RT journalist speaks out after deportation from Romania (VIDEO)

This post was originally published on RT

You will shortly be re-directed to the publisher's website

Chay Bowes has said the authorities labeled him a threat to national security

The Romanian authorities accused RT journalist Chay Bowes of representing a security threat before deporting him from Bucharest on Thursday.

The Irish reporter was taken by police from a flight from Dublin that had arrived in the Romanian capital, where he had traveled to cover the upcoming re-run of the presidential election. Bowes was put on a plane to Istanbul later that day.

Shortly after touching down in Bucharest, a group of police officers walked onto the tarmac and boarded the plane, Bowes said.

“They asked the cabin crew where I was. I identified myself, and three police came on to the plane and told me that I had to come with them, [and] that I was being detained,” he said after arriving in Istanbul.

As other passengers watched “with amazement,” police escorted Bowes for an interrogation. “I was asked questions in the vehicle by the officers – where I was going and who I was going to meet. I told them I was a journalist. They wanted to know who I was going to speak to, which I declined to tell them. I said I’m here to cover the election.” 

Bowes said he was then taken to “a smaller interrogation room with two chairs and a table.”

I was presented with a document, which was presumably stamped by a judge. They wouldn’t let me have a copy of it. They wouldn’t let me take a photograph of it. It said that I was a threat to the security of the state, and on that basis they were deporting me from Romania.

Bowes denounced the deportation as a “fundamental breach” of his rights as a journalist and an EU citizen. “I entered the country completely legally – to do my job. This is really quite shocking,” he said.

Read more

Journalist and ‘Going Underground’ host Afshin Rattansi.
‘No free press’ in NATO states – Going Underground host on RT journalist ban

The presidential election in Romania will take place over two rounds on May 4 and 18. The dates were set in January after Romania’s Constitutional Court annulled the results of the initial vote held in November 2024.

The original first round had been won by independent candidate Calin Georgescu, a vocal NATO critic and opponent of supplying weapons to Ukraine, who received 23% of the vote. Romania’s top court, however, cited “irregularities” in his campaign and referenced intelligence reports alleging Russian interference, which Moscow denied.

It later emerged that a TikTok influencer campaign had been funded not by the Kremlin, but by the pro-EU Romanian National Liberal Party, which has governed the country for much of the past three decades. Its most prominent member, Nicolae Ciuca, was a losing candidate in the November election.

Categorised as News