operation” abroad to capture a fugitive Syrian-Romanian businessman convicted of ordering the kidnapping of three Romanian journalists in Iraq.

Omar Hayssam, who was sentenced in absentia in 2007 to 20 years in prison, was handed over to Romania’s authorities early Friday and is now in police custody. The kidnapped journalists were freed after 55 days in captivity in 2005.

President Traian Basescu declined to reveal where Hayssam was captured or how he was brought back to Romania, but said: “How can I tell you when Romania carried out an unauthorized operation on the territory of another country?” He did not elaborate, but his comments suggested that Romanian authorities had carried out an unauthorized rendition on the 50-year-old.

Hayssam fled to Syria from Romania in 2006. His flight from Romania triggered resignations at a top level. The chiefs of the intelligence services and the general prosecutor were forced to resign amid allegations that they had facilitated his flight.

In an interview two years ago, Basescu said Romania knew exactly where Hayssam was. Hayssam had lived in Romania, where he obtained citizenship, for 24 years before fleeing.

A spokesman for Romania’s president earlier refused to say whether authorities in Damascus had turned Hayssam over.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Ethnic Hungarians in Romania mark national day

Thousands of ethnic Hungarians paraded in Romania on Friday to celebrate the Hungarian national holiday, and some expressed concern that their minority may not be allowed to retain the special privileges it enjoys.

Ethnic Hungarians, some in folk costumes, rode horses and carts and waved Hungarian flags, singing patriotic songs and shivering during traditional dances in rural mountain areas in Transylvania. They were whipped by winds with temperatures plunging to an icy -4 Celsius (25 Fahrenheit) as they celebrated the anniversary of the 1848 revolution against the Habsburg empire.

Romanian Hungarians, who make up about 6 percent of the population, enjoy special privileges such as the right to use their mother tongue in schools and in courts. But since an ethnic Hungarian party left the Romanian government last year after being a coalition partner for 15 years, some ethnic Hungarians fear their privileges could be lost.

“We call on them … to not take away our language, not to restrict the use of our language,” said Kelemen Hunor, leader of the ethnic Hungarian party. “We want Hungarian to be officially recognized in Transylvania,” the Hungarian-speaking region in central Romania.

Most of Romania‘s ethnic Hungarians live in eastern Transylvania, a rural area with vast potato crops and mineral water springs. The region was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire until 1918, when Hungary lost a huge swatch of its territory to Romania, Slovakia and other states. The minority faced heavy restrictions under Romania‘s former communist leader Nicolae Ceausescu. For the past two decades, the region’s ethnic Hungarians have been campaigning for greater rights.

Hunor urged Romania‘s government to allow Hungarians to fly their flags, vowing to defend “our national symbols … because we will defend everything that a free person and a free nation deserves.” In February, tensions briefly rose after local officials hoisted a Hungarian flag on a municipal building. By law, only Romanian and European Union flags can be flown on government buildings.

Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta has since tried to calm concern about ethnic Hungarians not being allowed to use their symbols, saying he doesn’t object to them being hoisted from municipal buildings.

However, President Traian Basescu told The Associated Press last week that Romanian authorities are opposed to territorial autonomy for Szeklers, an ethnic Hungarian group in Transylvania.

Former Foreign Minister Adrian Cioroianu, a historian, told the AP on Thursday that the …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

AP Interview: Romanian president blasts corruption

Romania‘s president says the country should do more to tackle corruption if it wants to join the European Union‘s open-border area.

President Traian Basescu told The Associated Press on Thursday that tackling the issue “is a test for the Romanian political class.

“Is it willing to sacrifice two or three corrupt officials for obstructing the national interest or not?”

Basescu says joining the so-called Schengen zone, which includes some 26 countries, should become a national priority for the country of 19 million, which joined the EU in 2007.

The Netherlands has led opposition to Romania and Bulgaria joining the borderless free-travel zone, arguing that it would lead to an increase in organized crime and corruption.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News