November 8, UPDATE
Death toll from horrific nightclub fire in Bucharest rises to 45. President Iohannis joins protesters in the capital's University Square.
Newsroom, 08.11.2015, 20:12
The death toll following the fire in Bucharest’s Colectiv club is rising. Four more people died on Sunday from the injuries they sustained in the fire bringing the death toll to 45. Authorities and doctors have warned that the number of deaths might increase. Around 30 people continue to be in critical condition in Bucharest hospitals, due to severe burns. Tens of patients have been transferred to hospitals abroad, some of them with a NATO aircraft requested by Bucharest. The blaze at Bucharests Colectiv club on October 30 was started by fireworks. The firm contracted to ensure the pyrotechnics show at the club on the night of the tragedy is being investigated, its owners having been arrested. They are also suspected of having tried to destroy evidence. The three club owners are also under arrest, on suspicion of aggravated manslaughter and involuntary bodily harm, as the venue was overcrowded, lacked the required number of emergency exits, and may not have been authorised to hold such a concert. Cristian Popescu-Piedone, the former mayor of Bucharest District 4 where the tragedy occurred is also under arrest, for having issued permits for the club’s functioning in spite of the fact that the club did not qualify. Concerns that safety at the club was compromised because of corruption – a long-standing issue in Romania – have further fuelled public anger against the political elite and triggered the resignation of the left-of-centre government led by Victor Ponta. President Klaus Iohannis, who has recently held talks with parliamentary parties and civil society representatives with a view to appointing a new prime minister, joined protesters at Bucharest’s University Square on Sunday evening.
The state institutions’ well-functioning is the condition for a state’s freedom and stability, which cannot exist without laws, competence and ethics, King Michael said in a message on Sunday, on the occasion of the Day of St. Michael and St. Gabriel. The former monarch, who was forced to abdicate by Soviet-backed communists more than six decades ago, has mentioned in his message the young people, who have been protesting in Bucharest and several other cities these days, against corruption and for sweeping reforms of state institutions and the political class. In his opinion, having the best possible laws and the most active civil society are not enough to secure a solid institutional life. “I am sure that the young generation will be able to find, in their Romania, the right balance between civic attitude and state institutions,” the King Michael said. “I have lived almost 100 years out of the 150 of the Crown, which entitles me to say to our young people: The time of your Romania has come!” the former monarch also said.
As many as 140 Romanian tourists were repatriated from the Red Sea resorts of Sharm El Sheikh and Hurghada, the Romanian Foreign Ministry announced. The operation was conducted by the Romanian Transport Ministry, with the support of the Romanian Foreign Ministry and the Romanian citizens received consular assistance during the repatriation process. Several countries have decided to repatriate their citizens and restrict flight to and from the Egyptian resorts following information that that it was possible a bomb on board had brought down the Russian plane which crashed last week, 23 minutes after takeoff from the Sinai resort of Sharm el-Sheikh. The crash on Saturday killed all 224 people on board. Russia, which had 78,000 tourists in Egypt and Britain, with around 20,000 tourists, have organised aerial bridges to evacuate holidaymakers as soon as possible. The Russian-Egyptian investigation teams have detected a explosion on board the plane but have said it is too early to say what caused it. A group of Egyptian jihadist have claimed the attack.
In Moldova’s capital city Chisinau, several supporters of the country’s unification with Romania took part in a march staged on Sunday at the initiative of the National Unity Bloc and the Union Council. ”The tragedy at the Colectiv club in Bucharest clearly shows that Romania needs to change its political class. On the other hand, the social and economic disaster the Republic of Moldova finds itself in, proves without a doubt that a reorganisation of this state as a whole is needed. We have the chance to take a vital step in both Bucharest and Chisinau, so that we can all live in a better Romania: a single government for the two Romanian states,” said Constantin Codreanu, a representtaive of the National Unity Bloc, a coalition made up of 22 NGOs.
Romanian and British military are carrying out, until November 11, joint training actions with a view to setting joint action procedures during drills to be conducted in Romania’s territorial waters and the Black Sea international waters in the upcoming period. For this purpose, the British destroyer HMS DUNCAN is currently in the Black Sea port of Constanta. The warship is equipped with state-of-the-art radars and anti-aircraft systems. Among the current missions of such warships in international waters are fighting piracy and drug trafficking and granting humanitarian aid to people affected by natural disasters in various parts of the world.