The Prague Post - Ion Iliescu: democratic Romania's first president

EUR -
AED 4.254419
AFN 72.973309
ALL 96.164402
AMD 437.01703
ANG 2.073057
AOA 1062.166225
ARS 1639.84365
AUD 1.645941
AWG 2.087847
AZN 1.972554
BAM 1.959558
BBD 2.333074
BDT 141.671666
BGN 1.908478
BHD 0.43728
BIF 3260.631774
BMD 1.158306
BND 1.483344
BOB 8.032988
BRL 6.082613
BSD 1.158381
BTN 106.855904
BWP 15.74137
BYN 3.385893
BYR 22702.800273
BZD 2.329567
CAD 1.57401
CDF 2501.941462
CHF 0.902897
CLF 0.02686
CLP 1060.579771
CNY 8.005172
CNH 8.006577
COP 4364.335359
CRC 551.43838
CUC 1.158306
CUP 30.695113
CVE 110.56031
CZK 24.428209
DJF 205.854752
DKK 7.471514
DOP 70.084261
DZD 152.526914
EGP 61.143971
ERN 17.374592
ETB 177.889316
FJD 2.560434
FKP 0.863606
GBP 0.864814
GEL 3.156432
GGP 0.863606
GHS 12.492314
GIP 0.863606
GMD 84.556577
GNF 10164.135829
GTQ 8.88473
GYD 242.34681
HKD 9.056275
HNL 30.660794
HRK 7.532811
HTG 151.755762
HUF 394.749619
IDR 19633.289012
ILS 3.59317
IMP 0.863606
INR 106.780942
IQD 1516.801886
IRR 1530006.576149
ISK 145.089878
JEP 0.863606
JMD 181.468763
JOD 0.821232
JPY 183.345381
KES 149.767772
KGS 101.293865
KHR 4650.599162
KMF 492.279602
KPW 1042.475177
KRW 1709.869575
KWD 0.356527
KYD 0.965359
KZT 576.836125
LAK 24712.461343
LBP 103726.315159
LKR 360.774927
LRD 211.969464
LSL 19.170364
LTL 3.420176
LVL 0.700647
LYD 7.395827
MAD 10.898213
MDL 20.074668
MGA 4811.017802
MKD 61.636391
MMK 2432.525278
MNT 4134.102778
MOP 9.325441
MRU 46.46007
MUR 55.517567
MVR 17.895493
MWK 2010.819517
MXN 20.617294
MYR 4.59036
MZN 74.018531
NAD 19.422143
NGN 1617.817216
NIO 42.631749
NOK 11.168827
NPR 170.969847
NZD 1.958076
OMR 0.445366
PAB 1.158421
PEN 4.032933
PGK 4.991615
PHP 68.680593
PKR 325.676108
PLN 4.278378
PYG 7454.358631
QAR 4.224537
RON 5.097475
RSD 117.432597
RUB 90.635529
RWF 1693.56215
SAR 4.348474
SBD 9.318784
SCR 16.064567
SDG 696.718077
SEK 10.659156
SGD 1.480437
SHP 0.86903
SLE 28.40744
SLL 24289.099775
SOS 660.867261
SRD 43.629923
STD 23974.598412
STN 24.546222
SVC 10.135523
SYP 128.085396
SZL 19.16414
THB 37.042269
TJS 11.102703
TMT 4.054071
TND 3.382317
TOP 2.788924
TRY 51.039306
TTD 7.860072
TWD 36.920197
TZS 2988.429491
UAH 50.90816
UGX 4361.363232
USD 1.158306
UYU 46.339259
UZS 14122.202273
VES 501.112123
VND 30437.389499
VUV 138.272414
WST 3.174325
XAF 657.217262
XAG 0.01376
XAU 0.000227
XCD 3.13038
XCG 2.087703
XDR 0.820953
XOF 657.222947
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.365705
ZAR 19.169857
ZMK 10426.144868
ZMW 22.386929
ZWL 372.974103
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0350

    23.22

    +0.15%

  • NGG

    0.5500

    90.41

    +0.61%

  • RELX

    0.0000

    35.68

    0%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    14.48

    -0.21%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.16

    -0.17%

  • RIO

    0.1400

    90.35

    +0.15%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    25.88

    -0.7%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    58.33

    +0.79%

  • BCC

    -0.8600

    74.49

    -1.15%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.58

    +0.08%

  • AZN

    0.7300

    194.95

    +0.37%

  • BP

    0.2100

    40.65

    +0.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3000

    16.7

    -1.8%

  • GSK

    1.0000

    55.51

    +1.8%

Ion Iliescu: democratic Romania's first president
Ion Iliescu: democratic Romania's first president / Photo: GRIGORE POPESCU - AFP

Ion Iliescu: democratic Romania's first president

Romania's former president Ion Iliescu, who died aged 95 on Tuesday, was long hailed as Romania's "little father" but faced charges over his role in the eastern European nation's chaotic transition from communism to democracy.

Text size:

The influential politician was last seen in public in 2017 when he was questioned by prosecutors.

That probe related to his role in the violence during the fall of communism which led to more than 850 deaths and saw him face charges of crimes against humanity.

- Fallout with Ceausescu regime -

A communist party apparatchik born on March 3, 1930, Iliescu served as former dictator Nicolae Ceausescu's minister for youth. But in the 1970s he fell into disgrace and was marginalised.

He rose to power during the December 1989 anti-communist uprising that toppled Ceausescu, under circumstances that remain unclear, becoming the self-appointed leader of the National Salvation Front, an interim governing body.

Iliescu then won a landslide victory in the country's first democratic elections in May 1990.

He was reelected for a four-year term in 1992, but was defeated at the polls in 1996, only to return to power in 2000 for a third term -- the most allowed by the Constitution.

During this last term Romania joined NATO in 2004 and signed the European Union accession treaty, with membership becoming effective in 2007.

The former Moscow University graduate was elected to Romania's Senate in 2004 but did not run in subsequent elections, arguing that a secondary role in politics was more appropriate for a man his age.

He nonetheless continued to be revered by many Romanians, especially in impoverished rural regions.

His advice still counted when his Social Democratic Party -- -- a successor to the National Salvation Front -- was faced with major decisions.

"Iliescu was a man of dialogue and not a bit confrontational. He would rather try to convince people than give orders," sociologist Vasile Dancu, a fellow Social Democrat who knew Iliescu well, told AFP.

He said "consensus" was one of the former president's favourite words.

- 'Canny politician' -

"He was an affable, well-read man, who knew how to flatter people but who could also be manipulative," a former French ambassador to Romania, Henri Paul, told AFP.

"A canny politician through and through."

Iliescu never disavowed his hardline leftist views and blasted the "bloodsucking" western countries and international financial institutions.

Over the past two decades, Iliescu had faced charges of crimes against humanity over the violence during the fall of communism.

In a separate case, he was also indicted over the decision to call in miners to crush student protests after his election in 1990. The crackdown brought widespread international condemnation.

But due to legal wranglings, Iliescu has not stood trial in either case.

Iliescu has denied any wrongdoing, at one point describing it as "a disgrace for Romania to indict the head of state who played a major part in its democratisation".

Though he was one of the few top-ranking Romanian politicians not to be suspected of illicit enrichment, high-level corruption flourished during his terms in office and analysts said the independence of the judiciary was often trampled on.

"I'd rather be poor but honest than rich and a thief," he used to say.

Iliescu, who spoke fluent English, French and Russian, was married with no children. His wife Nina was only seen in public when the couple went to the polls, once every four years.

The government announced his death in a statement on Tuesday, after he was hospitalised with lung cancer in early June.

It declared August 7 a day of national mourning in his memory.

mr-ani-jza-kym/rlp

X.Vanek--TPP