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Romania’s former premier appears in court for corruption

Former Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta exiting the High Court of Justice in Bucharest, November 6, 2015. (Photo by AFP)

Former Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta, who quit his post earlier this week, has made his first appearance in court to hear corruption charges.

On Friday, Ponta appeared at the High Court of Justice in the capital, Bucharest, for a preliminary hearing on charges of fraud, tax evasion and money laundering.

Ponta has so far denied the charges, which go back to the period between 2007 and 2011, when he worked as a lawyer before he became premier in 2012.

The Friday court hearing saw charges against the former premier read out, and was part of a lengthy legal procedure against him.

Ponta stepped down on Wednesday after huge street protests sparked by a deadly club fire earlier this month in Bucharest that left 32 dead and nearly 200 others injured.

Reports said that the venue was overcrowded, lacked the required number of emergency exits and was not authorized to hold large numbers of people in the first place.

People demonstrate against government corruption during in Bucharest, Romania, November 6, 2015. (Photo by AFP)

 

The incident touched off national protests, with demonstrators demanding a “profound change” in the government. Apart from the prime minister, the protests also forced the mayor of the Bucharest district where the club fire occurred and the country’s interior minister to resign.

The rallies continue to gain momentum as demonstrators believe that public safety had been compromised.

The country’s president on Thursday met dozens of leading civil society members involved in the protests, who said they want “new political figures” to take over in the government.

Romania is one of Europe’s poorest countries, now in its third decade after a revolution that overthrew ex-ruler Nicolae Ceausescu in 1989.


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