NID: ROMANIA: ANTIREGIME PROTESTS

Document Type: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
06826830
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
November 26, 2019
Document Release Date: 
December 10, 2019
Sequence Number: 
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 19, 1989
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PDF icon NID ROMANIA ANTIREGIME [15743467].pdf68.37 KB
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Approved for Release: 2019/10/29 C06826830 I �1 ROMANIA: Antiregime Protests The protests in Timisoara and Arad over the weekend, the largest since the Brasov riots in 1987, are the latest signals that the corrupt and repressive Ceausescu regime cannot Iniefinitely resist the changes engulfing Eastern Europe. Security has.been tightened throughout the country since riot police opened fire on thousands of antigovernment demonstrators in the two cities in ethnically diverse Transylvania. Timisoara was outwardly calm yesterday, despite unconfirmed reports that hundrcds of demonstrators were killed and a number arrested by heavily armed security forces. The fate of Laszlo Tokes, the ethnic Hungarian clergyman and civil rights activist whose court-ordered eviction sparked the protests, is unknown. Romania has closed its borders with Hungary, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, and the USSR. President Ceausescu yesterday proceeded with a scheduled visit to Iran. Comment: The brutal response to the demonstrations signals Ceausescu's determination to continue to resist popular demands for change, even at the risl of further international criticism and deeper isolation. His decision not to postpone his trip to Tehran was calculated to project confidence and strength, although privately he has become increasingly alarmed about the impact of Bloc developments on his regime. He has acknowledged, for instance, that reform ideas have infected the party and galvanized forces eager to depose him. He has also decreed that shortages of consumer goods, particularly food, should be eliminated within two years, presumably in an attem t to dampen public unrest over shortages this winter. Ceausescu's crackdown indicates that he retains the loyalty of the privileged security forces, at least for now. They fear any relaxation of controls would make them targets for popular rage. but their reliability will be increasingly doubtful as the political and economic crisis deepens. They could eventually support a disaffected individual or group in the party leadership and move against the hardli dictator under tI7 banner of nationalist renewal. "-TOrSe) 'ICS 2993/89 19 December 1969 Approved for Release: 2019/10/29 C06826830 Approved for Release: 2019/10/29 C06826830 Antigovernment Demonstrations, 16-17 December 1989 100 1100001�0 . *BUCHAREST Black Soa � Bulgaria:. 1221 Hungarians Outraged, Soviets Quiet So Far The Hungarian National Assembly yesterday condemned Romania's persecution of Laszlo Tokes as a brutal violation of basic human rights and urged the Budapest government to take specific steps to defend Tokes and his congregation. The ruling Socialist Party has issued its own condemnation of Romania. About 50,000 participated in a demonstration in Budapest last night called by the Hungarian Democratic Forum to protest the Romanian actions. Romania-bashing is a sure way to win votes in Hungary, and the increasing openness of Hungarian politics could encourage partisan competition in demanding sanctions against Romania. If demonstrators believe rumors of great bloodshed, Hungarian police may have difficulty protecting the Romanian Embassy from attacks. Moscow has not commentec officially on the Tokes affair, and press coverage of the riots has been light. Today's edition of Izvestiya, however, refers to Tokes as a human rights champion and notes that his house arrest has attracted international attention. Moscow is likely to condemn the violence, reiterate the need for reform, and offer at least private support for Hungary's efforts to raise the issue internationally. "1"--71r) Sew TCS 2993/89 19 December 1989 Approved for Release: 2019/10/29 C06826830