Association
In early March 2018, an amendment to the NGO Law (Government Ordinance No. 26 / 2000) was published on the website of the National Office for the Prevention and Control of Money Laundering in Romania.
Maria-Nicoleta Andreescu, executive director of local human rights group APADOR-CH, told the CIVICUS Monitor that the pretext for this amendment is the implementation of a European Union directive on the prevention of money laundering or terrorism financing.
Under this directive, which gives some discretion to each state as to how it is implemented, the Romanian government wants to impose an obligation on each association and foundation to report periodically to the Ministry of Justice. Those reports would include significant amounts of information related to the work of civil society organisations (CSOs), including the names of each of their beneficiaries. One interpretation of the draft law suggests that a significant number of organisations would need to report to the Ministry every 15 days. The proposed sanction for failing to meet this obligation would initially be a substantial fine of up to 5,000 Romanian lei (more than 1,000 EUR), followed by dissolution of the organisation. In a statement, APADOR-CH called on the Romanian authorities to reconsider the law, requesting that the government:
"...temper its increasingly brutal attempts to retaliate against [...] criticism from civil society by introducing legal regulations that prevent normal development of associations and foundations". (Translated from Romanian)
Andreescu believes that this latest amendment to the NGO Law represents yet another of the government's blatant attempts to restrict space for civil society in Romania. As previously reported, in early June 2017, the government published a draft bill proposing the closure of any non-governmental organisation (NGO) that does not publish reports of their revenues and expenses twice annually. On 20th November 2017, this bill was tacitly adopted by the Senate. Romania`s lower house, the Chamber of Deputies, will discuss the bill before its possible adoption into law. An analysisof that bill by the Open Society Justice Initiative, which was endorsed by 42 Romanian civil society organisations, found that, if implemented, it would violate European Union law.
Peaceful Assembly
The Romanian government’s relentless attempts to undermine judicial independence and make it harder to prosecute high-level crimes and corruption continue to spark public protests on the streets. On 20th January 2018, for example, an estimated 50,000 people marched in Bucharest against the ruling Social Democrats' efforts to decriminalise several corruption offences among public officials, while thousands more demonstrated in cities across the country. With public anger over corruption showing no signs of abating, protests continued in February and into March Click here for the original publication.