“Romanians are at the peak of morbidity in the fourth wave; they have over 5,000 confirmed cases every day with the number of deaths at 500 to 600 per day. The burden on hospitals is evident,” said Dr. Eyal Fuchs.
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BUCHAREST In late April, the Washington National Cathedral unveiled a stone carving of Holocaust survivor and longtime political activist Elie Wiesel to honor his legacy as an international human rights defender.
But in the Nobel laureate s birthplace of Romania, Nazi-allied leader Marshal Ion Antonescu a man who sent hundreds of thousands of Jews to their deaths has streets named after him.
There are, in fact, at least 17 places in the country with streets, busts, or institutions named after war criminals, according to the Elie Wiesel Institute for the Study of the Holocaust.
They include Antonescu, a Holocaust perpetrator who was executed in 1946 after his conviction by a People s Tribunal for war crimes and treason, among other crimes; Radu Gyr, a poet who supported a fascist paramilitary group known as the Iron Guard; and far-right philosopher and politician Mircea Vulcanescu, who served in Antonescu s government.