Romania's top prosecutor quits   (Reuters)  Updated: 2006-07-22 11:51  
BUCHAREST, July 21 - Romania's chief prosecutor quit on Friday after 
criticism of his handling of a case in which a Syrian-Romanian businessman 
charged with organising the kidnapping of three journalists in Iraq was able to 
flee the country. 
 The heads of Romania's main secret services and a top civil servant resigned 
on Thursday after a meeting with President Traian Basescu about the 
disappearance of Omar Hayssam shortly before he was to be returned to jail to 
await trial. 
 The presidency said in a statement that chief prosecutor Ilie Botos had 
resigned but gave no details. Interior Minister Vasile Blaga said earlier that 
prosecutors who handled the case should have resigned. 
 "I have personal reasons for resigning, I was not forced to do so," Botos 
told private television station Realitatea TV. "I quit after making a thorough 
assessment over the past days ... Today, I met prosecutors involved in the 
(Hayssam's) case. 
 Botos said Hayssam had left Romania. He did not elaborate. 
 He and the secret service heads were appointed during the rule of the 
ex-communist Social Democrats, who lost the 2004 election to the present 
centrist coalition. 
 The Justice Ministry said in a statement it would look for a successor to 
Botos soon. The government welcomed the changes, saying in a statement that 
reforms were badly needed. 
 "An essential condition for the secret services to function in line with 
democracy norms is to have professionals as chiefs there ... regarding the 
General Prosecuting Office, it is badly needed that justice reforms and fighting 
corruption are stepped up," Prime Minister Calin Tariceanu said. 
 "Hayssam's case is (having) a snowball effect," Alina Mungiu-Pippidi of the 
think tank Societatea Academica Romana told Reuters. "This wave of resignations 
is very positive for Romania." 
 NEW PROSECUTOR SOON 
 Botos had also been criticised for the ineffectiveness of his office's fight 
against "big-fish" corruption before the centrists took power 19 months ago. 
    
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