
Severe floods threaten historic Romanian salt mine
Severe floods threaten historic Romanian salt mine (Photo: AFP)
Romanian authorities scrambled Friday to save a salt mine in the northern village of Praid from further damage after heavy rains worsened flooding at a site that provides the region's economic lifeblood.
The floods in recent days have swollen a stream near the partially inundated salt mine, which has been shut down since 5 May.
The mine is among the biggest tourist attractions in northern Romania, with almost half a million people visiting the site in 2024, and many locals have depended on tourism related to the mine for decades.
"We have to save not just the salt mine there, but the entire community, with thousands of people in danger of not being able to put a loaf of bread on the table," environment minister Mircea Fechet told a local TV station Friday, saying "a real tragedy" was hitting the region.
According to the National Salt Company, underground stockpiles of salt "have been compromised, including equipment and machinery that can no longer be recovered".
Due to heavy rainfall in May, the Corund stream near the Praid mine recorded its highest flow rate in the last 30 years, official data this week showed.
But there is no imminent risk of collapse at the mine, said Petres Sandor, an official in Harghita county where the mine is located, which is also home to the largest ethnic Hungarian population in Romania.
"The biggest problem is to stop the possibility of water infiltration in order to start the underground work," he said.
"A very big danger is related to the state of mind of the population. Unfortunately, it's a feeling of the end of the world," Sandor added, urging tourists not to cancel their reservations.
Some locals protested in front of the mine's administrative headquarters on Thursday, voicing anger over preventive measures not having been taken in the past.
Hungary's nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban vowed "financial and practical assistance for the assessment of the damages and reconstruction of the mine" in a Facebook post on Wednesday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
4 hours ago
- First Post
Britain informed ahead of Iran strikes but not asked to provide Diego Garcia base
Britain was informed of the US military strikes on Iran ahead of time, but did not receive any US request for their shared Diego Garcia air base in the Indian Ocean to be used, senior minister Jonathan Reynolds said on Sunday. read more This handout satellite picture provided by Maxar Technologies and taken on June 22, 2025, shows Iran's Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant (FFEP), northeast of the city of Qom, after US strikes on the site. Image- AFP Britain was given advance notice of the United States' military strikes on Iran but was not asked to allow the use of their jointly operated Diego Garcia base in the Indian Ocean, UK minister Jonathan Reynolds said on Sunday. US President Donald Trump announced that American forces had 'obliterated' Iran's primary nuclear facilities in overnight strikes, marking a significant escalation in Middle East tensions. Tehran has vowed to respond with all available means. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Reynolds clarified that the UK did not participate in the strikes but had previously deployed military assets to the region. He emphasised that Britain would take 'all action necessary' to defend its key allies if threatened. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, he added, was in ongoing communication with Britain's international partners throughout Sunday. 'I know often because of British military assets, RAF Akrotiri (in Cyprus) or Diego Garcia, sometimes that request is made. And this was not a situation where that request was made,' Reynolds, the business and trade minister, told Sky News. Diego Garcia is a strategically important UK-U.S. military base located in the Chagos Islands. Reynolds said Britain knew about the strike in advance. 'I can't tell you exactly when we did know, but we were informed, as you might expect,' he said. Reynolds said that the government was in 'active conversations' about chartering aircraft to get people out of the region within 'hours, not days', pending the possible reopening of Israeli airspace. Britain's foreign ministry said it was preparing for a charter flight 'early next week', adding that British nationals and their dependants in Israel and the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories who were interested should register their details. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Trump's intervention – despite his past pledges to avoid another 'forever war' – threatens to dramatically widen the conflict, after Israel launched an unprecedented bombing campaign on Iran last week, with Tehran vowing to retaliate if Washington joined in. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi accused the United States of sabotaging diplomacy after talks with European powers. 'This week, we held talks with the E3/EU when the US decided to blow up that diplomacy,' he wrote on X. Aragchi later told reporters in Istanbul the United States and Israel had 'crossed a very big red line', asserting Iran would continue to defend itself 'by all means necessary'. However, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed the US strikes, saying Trump's decision to 'target Iran's nuclear facilities with the awesome and righteous might of the United States will change history'. In response to the US attack, Iran's armed forces said they targeted multiple sites in Israel including Ben Gurion airport, the country's main international gateway near Tel Aviv. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD With inputs from agencies


Mint
6 hours ago
- Mint
Parmy Olson: WhatsApp's no-ads promise was too good to last under Meta's ownership
Parmy Olson The app's founders Jan Koum and Brian Acton were deadset against ads on this chat platform, but when they sold it in 2014 to Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook (now Meta), they couldn't have expected its new owner not to monetize its eyeballs. But then again, they made big money. And money talks. Founders Jan Koum and Brian Acton were firmly against ads on WhatsApp. Gift this article It's hard to think of a more extraordinary business deal than Facebook's $19 billion acquisition of WhatsApp in February 2014. Its creators were outliers. With a lean staff of just a few dozen people, they had no marketing department, no sign on the door and had spent zero cents from their sole investor, Sequoia Capital. It's hard to think of a more extraordinary business deal than Facebook's $19 billion acquisition of WhatsApp in February 2014. Its creators were outliers. With a lean staff of just a few dozen people, they had no marketing department, no sign on the door and had spent zero cents from their sole investor, Sequoia Capital. But WhatsApp had 450 million users, mostly outside the US. Founders Jan Koum and Brian Acton also hated ads. They'd spent a combined 20 years working at Yahoo bonding over their frustration with a business model that sucked up personal data to show us pop-ups. Building ad systems was 'depressing," Koum told me in an interview in mid-2014. But not too depressing to sell their online chat service to Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook (now Meta Platforms) just a few months later. Eight of WhatsApp's roughly 50 employees made more than $100 million off that deal, while Koum gained a net worth of $6.8 billion. Also Read: Mint Quick Edit | Ads on WhatsApp: What's up, Meta? Just over a decade later, ads are finally coming to WhatsApp. They'll appear in its 'Updates' (formerly Status) tab, where users post images and videos. Advertisers will also be able to promote Channels there and collect thousands of followers. Meta described the rollout as 'gradual." Zuckerberg has long been under pressure to monetize WhatsApp, a prominent cash sink whose user base has soared to more than 3 billion but which has yet to pay its own way. Now, with Meta's costly push into AI, including a $14.3 billion investment in data labelling startup Scale AI, the company is moving on the last big piece of real estate it can squeeze cash from. Meta had already begun monetizing WhatsApp through business messaging tools and click-to-WhatsApp ads on Facebook and Instagram, but this is the first time that ads will appear on WhatsApp itself. Ads fly in the face of what WhatsApp's founders wanted. For a few years after his sale, Koum resisted Facebook's efforts to feature ads on WhatsApp, his co-founder Acton later told me, while Acton himself tried to convince Sheryl Sandberg, then the company's COO, to adopt a metered-user model. His idea was to monetize WhatssApp by charging users a tiny sum after a certain large number of free messages were expended. Sandberg stuck by the ad model that had already allowed Facebook to print money for years, telling Acton that his idea wouldn't scale. By the time he left the company, Acton knew that he couldn't stop the inevitable. 'At the end of the day, I sold my company," he said. Still, both internal and public resistance to ads has made Meta's monetization plans for WhatsApp a fitful journey over the last decade. Meta's chief marketing officer Alex Schultz admitted on LinkedIn that the company had announced ads a few times already. 'This time it's for real," he added. Meta first publicly announced its intention to bring ads to WhatsApp Status in November 2018, then put the plans on hold and nixed them in 2020, before announcing in 2023 that a rollout was back on. The U-turns are down to the staunch views of WhatsApp's founders, who infused company culture even after they vested their stock options and left Meta. WhatsApp users are also accustomed to an ad-free app that keeps their conversations private with end-to-end encryption. When Meta tweaked its privacy terms in 2021 to add more business-messaging features, many ditched it for rival apps like Signal and Telegram. Meta had to move slowly. Now it's trying to make up for lost time. It will target ads based on users' country or city, channels they follow and how they interact with ads they see on Status or on stablemate apps Facebook and Instagram if their accounts are linked. That's less invasive than the targeting done on Facebook or Instagram, but it's still a form of clutter that WhatsApp's founders abhorred. And Zuckerberg could still push for deeper insights as revenue from Status starts to pour in. Meta's investors can rest easy knowing the company has yet another platform to capitalize on as Zuckerberg spends heavily on AI. The rest of us have yet another reminder that tech visionaries can sometimes be as naive as they are idealistic. Sam Altman's efforts to start OpenAI as a non-profit that lived off donations from billionaires was arguably a pipe dream; hence his partnership with Microsoft. DeepMind's Demis Hassabis spent years trying to break away from Google in the hope that it would spin off a valuable AI lab after spending $650 million on it. He was wrong and his company was drawn deeper into Google. Koum and Acton may have also been wrong to think they could sell WhatsApp to one of the world's biggest ad businesses and keep it ad-free. Of course, $19 billion can quieten ideals. In the end, money talks. ©Bloomberg The author is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering technology. Topics You May Be Interested In


Indian Express
6 hours ago
- Indian Express
Planning to thrift a luxury watch from Instagram? You should read this first
Once you get your hands on a coveted luxury watch, your next wish might be to add a couple personal touches to it. But hold on, before you mess around with your Rolex timepiece, you might want to read this. Rolex Watch U.S.A., Inc. has filed a new lawsuit against a network of watch resellers, accusing them of introducing counterfeit and deceptively altered watches into the market. According to The Fashion Law, the claim alleges that these resellers are profiting heavily from unauthorised use of Rolex's trademarks and reputation for quality. In fact, these companies are selling 'heavily altered entirely fabricated Rolex-branded watches and parts, complete with counterfeit versions of Rolex's famed crown logo and other registered marks'. The sale and purchase of these counterfeit watches were a result of coordinated use of social media and third-party marketplaces – including Instagram, Facebook, eBay, Chrono24, TikTok, and YouTube – to market the disputed products. According to Rolex, these platforms featured timepieces that bear visible Rolex branding but lack the quality, craftsmanship, and authentication that define its watches. The luxury watchmaker's legal action comes in recognition of the importance of working only with trusted names when buying or selling a Rolex. It's easy enough for an inexperienced buyer to get drawn in by a slick ad from an unvetted third party. But sellers face risks too, especially on platforms where counterfeit or heavily altered watches can slip through unnoticed. According to their official website, here are some of Rolex's standout and most coveted pieces that have left watch collectors and enthusiasts enamoured: At its launch in 1956, the Day-Date was a major innovation: it was the first calendar wristwatch to indicate, in addition to the date, the day of the week spelt out in full in an arc-shaped window at 12 o'clock on the dial – a technical feat at the time. Made exclusively of precious metals – 18 ct yellow, white or Everose gold or 950 platinum – and accompanied by its emblematic President bracelet, its multiple dials make it the ideal canvas for self-expression. The Sky-Dweller simultaneously displays the time in a second time zone as well as the local time, which is indicated by central hands. This second time zone – or reference time – is indicated by a highly legible, small triangle with a red silhouette on a 24-hour graduated rotating disc. A signature element of the model, this off-centre disc makes it possible to unequivocally distinguish between daytime and night-time hours: an invaluable asset for someone travelling to the other side of the world. A post shared by ROLEX (@rolex) Its sleek, bold design houses a movement that introduces groundbreaking innovations, calibre 7135. Thinner than the majority of the brand's movements, it is designed to operate at a high frequency of 5 hertz, delivering exceptional performance. Bezel, minute track and three counters: this characteristic five-circle iconography is emblematic of the Cosmograph Daytona. Over time, the design of the dials, the colour combinations and the architecture of the cases have been regularly reworked to reaffirm the elegance of the model. A key part of the Cosmograph Daytona's identity, the tachymetric scale is located on the bezel of the watch. It allows average speeds of up to 400 kilometres or miles per hour to be determined via a central sweep seconds hand.