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Nicolae CeauÅŸescu
a demonstration for human rights in the city of TimiÅŸoara sparked
widespread demonstrations against his dictatorship and the Communist
Party rule and turned the army against him. His attempt to flee
Bucharest on December 22, 1989, with his wife Elena, herself a member of
the Politburo, was unsuccessful. Captured and tried secretly, they were
executed on December 25.
Revolution.
In December 1989, a combination of mass uprisings, primarily in the
cities of Timisoara and Bucharest, and a coup d état led by dissident
Communists and elements of the armed forces had produced a political
revolution of major proportionsâ€â€culminating in the dramatic execution
of Romania s president and Communist Party leader, Nicolae Ceausescu,
and his wife, Elena, on Christmas Day. During the last two weeks of
December, thousands of people were killed in street battles that first
pitted civilians against government troops and Ceausescu s Securitate
(internal security) forces, and then saw the Securitate battling
civilians and the army, which turned against Ceausescu on December 22.
When the smoke cleared, the leadership of the Romanian Communist Party
had been swept away, and an interim ruling structure, the Front of
National Salvation, had been established.
The composition of the Front reflected the coalition that had helped
unseat the Ceausescus. By the end of 1989, its leadership was held
firmly by Ion Iliescu, a Communist with reformist ideas who had fallen
out of favor with the Ceausescus several years earlier. The new regime
pledged major changes, including gradual reduction of state control over
economic and social life and democratization of the political order,
with elections to be held in the spring.
The New Regime.
During the first few months of 1990, the Front attempted to consolidate
its hold over Romania s political system. It soon became clear that
former Communist leaders were determined to retain control; gradually,
those members of the provisional government who objected to this trend
resigned in protest or were relegated to secondary positions. Doina
Cornea, the most prominent Romanian dissident during the Ceausescu era,
was one of those who resigned, claiming that the revolution had been
aborted. In January and February violent demonstrations led primarily by
students and intellectuals, rocked Bucharest.
A major cause of such protest behavior was the debate about measures to
be undertaken against former leaders of the Ceausescu regime, as well as
against officers of the Securitate forces, which had resisted the
revolution with such brutality. After the execution of the Ceausescus,
the death penalty was abolished. Court cases against other members of
the Ceausescu clan were slow in developing, adding to the uneasiness
over this issue. The Front did agree, in January, to formally outlaw the
Communist Party.
By late in the year, at least two major trials had made headlines. In
September, Nicu Ceausescu, youngest son of the ousted dictator, was
convicted of "instigation to murder" and was sentenced to 20 years in
prison. The young Ceausescu, a former Communist Party leader in southern
Transylvania, had been accused of causing 89 deaths during the
revolution that toppled his father. Also in September, Iulien Vlad, head
of the Securitate under Ceausescu, went on trial on charges of
"complicity in genocide" for his role in the deaths of over 1,000 people
during the December revolution. In November, however, a military court
suspended Vlad s trial, citing insufficient evidence.
Ethnic Turmoil.
Ethnic relations also posed a major problem for the government. The
Ceausescu regime had been characterized by its extreme Romanian
nationalism. In contrast, the revolutionary leadership proclaimed the
immediate removal of all discrimination against ethnic minorities,
particularly the Hungarians, and pledged to reestablish Hungarian
centers of education and culture that had been eliminated under
Ceausescu s rule. However, the removal of censorship and the easing of
political control over the expression of ideas also allowed extreme
Romanian nationalist movements to emerge, especially the organization
Vatra Romaneascea, or Romanian Hearth. The program of this group, laced
with elements of native fascism, old-fashioned populism, and extreme
nationalism, was largely directed against the Hungarian minority. Ethnic
tensions culminated in March in serious disturbances in the city of
Tirgu Mures, during which some 2,000 Romanians armed with scythes and
clubs attacked 5,000 ethnic Hungarians. Government tanks and troops had
to be deployed before the fights abated. Other, smaller disturbances
occurred elsewhere, particularly in Transylvania. In language shockingly
similar to that of the Ceausescu era, the Front leadership accused the
Hungarian government of promoting the demonstrations.
The Electoral Process.
Another major issue was the relationship between the Front and the many
new opposition groups and parties that had sprung up. Iliescu had
originally promised that this umbrella organization would dismantle
itself so that its constituent parts could participate in the
forthcoming national elections on an equal footing with all other
parties. However, Iliescu eventually decided to participate with the
Front intact.
Since it controlled most of the facilities of the old order, including
much of the press, radio, and national television, the Front clearly had
a substantial advantage in the electoral campaign. Other tactics were
employed to intimidate the opposition, such as demonstrations by workers
forcefully expressing "indignation" over those who opposed the
revolution by criticizing the Front. In some cases, opposition
candidates were barred from entering communities and even physically
assaulted.
The elections, held on May 20, produced an astonishing victory for the
Front and for Iliescu personally. The Front captured almost
three-quarters of the seats in Parliament, and Iliescu was elected
president with close to 90 percent of the vote. Some observers ascribed
the margin of victory to intimidation of the opposition, as well as to
the opposition s lack of time and facilities to mount an effective
campaign. Others cited the authoritarian attitudes and values engrained
in the general population, coupled with widespread fear among the
electorate that economic decentralization could result in the loss of
jobs.
After the Elections.
After the May elections the victors appeared to harden toward other
elements of the political order, while opponents of the regime became
more vocal. Through much of the summer mass demonstrations occurred,
particularly in Bucharest. In June, Romanian soldiers shot protesters
who raided the state television offices and burned down police
headquarters. In the same month, thousands of armed miners from the
coalfields of northern Romania, brought to Bucharest to quell
demonstrations, used wooden clubs and rubber truncheons against
suspected opponents of the government. The United States accused Romania
of vigilante violence against the antigovernment demonstrators, and the
U.S. ambassador boycotted Iliescu s presidential inauguration, on June
20, to demonstrate concern.
Through the summer and fall, challenges to the government were dealt
with harshly, but it was nevertheless possible to demonstrate and to
issue such challenges. Ethnic relations were troublesome. Remnants of
the old order, particularly the Securitate, were left relatively intact
or were integrated into the new system. Still, the most pressing concern
for the average Romanian was the economic crisis.
Economic Problems.
In July the government announced that the economy had declined sharply
in the first six months of the year. Imports, mostly food and crude oil,
had risen 46 percent, while exports had dropped 43 percent. On July 11
the government eliminated subsidies on crude oil, in a first shift
toward a market economy; the price of gasoline doubled, and other prices
also rose. By midsummer the country was experiencing severe shortages of
meat, cheese, and butter. The situation was aggravated when 24 Western
industrialized nations withheld economic aid after the brutal crackdown
in June against government protesters.
In October, Prime Minister Petre Roman presented to Parliament a package
of economic reforms that he described as "shock therapy" intended to
stimulate Romania s transition to a free-market economy. Protests
erupted in November when price controls were lifted and the prices of
some foods and other consumer goods soared. In the same month the
government devalued the currency by almost 50 percent.
Orphans and AIDS.
children, almost one quarter of whom were discovered this year to be
infected with the AIDS virus. The practice of transfusing unscreened
blood into infants of low birthweight, along with the reuse of
unsterilized hypodermic needles during the procedure, were thought to be
responsible. Among the first actions of the Front had been the
legalization of birth control and abortion.
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