FAC - Romania's Foreign Minister, Bogdan Aurescu, is today attending the Foreign Affairs Council (FAC) meeting hosted by Brussels. According to a Foreign Ministry press release, talks will focus on Russia's aggression in Ukraine, with Ukraine's Foreign Minister, Dmytro Kuleba expected to take part in videoconference format. With respect to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Minister Aurescu will reassert the need to continue the EU's multidimensional assistance to Ukraine, in particular with a view to getting through the cold season safely and providing military assistance to the Ukrainian army via the European Peace Facility. The Romanian official will also call for the introduction of new sanctions against Russia and additional support to third countries affected by the fallout from the war. According to the Foreign Ministry, European officials will also look at the latest developments in Iran, Montenegro, Afghanistan and Venezuela, as well as the launch of the EU mission to Armenia. The EU will act as an observer and will report on developments alongside the Armenian-Azeri border, with a view to facilitating the process of normalizing relations between the two states through confidence-building measures.
CHERNIVTSI - Chernivtsi could be the first region of Ukraine to implement a program designed to reintegrate internally displaced people, nearly a year since the start of the Russian aggression. The top concerns facing war refugees include access to social services, housing and long-term jobs. To come to their aid, Kyiv has launched this reintegration program, which will first be implemented in Chernivtsi, where Ukraine's Minister for the Reintegration of temporarily occupied territories, Irina Vereshchuk paid a visit at the end of last week. The Ukrainian official said this would be a complicated process, since the integration of internally displaced people entails much more than the provision of social services. Since the start of the war, over 100 thousand Ukrainians have moved to Chernivtsi, which is so far the only region of Ukraine that has not been affected by attacks or shelling. Of these, most were in route to Romania, although part of them chose to stay. Over 30 factories from Eastern Ukraine relocated their production here.
GEORGE BANU - The reputed Romanian theatre expert, George Banu, passed away at the end of last week, aged 79. A graduate of the Theatre and Film Department of the I.L. Caragiale Institute for Theatre and Cinema arts in Bucharest, George Banu settled in Paris in 1973. He is three-time winner of the Award for Best Theatre Book in France. He served as director of the Experimental Theatre Academy, taught at Le Sorbonne in Paris and at the University of Louvain la Neuve in Belgium. His activity earned him many other distinctions: Les Palmes Academiques and L'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, L'Ordre du Merite National (France), the Award of the city of San Paolo and the Award of the city of Bologna. He was designated Doctor Honoris Causa by several European universities. In 2006, George Banu was awarded the Honorary Prize by the Romanian Department of the International Association of Theatre Critics. George Banu got the award for his exceptional activity in the field of international theatre criticism and research and for promoting Romanian theatre at European cultural level.
AUSTRALIAN OPEN - The Romanian-Swiss pair made up of Monica Niculescu and Viktorija Golubic is today playing Storm Hunter of Australia and Elise Mertens of Belgium, the competition's fourth seeds, in the round of 16 of the women's doubles at the Australian Open. Also in the round of 16, Gabriela Ruse of Romania and Marta Kostiuk of Ukraine will play the all-Czech pair Miriam Kolodziejova and Marketa Vondrousova. Romania has no more players left in the singles competition. (VP)