Romania Parliament To Bring Lustration Bill In Line With Constitution- Lower House Speaker

Romania’s Chamber of Deputies Speaker Roberta Anastase said Monday, after the Constitutional Court ruled the country’s recently adopted lustration bill is unconstitutional, that the Parliament will amend the bill to bring it in line with the Constitution.

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Imaginea articolului Romania Parliament To Bring Lustration Bill In Line With Constitution- Lower House Speaker

Romania Parliament To Bring Lustration Bill In Line With Constitution- Lower House Speaker

Anastase said the Parliament will bring amendments to the bill after the Court makes public the motivation for its ruling.

The Constitutional Court Monday ruled the country's lustration law is unconstitutional, after the normative act was challenged by several lawmakers.

On May 19, Romania's Chamber of Deputies adopted with 203 to 40 votes and 12 abstentions the country's lustration bill which became law as it had already been adopted in the Senate on April 2006.

The lustration law states that all those who were members of the Romanian Communist Party (PCR), members in the country's communist State Council and Council of Ministers, diplomats, state secretaries, party secretaries, police inspectors, as well as people who worked for the secrete police Securiatate in the March 6, 1945 and December 22, 1989 interval will not be allowed to fill public positions for five consecutive years starting the moment the lustration law is enforced.

Within 30 days from the enforcement of the lustration law, people who currently fill public positions must submit with the institution they are working for an affidavit stating whether they are in any of the situations described by the lustration law.

In 2006, Romanian President Traian Basescu condemned communism before the Parliament, but lawmakers failed to pass the lustration law, despite favorable steps taken in this respect.

In 2009, three years after the lustration law was adopted by the Senate and was still pending debates in the Chamber, the head of state stressed the steps he had taken in recent years to condemn communism and declassify the files of the Securitate, the country's former communist secret police, must be carried on and sealed with the lustration law.

In the period of post-communism, after the fall of various European communist countries in the 1989-1991 period, lustration came to define government policies of limiting the participation of former communists, and especially informants of the communist secret police, in the successor political appointee positions or even in civil service positions. Lustration mainly targets to prevent continuation of abuses that had occurred under a former dictatorial regime.

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