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Romania protests join Balkans-wide wave


Protesters shout yesterday during the 15th day of demonstrations in Bucharest against the Rosia Montana Gold Corporation mine project using cyanide.


AFP/Bucharest


A fortnight of protests in Romania against plans for Europe’s biggest open-cast gold mine have joined an unusual wave of grassroots opposition across the Balkans, analysts say.
The Romanian civic movement, unprecedented since the 1990s, follows protests by similarly young, educated, middle-class Slovenians, Bosnians, Bulgarians or Turks venting their anger at politicians accused of cronyism and incompetence.
“These demonstrations are quite different from organised political rallies or protests for better salaries or pensions. People gathering here are concerned about the future, they are not asking a pay rise but fight more out of idealism,” says sociologist Mircea Kivu.
“What you see this year, from Slovenia to Bulgaria, is a revolt of educated, middle-class people who grew up in political apathy. All started with a relatively minor controversy, but quickly turned into a general cry for change,” Joost van Egmond, a Dutch journalist who covered the various protest movements in the region, told AFP.
Bulgaria, Romania and Bosnia are among the poorest nations in Europe.
Artists, managers, engineers and students have all joined the rallies in Romania, which have seen many arriving on their bikes and mothers pushing their babies in prams. Most are aged between 18 and 35.
The protests are colourful, featuring peaceful sit-ins on the capital’s main boulevard, improvised concerts of plastic bottles filled with coins or pebbles and home-made banners.
“Arab Spring, Turkish summer, Romanian autumn”, read a banner in one of the Bucharest rallies held on University Square, where protests against dictator Nicolae Ceausescu erupted in 1989, leading to his downfall.
“We are seeing an unprecedented phenomenon since the 1990s with a real opposition coagulating within civil society,” Victoria Stoiciu, an analyst at the Friedrich Egbert Foundation says. It breaks the “suffocating civic apathy in Romania,” she said.
A decision by the centre-left government to clear the way for Europe’s biggest open-cast gold mine in the Carpathian village of Rosia Montana was the trigger in Romania.
Through its 80%-owned subsidiary Rosia Montana Gold Corp, Canadian firm Gabriel Resources plans to extract 300 tonnes of gold using 12,000 tonnes of cyanide a year.
After promising to block the mine during the electoral campaign, prime minister Victor Ponta’s ruling coalition approved a draft law making it easier for the company to expropriate private lands and circumvent existing environmental and urban planning regulations.
“Rosia Montana has touched a sensitive point because it threatens values that young people believe in: ecology, transparency, the right to be consulted,” Codruta Cernea, a visual artist told AFP. Cernea, 34, had never taken part in street protests before.
Disappointed by Romanian politics, she had chosen to focus on other subjects for years and even once thought of moving abroad. But she is now determined to stay in Romania. “Politicians thought we would be indifferent and would not react but I think a new generation is starting to be aware of its voice,” she adds.
“We were used to remaining silent. These protests show that we did not completely fall asleep, that we still believe in something,” Cristina Flutur, who shared the 2012 Cannes Best Actress Award for her role in the Romanian drama ‘Beyond the Hills’, told AFP at the protest.
Social networks are the main tools used to mobilise and share information.
“The traditional press has lost credibility because of its heavy reliance on advertising from the Gold Corp,” said Emanuel, a 21-year-old student.
The Active Watch press monitoring agency has documented cases of what it called “censorship” and “bias”.
After a week of protests, one party of the ruling coalition said the project should be scrapped, while Ponta said the bill would be “rejected in parliament”.
But the vote is still pending.
Ministers have been defending the project in recent days, prompting protesters to stay in the streets. A big rally was planned Sunday evening.
For Alina Mungiu Pippidi, a professor at The Berlin Hertie School of governance, protesters will “have to think what to do next”, hinting at a possible new party with “an environmentalist and good governance agenda”.

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