----- Original Message ----- 
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, November 29, 2004 7:00 PM
Subject: [romania-economics] news Romania faces hung parliament risk after 
vote


Romania faces hung parliament risk after vote (Releads with fresh results, 
market analyst comment)

By Radu Marinas and Antonia Oprita

BUCHAREST, Nov 29 (Reuters) - Romania faced the prospect of a hung 
parliament on Monday as inconclusive results emerged from general elections 
in the poor Balkan country, already struggling to stay on track in its drive 
to join the European Union.

Partial results from Sunday's poll showed the ruling ex-communist Social 
Democrats (PSD) leading slightly over the opposition centrists, but well 
short of majority in parliament.

With nearly half the votes counted in the twin presidential and 
parliamentary election, the PSD had about 35 percent of the vote, just three 
percent ahead of the centrist alliance of Liberal and Democrat parties.

"It will be extremely difficult to form the government and probably Romania 
will see for the first time (since communism collapsed in 1989) a shorter 
parliamentary term and an early election," independent analyst Florin Petria 
said.

Exit polls had given a clearer lead of around 40 percent to the ruling 
party, credited with boosting economic growth but blamed for widespread 
corruption in the former Soviet bloc country of 22 million people.

Partial results made Prime Minister Adrian Nastase front-runner to replace 
President Ion Iliescu but he will face a run-off against outspoken 
opposition leader Traian Basescu.

If fears of a hung parliament are confirmed, the battle for the largely 
ceremonial post of president will take on new significance as he will have a 
decisive say in resolving the deadlock. This effectively freezes any talks 
on a new government until well after the Dec. 12 run-off.

"The whole process could take up to 80 days until a new government could be 
formed," said Simon Quijano-Evans, emerging market analyst at BACA, HVB 
Group.

EU TARGET SAFE FOR NOW

Romania and its neighbour Bulgaria missed the first wave of the EU's 
eastward expansion in May.

But whereas Sofia has already concluded talks on entry in 2007, Romania has 
fallen behind. The EU has criticised the PSD government for dragging its 
feet in key reforms, human rights and rooting out graft.

Romanians blame the PSD for widespread corruption but the party's success in 
boosting economic growth and promises to take care of the underprivileged 
have underpinned its support, particularly in rural areas.

Both main parties ruled out a coalition with the far-right Greater Romania 
party, which was lying third with 13 percent. Its participation in any 
government could jeopardise the country's EU accession negotiations, 
diplomats say.

That leaves a small party of ethnic Hungarians and a handful of deputies 
representing several other minorities as potential coalition partners.

The Hungarians said they were ready to cooperate with either of the main 
parties but would enter any government talks only after the presidential 
run-off.

With the race so close, the opposition was quick to charge that the PSD had 
used dirty tricks and its administrative clout to rig the vote.

Fears of vote fraud -- mainly on how absentee ballots were cast -- have been 
fuelled by events in neighbouring Ukraine, shaken by mass protests against 
what the West and the Ukrainian opposition see as a rigged election.

"We know there was fraud, which we estimate at 3-5 percent," opposition 
leader Basescu said. Alliance officials said they had alerted authorities 
about specific cases and urged a thorough investigation.

The PSD has vehemently denied trying to rig the vote. The Organisation for 
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), a pan-European watchdog 
monitoring human rights, said it would issue a statement later on Monday.

Western diplomats said they had seen more irregularities than in previous 
elections the West regarded as democratic, but were sceptical they were 
enough to tip the scales.

"There were things out there that were troublesome but it's hard to say 
whether they would tilt the elections," a senior Western diplomat told 
Reuters.

A Romanian rights group, Pro Democratia, said some of its 3,300 monitors saw 
buses full of PSD supporters touring the countryside, raising the prospect 
of multiple voting.



11/29/04 09:07 ET







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***
Birou de traduceri autorizate. Oana Gheorghiu - tel/fax: 252.8681 / [EMAIL 
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