Tag Archives: Romania

EU ministers look for better meat processing chain

European Union ministers are looking at better ways to trace processed food across the continent and eliminate fraud amid a widening food scandal in which horsemeat was sold as beef to unwitting consumers.

Wednesday’s emergency meeting at EU headquarters included nations most affected by the horsemeat scandal. Those are Britain, Ireland, France, Romania, Poland, Luxembourg and Sweden.

The ministers were eager for answers and aimed to make sure the 27-nation bloc would put better checks on processed food in place.

The ministers said so far the discovery of horsemeat sold as beef did not raise any consumer health issues, only a suspicion of fraud.

In Britain and Ireland there is great sensitivity about eating horse, but that does not exist in other EU nations like France and Belgium.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Crisis-hit Greece backs pipeline for Caspian gas

Greece, Italy and Albania signed an agreement Wednesday backing a proposed pipeline to transport natural gas from the Caspian Sea to western Europe, intensifying the rivalry with a competing project.

The 800-kilometer (500-mile) Trans-Adriatic pipeline system, or TAP, would have an initial annual capacity of 10 billion cubic meters (353 cubic feet) of natural gas from Azerbaijan. The venture is run by consortium comprised by Germany’s E.ON Ruhrgas, Norway’s Statoil and the Swiss-based Axpo group.

Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras said the project would provide €1.5 billion ($2.02 billion) of private investment in his country, which is suffering through a sixth year of recession.

“This will change Greece from a second-tier energy destination to a significant transit point,” Samaras said. “It will create 2,000 Greek jobs in the early stages of the project in regions that are suffering high rates of unemployment.”

TAP is widely seen as a competitor of the Nabucco West pipeline, a separate proposed project that would transport gas to Austria via Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary. Both are vying for the right to transport natural gas from Azerbaijan‘s Shah Deniz gas field to western Europe by 2019.

The Shah Deniz gas producers will decide in June which route to use to export their gas to Europe.

TAP officials on Wednesday said they did not yet have an estimate of the total cost of the project and added that, if selected, construction of the pipeline would start in 2015. The pipeline’s annual capacity could be doubled to 20 billion cubic meters, they said.

Wednesday’s agreement was signed by Greek Foreign Minister Dimitris Avramopoulos, along with Albanian Finance and Energy Minister Edmond Haxhinasto and Italian Development Minister Corrado Passera, while representatives of the Azerbaijani government also attended the ceremony.

“This is an important step for the diversification of Europe‘s energy supply and access by Azerbaijan to Europe‘s market,” Passera said.

European governments are keen to bring Azeri gas to their markets, and ease current domination by Russia.

Kjetil Tungland, TAP‘s Managing Director, argued the venture would also spur other badly-needed growth-boosting projects in Greece.

“Projects like TAP signal confidence for other investors,” he said.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

France hunting fraudsters in horsemeat scandal

Europe’s horsemeat scandal is spreading, as French consumer safety authorities say companies from Romania, Cyprus and the Netherlands were part of a supply chain that resulted in horsemeat being disguised as beef in frozen lasagna sold around the continent.

French companies were also part of the supply chain.

France‘s junior minister for consumer goods, Benoit Hamon, said Saturday an initial investigation shows that one of the French companies bought frozen meat from a Cypriot trader, who had received the meat from a Dutch food company. And that Dutch company had received the meat from a Romanian supplier.

Romanian authorities are investigating. Dutch authorities say they are ready to investigate if necessary.

Lasagna meals and burgers suspected of containing horsemeat have been pulled from shelves in Britain, Ireland, Sweden and France.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Horsemeat for Dinner, Globalism under Fire, and the Future of the Human Condition

By Eamonn Fingleton, Contributor

The horsemeat discovered on British dinner tables last week was (1) supplied by a Swedish frozen foods marketer that had (2) outsourced meal preparation to a French company that (3) operates a factory in Luxembourg that (4) uses meat imported, (5) via a Dutch agent, (6) from Romania. At least that is the BBC’s version of the byzantine sequence (other versions differ slightly). What is clear is that the affair has thrown another tanker-load of gasoline on the British people’s already incandescent rage at the European Union (EU) and its role in undermining their sovereignty. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

China honors Romania's former Securitate Chief

China‘s embassy in Bucharest has ruffled feathers by honoring the last chief of Romania‘s much-loathed, communist-era secret police.

Iulian Vlad, the Securitate chief from 1987 to 1989, was given an award by the embassy on Sunday for his role in developing relations between the two countries, but news emerged only Wednesday.

Romania is a European Union and NATO member, yet traditional links with China remain strong.

This award “is like a phantom from the past,” said Stelian Tanase, a political commentator, suggesting that the Chinese rewarded those who suppressed dissent rather than encouraged democracy.

Romania is still coming to terms with the Securitate, which had an estimated 760,000 informants, and whose files have never been properly opened.

Vlad was sentenced to 25 years in prison for suppressing the 1989 anti-Communist revolt, but was released after four.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

IMF tells Romania to push on with reforms

The International Monetary Fund has called on the Romanian government to implement deeper structural reforms and to apply for more European Union development funds to help economic growth.

Romania is borrowing rescue loans from the IMF, and the two sides this week agreed to extend the €5 billion ($6.72 billion) aid scheme by three months to June to give the government more time to meet its reform commitments.

Erik de Vrijer, the IMF‘s chief of mission for Romania, said Tuesday that one key problem is a lack of economic growth.

“Growth is lower than what it could be even though what it could be is lower than what it should be,” he said.

Economic growth nudged slightly above zero in 2012, a year of political instability when the country had three prime ministers and Parliament impeached the president — a move that ultimately failed as too few people voted in a subsequent referendum to oust the head of state. The IMF forecasts growth of 1.5 percent this year.

De Vrijer said that besides more reforms of the economy, Romania could tap more EU structural funds, money that is earmarked for development and infrastructure projects.

“Progress in structural reforms is difficult and susceptible to delays … but if the government succeeds in doing the things we agreed, it will get high marks,” he said at the end of a visit which began on Jan. 15.

The IMF will extend its current €5 billion ($6.72 billion) aid scheme by three months to June to give the government more time to meet its commitments.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Three charged with distributing Gozi virus

Three people allegedly involved for years in cybercriminal activities in Eastern Europe have been charged in a U.S. court for creating and distributing the Gozi virus that infected more than 1 million computers and allowed cybercriminals to steal millions of dollars over a five-year period.

The three defendants, Nikita Kuzmin of Russia, Mihai Ionut Paunescu of Romania, and Deniss Calovskis of Latvia, face a variety of charges in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Wednesday. Gozi targeted online banking credentials and other online accounts and infected 40,000 computers in the U.S., including 160 at NASA, the U.S. space agency.

Kuzmin, the alleged chief architect and promoter of Gozi, faces charges of bank fraud and conspiracy, access device fraud and conspiracy, and computer intrusion, among other charges. Kuzmin allegedly began working on Gozi in 2005, and computer security experts discovered the threat in 2007, according to court documents.

Paunescu, who allegedly provided secure hosting to the creators of Gozi, the Zeus Trojan and the SpyEye Trojan, faces charges of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion, conspiracy to commit bank fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Authorities in Romania arrest 3 suspects in multimillion dollar art heist

Dutch police say authorities in Romania have arrested three suspects in a multimillion euro (dollar) art heist from a Rotterdam gallery last October.

Rotterdam Police spokeswoman Yvette van den Heerik tells The Associated Press that the seven paintings, including works by Picasso, Matisse and Monet, have not been recovered.

They were swiped last year in a late night raid at the Kunsthal gallery.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

List of dead and missing from raid at Algerian gas plant

At least 81 people have been reported dead, including 32 Islamist militants, after a bloody, four-day hostage situation at Algeria‘s remote Ain Amenas natural gas plant. Nearly two dozen foreign workers remained unaccounted for late Sunday.

Here’s the latest information from Algeria on the dead and missing:

THE DEAD:

— 32 Islamist militants, according to the Algerian government.

— 23 hostages, according to Algeria.

— 25 more bodies found Sunday, unclear yet whether they were hostages or militants, according to an Algerian security official.

— 1 Romanian died in the hospital, after being evacuated.

— Confirmed dead so far include six from the Philippines, three from Britain, two from Romania and one each from the U.S. and France.

THE MISSING HOSTAGES

— JAPAN: 10 Japanese working at the plant are unaccounted for, according to their employer JGC Corp.

— NORWAY: Five Norwegian employees of Statoil are still missing, the energy company said Sunday.

— BRITAIN: Three other Britons still missing and feared dead, the U.K. government said Sunday. Another British resident also feared dead.

— THE PHILIPPINES: Four Filipinos are still missing, a government spokesman said in Manila.

— MALAYSIA: Two Malaysians are missing, the government says.

— UNITED STATES: The number of possible American hostages is still unclear. One Texan is dead, the U.S. has confirmed. The militants at first said they were holding seven American hostages, but there has been no official confirmation if any Americans are unaccounted for.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

300-million-year-old UFO tooth-wheel found in Russian city of Vladivostok

By ScottCWaring

Story by Alton Parrish of Beforeitsnews.com
The Voice of Russia is reporting that a 300 million year old piece of aluminum machinery has been found in Vladivostok. Experts say a gear wheel appears to be manufactured and not the result of natural forces.

According to Yulia Zamanskaya, when a resident of Vladivostok was lighting the fire during a cold winter evening, he found a rail-shaped metal detail which was pressed in one of the pieces of coal that the man used to heat his home. Mesmerized by his discovery, the responsible citizen decided to seek help from the scientists of Primorye region. After the metal object was studied by the leading experts the man was shocked to learn about the assumed age of his discovery. The metal detail was supposedly 300 million years old and yet the scientists suggest that it was not created by nature but was rather manufactured by someone. The question of who might have made an aluminum gear in the dawn of time remains unanswered.

Credit: joy4mind

Nowadays, finding a strange artifact in coal is a relatively frequent occurrence. The first discovery of this sort was made in 1851 when the workers in one of the Massachusetts mines extracted a zinc silver-incrusted vase from a block of unmined coal which dated all the way back to the Cambrian era which was approximately 500 million years ago. Sixty one years later, American scientists from Oklahoma discovered an iron pot which was pressed into a piece of coal aged 312 million years old. Then, in 1974, an aluminum assembly part of unknown origin was found in a sandstone quarry in Romania. Reminiscent of a hammer or a support leg of a spacecraft “Apollo”, the piece dated back to the Jurassic era and could not have been manufactured by a human. All of these discoveries not only puzzled the experts but also undermined the most fundamental doctrines of modern science.

The metal detail which was recently found by Vladivostok resident is yet another discovery which perplexed the scientists. The coal in which the metal object was pressed was delivered to Primorye from Chernogorodskiy mines of Khakasia region. Knowing that the coal deposits of this region date 300 million years back, Russian experts inferred that the metal detail found in these deposits must be an age-mate of the coal.

Another question that interests Russian scientists is whether the aluminum alloy is of Earthly origin. It is known from the study of meteorites that there exists extra-terrestrial aluminum-26 which subsequently breaks down to magnesium-26. The presence of 2 percent of magnesium in the alloy might well point to the alien origin of the aluminum detail. Nonetheless, further testing is needed to confirm this hypothesis.

Valery Brier performed X-ray diffraction analysis of the metal. It showed very pure aluminum with microimpurities of magnesium of only 2 – 4 percent. Analysis was also conducted by Senior Fellow of the St. Petersburg Institute of Nuclear Physics Igor Okunev who confirmed the age of the material according to Natalia Ostrovsky

It is the first such finding in coal made in Russia, according to Valery Brier.
While exploring core samples (rock samples) that were raised from a 9-meter depth during the drilling of the seabed to support the bridge on a Russian island near Cape Nazimova, strange metal alloys were discovered that were “preserved” in the prehistoric sandstone (age – 240 million years old). The pieces of special alloys had an unusual composition and were clearly not used in the drilling machinery. The alloys, said Brier, were artificial and constructed by intelligent beings.
Reconstruction of the item found near Cape Nazimova
Credit: Natalia Ostrovsky
Not so long ago in Russia a mechanical device was found in volcanic rock which was dated 400 million years before the current era (B.C.E)

It was found on the remote Kamchatka Peninsula, 150 miles from the village of Tigil, by archaeologists at the University of St. Petersburg among found strange fossils. The reliability of the finds has been certified. According to archaeologist Yuri Golubev the find amazed experts as it was some sort of a machine.

The most ancient vase on Earth was discovered in 1851 in Massachusetts when blasting in the quarry. It is a silver-zinc vase inlaid with fine silver in the form of the vine. The age of this vase, according to the the rock in which it was found, is 534 million years old.

Photos: www.lah.ru

Another strange artefact that was found in coal is the iron pot shown below. It was found in 1912 in Oklahoma in a piece of coal with an estimated age of 312 million years.

Photos: www.lah.ru

In Romania in 1974, in sandstone quarry of not less than 1 million years old was found aluminum parts, reminiscent of a hammer or a support leg landing spacecraft “Viking” and “Apollo”.

Photos: www.lah.ru

More information at these links:

http://tv.kp.ru/daily/26013/2936837/?cp=1

Источник: http://joy4mind.com/?p=7835#ixzz2ITuGYv00
http://english.ruvr.ru/2013_01_19/300-million-year-old-UFO-tooth-wheel-found-in-Russian-city-of-Vladivostok/

Source: FULL ARTICLE at UFO Sightings Daily

Romania turns up heat on cigarette smuggling

Armed with state-of-the-art sensors and surveillance cameras, authorities in Romania say they are gaining the upper hand against rampant cigarette smuggling along the country’s porous border with Ukraine.

Ukraine, to the north, is a hotbed of smugglers seeking to profit from vastly higher prices on the other side of the rugged border. A pack of cigarettes rolled in makeshift workshops can sell for as little as half a euro — and the price immediately doubles over the northern Transylvania and gets dramatically higher the closer they get to western capitals.

Some 9.7 million packs of cigarettes were confiscated in 2012 by police, who say they have busted 30 organized gangs. The patrols also stopped over 130 individual smugglers and recovered 268 stolen cars and vans.

The turning point in the daily battle — waged in diverse terrain ranging from steppe to rugged mountains — came in July when EU funds totaling some €2 million ($2.66 million) were invested in seismic sensors able to detect footsteps, surveillance cameras and other equipment.

Some €9 million worth of cigarettes alone have since been confiscated, officials say.

“We used to patrol through extreme weather, through cold and through rain, but the new technology makes our work much easier and the traffic has visibly decreased,” chief agent Olimpiu Breton told The Associated Press. He says the X-ray systems — known as Robo-Scan — are working night and day and can detect whatever may be stashed inside passing trucks.

Video obtained by the AP showed officials intercepting an oil tanker, filled with contraband cigarettes.

After Romania became an EU member in 2007, life in the quiet northernmost region some 650 kilometers (400 miles) north of Bucharest changed dramatically.

Many people went to work abroad; those who remained had little option but to seek easy money. The 1,600 kilometers (1,000 miles) of border make Romania the European state with the longest external frontier. And with it came not just smuggled cigarettes, but also drugs, cars and human trafficking. The smuggling has also been rampant in other Balkan countries, as a result of the wars of 1990s.

Struggling uphill alongside his horse, woodcutter Ionut Opris sighed at the thought of what until recently had been a crime zone: “Smugglers are Romania‘s biggest thieves! We work hard, in the forest, in rain and cold, for less than €150 per month and pay taxes, while these guys, with their cigarettes, do nothing but steal.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Romania wants 2 drug trafficker suspects arrested

Romanian prosecutors want to arrest two Bulgarians suspected of running one of Europe‘s largest cocaine trafficking rings from Colombia to Europe.

The prosecutor’s office said Wednesday that Banev Evelin Nikolov and Radoslav Georgiev Atanasov, currently detained in Italy on other drugs’ trafficking charges, were allegedly involved in smuggling a shipment of 50 kilograms ( 110 pounds) of cocaine worth €6 million ($8 million) captured in Romania in April.

Colombians, Romanians, Bulgarians and Italians were part of the ring that trafficked hundreds of kilograms (pounds) of cocaine on yachts, cargo ships and speedboats from South America to western Europe, some of it through Romania. U.S., Greek, Bulgarian and Italian authorities investigated the drug smuggling ring.

The group is linked to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and drug cartels.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News