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- <text id=90TT0044>
- <link 90TT1417>
- <title>
- Jan. 08, 1990: Romania:Unfinished Revolution
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 08, 1990 When Tyrants Fall
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 28
- RUMANIA
- Unfinished Revolution
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Ceausescu is dead, but the country is entering a perilous new
- phase. Can the interim government win popular loyalty? Will the
- army take over? Does democracy stand a chance?
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Kenneth W. Banta/Timisoara,
- William Mader/London and James Wilde/Bucharest
- </p>
- <p> Over and over, as if to exorcise the evil of Nicolae
- Ceausescu's ironfisted 24-year reign, national television last
- week replayed the taped record of his final ignominious hours.
- Haggard, wrapped in a fur-lined overcoat, his hair in tangles,
- he sat with his wife Elena behind two folding tables pushed
- together to form a makeshift dock.
- </p>
- <p> He had been so confident of his power: only a week earlier,
- he had ordered his security forces to fire on demonstrators in
- the city of Timisoara, near the border with Yugoslavia, as he
- flew off for an official visit to Iran. Now, under arrest and
- facing a military tribunal, he did not seem to understand or
- accept his defeat. He raged at his judges, who were not shown
- on the tape, insisted that he would answer only to the "working
- class" and refused to address the prosecutor's charges that he
- had destroyed Rumania. Within a bare two hours, the Ceausescus
- were found guilty of genocide, with "more than 60,000 victims,"
- and of gross abuse of the power of the state.
- </p>
- <p> At dusk on Christmas Day, wearing their overcoats, he and
- Elena, the second most powerful figure in the country, were
- executed, without blindfolds, before a barracks wall at the
- Boteni army camp outside Bucharest. There had been 300
- volunteers for the three-man firing squad, a military spokesman
- who had been present said later, and the actual execution was
- not filmed because some of the soldiers began shooting as soon
- as they faced the Ceausescus.
- </p>
- <p> The ashen face of the dictator, eyes open, blood oozing from
- his head, leaped almost instantly onto TV screens in Rumania
- and around the world. Many Rumanians wept or cheered in relief.
- Soviet viewers saw parallels with the Bolshevik Revolution and
- the execution of Czar Nicholas II and his family. In Paris
- editorial writers recalled the French Revolution and suggested
- it was 1789 in Rumania--with some of the same ambiguities of
- that upheaval.
- </p>
- <p> Others were chilled. In China the Rumanian revolution was
- read as a cautionary tale of what could have happened in
- Beijing last year had the army not crushed the pro-democracy
- movement--and what might still come to pass. Communist Party
- officials in Beijing put out a directive telling their cadres
- how to interpret the revolution that swept across Eastern
- Europe last year, the result of the subversion of socialism by
- Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. In the Arab world several
- newspapers pointedly reminded oppressive regimes that tyranny
- could not be maintained forever and that strongmen in the
- region should take heed.
- </p>
- <p> Comparisons with 1789 and 1917 are not out of place. The old
- order in Rumania has passed, but the bloodshed is not over, and
- the shape of a new order is not yet discernible. Euphoria
- collides with the reality of post-Ceausescu life: unrelenting
- poverty, political confusion, ethnic tension. Rumanians may be
- jubilant, but they are also fearful of the uncharted world into
- which they have been pitched. Ceausescu is gone, but the real
- revolution is just beginning.
- </p>
- <p> In the capital and other parts of the country, several days
- of heavy fighting between the army and holdout members of the
- Securitate, Ceausescu's omnipresent secret police, were
- followed by sporadic sniping and skirmishing. In front of the
- all-seeing television cameras at Bucharest's national TV
- studio, where tanks and troops had beaten back several
- determined Securitate assaults, a self-appointed 60-member
- National Salvation Front took charge of the country and named
- a transitional government until free elections, promised for
- April, could be held. In short order, demonstrators stormed
- back into the streets to oppose the inclusion of former senior
- party and government officials in the administration. "No more
- communists," they chanted, "no more Ceausescus."
- </p>
- <p> New political parties--the first rivals to communism in
- 45 years--were being formed. The caretaker government set out
- to erase the most despised features of Ceausescu's Big Brother
- regime, but the only cohesive organization left to enforce the
- new decrees seemed to be the army, whose turning against
- Ceausescu and his Securitate had rescued the revolution from
- failure.
- </p>
- <p> Even before the Ceausescus were executed, civilians had
- moved to assert authority over the army as well as the country.
- Television, which once beamed out only the glory of Ceausescu,
- then helped topple him, became the heart and voice of the new
- government. The National Salvation Front gathered at the studio
- to announce that the revolution had triumphed--and set about
- trying to steer it into calmer channels. The Front ordered all
- those who had seized or been issued firearms to turn them in
- and instructed revolutionary committees that had sprung up
- around the country to be "immediately subordinated" to it.
- </p>
- <p> Two days later, a 37-member provisional government threw out
- some of the most odious of Ceausescu's laws. It abolished the
- Securitate and canceled the so-called systematization in the
- countryside, under which thousands of villages were to be
- destroyed in the name of progress and peasants forced to move
- into high-rise apartment complexes. It legalized abortion,
- which had been prohibited by Ceausescu in an effort to increase
- the labor force in a country that now has a population of 23
- million. It ended food rationing, provided enough power to
- allow citizens to turn up the heat in their houses and
- apartments, and made it illegal to refuse medical treatment to
- the elderly, a policy Ceausescu had enforced to keep the
- population young. No total overhaul of the economy would be
- undertaken until after elections, but the caretakers canceled
- food exports and took steps to improve distribution and relieve
- widespread shortages.
- </p>
- <p> Rumania is potentially a prosperous country, but Ceausescu's
- compulsion to pay off a $10 billion foreign debt led him to
- sell most of the country's oil and food production abroad and
- ration everything at home. Last week supplies his regime had
- hoarded for export--and for the old communist elite--were
- rushed into empty stores, and shoppers were dazzled to find
- meat, oranges, coffee and chocolate, the kind of goods that had
- not been available to them for years.
- </p>
- <p> All that was popular, but not enough to win universal
- support for the narrowly based provisional government.
- Rumanians are troubled by some of the men who assumed control.
- Several of the leading figures are communists--dissident and
- reformist communists of the Gorbachev variety, to be sure, but
- still tainted by membership at one point or another in
- Ceausescu's machine. The President, Ion Iliescu, 59, is a
- former Central Committee Secretary who was demoted in the early
- 1970s after complaining to Ceausescu about nepotism in the
- party. Vice President Dumitru Mazilu is also a lifelong
- communist whose career ground to a halt after he clashed with
- the dictator. The same is true of General Nikolai Militaru, the
- Defense Minister. Should old bosses, even if disgraced under
- Ceausescu, run the country's affairs?
- </p>
- <p> Student demonstrators, who triggered the revolution, said
- no--and emphatically so. They poured into Palace Square only
- hours after the caretaker government was announced. In the
- shadow of the burned-out, bullet-pocked presidential palace and
- Communist Party Central Committee building, they marched over
- the refuse of the struggle, crunching through broken glass,
- lost shoes, burned wood and ash. "We are not leaving!" they
- yelled. One young man in the crowd told Western correspondents,
- </p>
- <p>Gabrielescu, a 68-year-old lathe operator standing at the edge
- of the demonstration, agreed. "I do not believe in good or bad
- communists, just communists. They are all crooks," he said.
- </p>
- <p> Most Rumanians associate communism with tyranny and
- deprivation, and are not likely to trust even its reformers for
- long. Like Gorbachev, some of the post revolution leaders hope
- to rebuild the Communist Party, not abolish it. Others are
- uncertain. Newly appointed Prime Minister Petre Roman, for
- example, admitted last week that the party might not have a
- future. "I don't know if it will survive," he said. Vice
- President Mazilu went further. "Rumania is no longer a communist
- country," he said. "Rumania is a free land, and we will create
- a real democracy."
- </p>
- <p> Yet even if the party is destined for the trash heap, not
- all its members--3.8 million before the revolution--can be
- ruled out of public life, and some may in time prove their
- worth. In any case, practicality demands that the government
- retain at least part of the old bureaucracy in the interest of
- survival. "What can we do?" asked Corneliu Bogdan, the Deputy
- Foreign Minister. "There is no question of vengeance." But, he
- added, "we hope gradually to weed out all the top officials who
- supported Ceausescu." That kind of compromise made many newly
- liberated Rumanians uneasy about a potential alliance between
- the army and the bureaucracy--and a possible new dictatorship
- in the making. Said Doina Cornea, a longtime dissident and a
- founder of the National Christian Peasant Party: "We don't need
- central control anymore."
- </p>
- <p> But lack of central control was an obvious problem last
- week. Under Ceausescu's paranoid purges and the vigilance of
- his secret police, no significant resistance movement was able
- to form. The explosion that ended his reign resulted from
- spontaneous combustion, and the people who powered it were only
- beginning to get organized. Nobody had a plan for the
- revolution; the participants only knew what they were against.
- Said Iliescu: "It was not the movement that led to the
- overthrow, but the overthrow that created the movement."
- </p>
- <p> That organizing process got haltingly under way last week.
- Citizens' committees in provincial cities such as Timisoara,
- where the revolt ignited in mid-December, refused the call to
- "subordinate" themselves, and demanded a role in the National
- Salvation Front. Workers who joined students in the streets of
- Craiova, a southwestern industrial town, for example, had no
- more coherent a plan than the warning "Beware of the wolf in
- sheep's clothing."
- </p>
- <p> Nor could the caretaker government be certain of security.
- It appealed "for an end to acts of revenge," but Securitate
- gunmen sniped intermittently from Bucharest's rooftops; others
- were believed to be hiding out in a maze of tunnels and secret
- passages Ceausescu had constructed under the capital's streets.
- Fighting around the city's international airport forced the
- frequent interruption of flights. There were ongoing firefights
- in Timisoara, Arad and Brasov.
- </p>
- <p> With Securitate agents still at large, an absence of
- fighting did not necessarily mean that they had gone away. Some
- were killed or captured, but the organization had begun the
- struggle with 180,000 well-equipped and highly trained agents,
- and no one seemed to know where most of them were. The
- provisional government issued an ultimatum: "If they surrender
- voluntarily with their weapons, they will be tried and the
- death penalty will not be applied." If they did not, they would
- be "tried and condemned" by special tribunals. Few secret
- policemen accepted the offer. With thousands of them, armed and
- perhaps defiant, unaccounted for, it remained unclear whether
- they would vanish in the general confusion or carry on some
- form of guerrilla warfare against the shaky government.
- </p>
- <p> There were persistent rumors last week that mercenaries from
- Libya, Iran and the Palestine Liberation Organization had been
- taken into the Securitate and were conducting urban guerrilla
- raids around the country. At the Foreign Ministry, Bogdan said
- he had received "denials to our satisfaction from these Arab
- governments." But in Washington, Silviu Turcu, a high-level
- Rumanian intelligence official who defected to the U.S. a year
- ago, said up to 500 Arabs, mostly Palestinians, could have been
- involved in the fighting.
- </p>
- <p> When Ceausescu left for Iran on Dec. 18, he believed that
- Securitate had the uprising in Timisoara in hand. "They
- tortured everyone, young and old, to frighten the city," a
- young army officer recounted last week. But Timisoara's young
- refused to be cowed. "It was a revolt by the kids, a young
- revolution," said Gabriela Vlad, 24, a doctor in the Timisoara
- hospital. One of her patients, a 13-year-old girl named Suzana
- who was shot during a demonstration, explained, "We marched
- because we had nothing to lose here. We are tired of hearing
- `No, no.'"
- </p>
- <p> Returning from Tehran, Ceausescu found that demonstrations
- had flared throughout the country and into Bucharest, where he
- came face to face with rebellion in Palace Square, outside his
- office. At a rally called to prove his popularity, he was
- silenced by students shouting "Ceausescu, assassin!" Visibly
- shocked, he froze, and television transmission was cut off for
- three minutes. He ordered the Securitate to shoot, but at that
- point the army switched allegiance--and that was the
- beginning of the end for Ceausescu, who fled with his wife. TV
- newsreaders in Bucharest claimed last week that 80,000 people
- or more were killed in the struggle that began with the
- slaughter in Timisoara; Western diplomats thought the death
- toll was far smaller--perhaps thousands, but not tens of
- thousands. Bernard Kouchner, France's Secretary of State for
- Humanitarian Affairs, who visited Bucharest last week, said the
- Rumanian Ministry of Health could confirm only 746 deaths and
- some 1,800 wounded. An exact figure may never be learned.
- </p>
- <p> The nepotism of the house of Ceausescu had put more than 30
- of the dictator's family into high offices. By the time he was
- executed, many of them, including his two sons, his daughter,
- his sister and two of his brothers, had been arrested and would
- probably be put on trial. Ceausescu's son Nicu, who directed
- security troops in a bloody battle in the city of Sibiu, was
- expected to be executed. A brother, Marin Ceausescu, 74, was
- found hanged in the Rumanian embassy in Vienna, where he had
- headed the trade delegation and was widely believed to have
- been the conduit through whom Nicolae allegedly transferred
- millions of dollars into Swiss bank accounts. The provisional
- government notified Switzerland that it would request the
- assistance of the courts there to try to recover the funds.
- </p>
- <p> Governments East and West cheered the overthrow of
- Ceausescu, but there were murmurs of distaste at the secret
- trial and execution of the 71-year-old dictator and his wife.
- "We would have preferred it if there had been a public trial,"
- said White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater. Nevertheless, like
- other Western countries, the U.S. speedily recognized "the new
- legitimate government" and offered its support. Said the
- British Foreign Office: "Although one may regret a secret
- trial, at the time it was not really surprising." Gorbachev
- congratulated Iliescu on taking charge "at a difficult moment
- when Rumanian patriots resolutely came out to save the nation
- from forces of despotism and terror." Beijing, a Ceausescu
- supporter to the end, fretted privately but said only that "we
- respect the choice made by the Rumanian people."
- </p>
- <p> Prime Minister Roman defended the swift execution, claiming
- that Ceausescu loyalists were about to attack the military base
- where the dictator was being held in an attempt to free him.
- "We were in a situation that did not allow us to wait," Roman
- said. "Perhaps it was a mistake. But it is too early to judge."
- At least as real as an impending rescue attempt was the
- Salvation Front's fear that Ceausescu as a prisoner would give
- the Securitate a reason for fighting on. Some members of the
- Front may have thought it a good idea to offer the Rumanian
- people some blood quickly in order to head off wider vengeance
- directed against communists in general. "A long trial," said
- Deputy Foreign Minister Bogdan, "would only have led to more
- useless carnage."
- </p>
- <p> Rumania now enters a perilous new phase of its revolution.
- The tyrant has been overthrown, but a power vacuum has been
- left behind. The National Salvation Front is ruling by
- televised announcements; no authority is in full control
- anywhere. Weeks are likely to pass before anything resembling
- an effective government emerges.
- </p>
- <p> In the meantime, the only national institution with
- authority and legitimacy is the army. While the military has
- promised the Front its support, the ad hoc alliance faces the
- task of ending civil strife and imposing law-and-order on a
- country flooded with weapons and a thirst for retribution. Says
- a Western military attache: "Proper law-and-order can be
- restored only when the army takes all excess weapons out of
- circulation. But it can do that only when it has won the
- confidence of the population."
- </p>
- <p> Thus the near future contains more questions than answers.
- Will the National Salvation Front win popular loyalty in spite
- of its domination by communists? Will the army lose patience
- with squabbling civilians and simply take over? Can peace be
- restored so that Rumanians can cooperate in constructing a
- freer political system? Does democracy stand a chance?
- </p>
- <p> The U.S., the Soviet Union and the European Community have
- all pledged to help Rumania mend its wounds and have dispatched
- shipments of food and medicines. But even with the best of
- will, there is little outsiders can do beyond providing
- emergency aid until the transition government, or the one to
- follow it, manages to grasp firm control. In an attempt to
- achieve that and broaden its base, the Front at week's end
- expanded from 60 to 145 members. Among the newcomers were
- representatives of some ten nascent political parties and local
- action committees and citizen militias from around the country.
- Once a solid coalition is in place, its biggest task will be
- to organize and carry out Rumania's first free elections since
- 1928.
- </p>
- <p> In a country with no tradition of pluralism and democracy,
- the creation of parties, of programs, of an electoral system
- is a daunting enough assignment--even without
- post-revolutionary confusion and chaos. There have been
- suggestions that the balloting should be postponed beyond
- April. But Rumanians, who have shed much blood to win the right
- to choose a representative government, are not likely to allow
- anyone to keep them from doing so.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-