Anti graft prosecutors are working on one of the most complex files targeting the activity of the state owned company Oltchim and the illicit wealth gained by its general director. Almost 80% of the hospitals in Romania were currently evaluated and those that do not comply with minimum standards will have to disappear. A Romanian doctor commutes to Belgium every two months for work. American investors are interested in the hydro plant at Tarnita Lapusesti, West Romania. The most important offshore yachting competition is organized by Yacht Club Romania and LZ Yachting Bulgaria.
Evenimentul Zile reads about one of the most important files which anti graft prosecutors are putting together, against Constantin Roibu, general director of a state owned company, Oltchim who apparently made his fortune on the shoulders of the company. Apparently, as director of the company, Roibu made some commercial and financial operations to obtain personal benefits and the detriment of the company he runs.
Apparently Roibu set up a real criminal network that sucks for years tens of millions of euro from the accounts of the company. Roibu has been a director at Oltchim for 20 years while the company’s operations have been financed by the state’s budget. The company reported loses worth 200 million lei each year.
Romania’s health sector is in a bad shape, but that’s nothing new. Romania libera reads that about 80% of the hospitals in Romania have been categorized according to new criteria and while most received the highest scores, some did not even make it to the minimum. Therefore, there will be plenty of small hospitals that will have to merge together with similar others or shut down.
Doctors appreciate the new system, saying that those hospitals without necessary equipments will be shut down and patients moved to those where they can kno