Romania: Tens of thousands attend anti-government rallies
|Romanian police have used tear gas and water cannon to disperse protesters in the capital, Bucharest, as tens of thousands took to the streets to call on country’s government to resign.
Friday’s rally was attended by many expatriates who returned to Romania to express their anger over what they say is entrenched high-level corruption, low wages and attempts by the ruling Social Democrat (PSD) party to weaken the judiciary.
Thousands of people also joined demonstrations in other main Romanian cities, including Cluj in the northwest, central Sibiu and Timisoara in the west.
In Bucharest, the crowd chanted “resign” and “thieves” as they assembled in a central square outside the main government building.
Messages projected on buildings around the square said “We are the people” and “No violence”.
#Romania | Massive protest in Bucharest against the Government. Some of the demonstrators are Romanian expatriates which came back to protest. pic.twitter.com/TjZmsCMnNL
— Drago? Ioni?? (@DragosIonita) August 10, 2018
Hundreds of the protesters tried to break through the police cordon and officers in riot gear responded with tear gas and pepper spray, forcing the demonstrators back.
At least 100 people required medical attention after inhaling the gases, while 10 police officers were injured by hurled stones and bottles, the emergency services said.
“Corruption has been a big problem in Romania for a long time,” Kit Gillet, a journalist who attended the protest in Bucharest, told Al Jazeera.
“People are angry about that and feel that the system needs to change.”
Romania ranks as one of the EU’s most corrupt states and Brussels keeps its justice system under special monitoring.
‘Nothing has changed’
Stefan and Ileana Anghel, Romanian nationals living in Spain, waved a Spanish flag after travelling across Europe to take part in the demonstration.
“Unfortunately nothing has changed in Romania,” Ileana told AFP news agency.
“We want to see modern roads and schools and above all to not have to pay bribes to the left and right,” added Ileana.
Last month Romanian President Klaus Iohannis sacked top anti-graft prosecutor Laura Codruta Kovesi, who was considered a symbol of the fight against corruption.
With Kovesi at the helm, the Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (DNA) had led a crackdown on corruption among local and national elected officials in recent years, earning accusations of abuse of power and the enmity of many in Romania’s political class.
Thousands joined an anti-government rally in Bucharest [Inquam Photos/Octav Ganea via Reuters] |
‘I left to give my children a better life’
Among the protesters in Bucharest on Friday was 60-year-old Vlad and his wife who flew in from New York where they have lived for 30 years.
“Corruption and embezzlement, which profit the ruling class, are what bothers me,” said Vlad, an estate agent in the US.
“A force is being born here [at the protest] and I hope that the message is heard,” he added.
Around four million Romanians work abroad from an overall population of 20 million. Half of the expatriates are living in Italy and Spain, according to official figures.
Last year those working abroad sent 4.3bn euro ($4.9) back to their families at home, nearly 2.5 percent of the national GDP in one of Europe’s poorest countries.
“I left to give my children a better life, which was not possible here then,” said lorry driver Daniel Ostafi, 42, who moved to Italy 15 years ago in search of a future he says Romania could not offer his family.
“Unfortunately, it is still not possible, the … people who govern us are not qualified and they are corrupt,” he told Reuters news agency.
Some politicians from the ruling coalition derided the rally in the run up, saying they did not understand why the diaspora would protest.
SOURCE: Al Jazeera and news agencies