In loc de ascunsul gunoiului sub covor si alte chestii de fatada, de luat
ochii soacrei, cate nu se puteau face cu banii astia?  Timp de cateva zile,
centrul Bucurestiului si traseul oficial vor arata mai mult sau mai putin
impecabil.  Dar putem sa stam linistiti, nici o minune nu dureaza mai mult
de 3 zile.  De pe 5 aprilie incolo, imaginea orasului va reveni la "normal".
Evident, "normalul" cu care suntem noi obisnuiti.  Se vor intoarce si cainii
maidanezi, si cersetorii, si masinile parcate aiurea, si mitocania... ce
mai, orasul va redeveni "Bucurestiul nostru iubit", lasat prada edililor si
clientelei lor.
 
P.S.  Am inteles ca se planteaza si pomi pe traseu.  Ma intreb daca vor
ramane acolo, sau vor fi recuperati dupa summit.  Si, apropo, cum de nu le-a
venit organizatorilor ideea sa vopseasca in verde (ca pe vremea "odioasei
dictaturi si a sinistrei sale sotii") frunzele prafuite ale pomilor
existenti (aia putini, cati au mai rezistat furiei "dezvoltatorilor")?  Sau
poate le-a venit si nu stiu eu...
 
----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness." (Carlo Goldoni)
"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace." (Jimi Hendrix)
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alternativa moderata (un pic) la [ngolist]
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http://lizuca.wordpress.com/2008/03/26/spring-cleaning-and-summitry/
 
 <http://lizuca.wordpress.com/2008/03/26/spring-cleaning-and-summitry/>
Spring Cleaning and Summitry
March 26, 2008 by  <http://lizuca.wordpress.com/author/lizuca/> lizuca
 
Less than a week before the NATO summit and the city is still going through
its "extreme makeover".  Roads are being repaired, pockets of pansies and
primula are appearing in hastily dug flower beds along the main roads (but
so too are the weeds), they have finally got around to putting in street
lamps near Baneasa airport where for months we have been treated to the
sight of loose cabling sticking out of the ground like so many bare trees.
There are signposts in the centre of town telling everyone how to get to
districts of Bucharest that the NATO Summit visitors will never actually
visit.
 
They are repainting the white lines in the roads, though I can't for the
life of me understand why.  Romanian drivers on the whole ignore them as an
unwelcome piece of road art, and when the Summit convoys are on the move,
no-one else will be allowed on the road anyway so it doesn't much matter.
 
NATO has ordered dozens of portaloos be installed in the conference venue
because the half a dozen that are there will not serve 3000 people, contrary
to what Madam Architect of the building believes. And they've rounded up
about 500 stray mutts from the vicinity of the airport and crowded them into
cages at the pounds in the hope that out of sight will be out of mind. But
what about the dogs that are not on the convoy routes, several thousands of
them?  Perhaps the dogs know better than to wander off in the direction of
the hundreds of law enforcement officers that will be patrolling the main
routes.  And what will they do with them afterwards?  They can't afford to
feed them; they're not allowed by law to euthanise them; and no-one wants to
adopt them.  My guess is they'll turn them all out on the street again the
minute the last plane leaves.
 
And there's a new phenomenon now - abandoned horses.  Their owners are
forbidden to use their horse and carts on the roads; if they do, their carts
are confiscated; they have no money to feed their animals and so are forced
to abandon them.  I saw two abandoned behind a petrol station a couple of
weeks ago, looking half starved and in miserable condition.  But could I
find anyone to call to have them looked after? Nobody I knew how to track
down.  But as long as these poor animals are nowhere near the airport or
within sight of the visiting dignitaries, who cares anyway.
 
Never mind the poverty that forces people to such extreme measures.  Much
better to spend 25 million Euros on a slap dash decorating job that will
last a few months but will save the authorities from the embarrassment of
some critical comment about the state of the city they have neglected for
years.
 
So why are they doing all this?  Are they so desperate to show the rest of
the world what a civilized city Bucharest is?  Do they really think a coat
of paint and a few pot plants here and there will succeed in distracting
European leaders from the childish political games that continue to bemuse
the general population, or from the dysfunctional justice system which has
put the responsibility to waive or not to waive parliamentary immunity in
cases of corruption investigations right back into the hands of .yes,  the
parliamentarians?  (No prizes for guessing which way they decide.)
 
And while they're preoccupying themselves with decorating and sweeping, the
real business of what will be agreed at the NATO summit seems to be going on
without much input from the host country.  As is so often the case, they are
more worried about form than substance.  As long as they get to shake lots
of important hands and no-one complains about the dirt or the dogs, they can
claim the summit is a success for Romania's image.
 
>From this weekend the city will start to shut down.  The airport road will
be down to one lane.  The convoy routes, supposedly confidential for
security reasons though you only have to look for the plants and the paint
to know which they are, will be closed to normal traffic.  Air traffic will
be severely disrupted, though not for TAROM passengers since their flights
have been cancelled altogether.  Antiterrorist police are scouring manhole
covers (where they've been stolen, I assume they'll have them replaced),
parking will be forbidden along main routes (if only they would keep that
measure in place permanently) and extra security surrounds sensitive points,
though not the thousands of exposed gas pipes and electricity junction boxes
throughout the city.
 
All in all, the week will be hell on earth for those people forced to go to
work, like most of the public servants in the capital who haven't been given
time off.  On the plus side, travel agents are doubling their business
selling holiday packages to Bulgaria and Greece.  I for one am off at the
weekend and will be back when the madness has died down. Let's see if all
this effort and expense has achieved anything useful for the average
Romanian citizen in the long-term.
 
For those who read Romanian, I recommend a recent article by Alina Mungiu
Pippidi on the subject  -
http://www.romanialibera.ro/a120496/poale-peste-nato.html

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