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Austerity demonstrations

January 16, 2012

Romania's once popular president, Traian Basescu, faces calls for his resignation after demonstrators took to the streets for a fourth day of protests in response to unpopular austerity and health care reform measures.

https://p.dw.com/p/13k67
Romanians protest holding 1989 revolution flag
Austerity and corruption have led to nationwide protestsImage: picture-alliance/dpa

Romania's government called an emergency meeting on Sunday in response to nationwide anti-austerity protests, which have continued for a fourth day despite President Traian Basescu's decision to scrap a controversial health care law that originally triggered the unrest.

In the capital, Bucharest, more than 1,000 protesters gathered in the city center, some of whom threw rocks at riot police. In turn, the police deployed tear gas and flares against the demonstrators. At least 13 people were injured in the violence, according to the Associated Press.

On Saturday, riot police estimated up to 4,000 protesters had gathered in 20 cities nationwide.

The unrest began on Thursday, when the popular Deputy Health Minister, Raed Arafat, resigned after criticizing an unpopular bill that would have brought private firms into the public health care sector.

Romanian President Traian Basescu
Protesters are calling for Basescu's resignationImage: picture alliance/dpa

Austerity and corruption

Although President Traian Basescu withdrew the bill on Friday, the protests escalated over the weekend. In response, Interior Minister Traian Igas called the emergency meeting aimed at stemming the crisis.

The government has also implemented painful austerity measures, which raised value added tax and cut state wages, as part of a two-year aid deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Protesters have expressed anger over the austerity measures as well as state cronyism and widespread corruption, calling for the resignation of Basescu and Prime Minister Emil Boc, who leads a coalition government. Boc, meanwhile, has called for dialogue.

Author: Spencer Kimball (Reuters, AP, AFP)
Editor: Nicole Goebel