The government has had it all along. It is humiliating to listen to an entire country to know what will happen to us in an hour.



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Cristian Tudor Popescu told Digi24 about the current situation in which citizens do not know what they will do from May 15, not even an hour before the expiration of the state of emergency. The journalist says this is “humiliating and disrespectful to citizens.” Cristian Tudor Popescu also criticizes the lack of information on the use of protective masks. “Does anyone know, if we have to leave tomorrow morning, what do we do in this case?” CTP rhetorically asks.

Cristian Tudor Popescu: The time now is 11:00. I suspect that many Romanians feel the same way I do right now.

I feel humiliated and neglected, because it cannot be normal to stay at 11:00, when the state of emergency closes at 12:00, to stay with our ears pricked all over a country to find out what will happen to us in an hour. .

It is a grotesque and humiliating situation for citizens, especially since the country’s president, Mr. Iohannis, announced without being forced, almost a month ago, that on this date, from May 14 to 15, the state ceases of emergency.

So, the Government has had all the time, since then, to establish this project and not have this tarantella between the RCC, the Parliament and the Government that, it would be an illusion for journalists to imagine that people are now interested in all these cramps. legal and legal services. People are not interested in such a thing. They want to know what I will do tomorrow.

And tomorrow, for example, nobody knows, an important and new physical element: the mask, because it gets the power of the law. The mask has not had the force of law until now. You used it or didn’t use it the way you wanted. Now the mask is required by law. Does anyone know if we have to leave tomorrow morning, what do we do in this case? Do we find masks in the pharmacy? Do we find masks in the pharmacy for 10 lei per piece and not for 10 lei per piece?

Because lately, mask prices have risen to 10 lei per piece. No one knows anything about that. Do we know that we will receive, for example, masks and gloves, eventually, at the supermarket entrance? Because that is what the rulers told us. “Sir, that is the job of supermarket owners …” Do we know something like that? Will we receive masks tomorrow morning at the supermarket?

On the bus, someone comes, gets on and has no mask. Let’s say the driver looks at you … Suppose you do. “You don’t have a mask!” “Well I didn’t find it!” Or: “I don’t have money to carry, because they are too expensive!” Then there must be a driver, in each form of public transport, a package, a stock of masks to give the person a mask to get on the bus with the other passengers.

All of this is in the air, totally. No one really knows what is going to happen. We only hear these texts of law and scandal.

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