Constantin Olteanu (politician)

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Like other party members, I was sent to deal with economic issues, namely the conclusion of the plan for that year, the supply of the population, the technical-material supply of enterprises... In the subsidiary, we were asked to discuss with the leading factors of the respective counties and the measures indicated by Ceaușescu at the teleconference on the evening of December 17, to ensure peace and public order.(...) I was not sent to Iași, as well as to the other counties - Vaslui, Suceava and Botoșani, with any authorization of a military nature, although I was still an active colonel-general, so I did not have the capacity to give orders to the Ministry of National Defence, Ministry of Internal Affairs, State Security Department or Patriotic Guards units

[5]

As he also states, in the office of the first county secretary of Iași and asked by lieutenant-colonel Ion Cioară - chief of staff at the 10th "Ștefan cel Mare" Mechanized Division in Iaşi - if it is required to arm the military with war ammunition against to the possible demonstrators, "I also specified - there were several people present - that if there will be demonstrations, somehow, the street belongs to them, to the demonstrators. "You do not intervene in anything, I said. Only if they attack the objectives, if they set them on fire , then it's something else... But on the street you have nothing to do with weapons". [5]

On December 22, 1989, he left Iași and was received in the Second Army garrison in Buzău. General Olteanu was arrested and, on December 31, 1989, he was brought with two SUVs and an escort to the Training Center of the Genius Troops in Bucharest, on Șoseaua Olteniței, a facility transformed into a prison.

On January 11, 1990, Colonel-General Constantin Olteanu was transferred to the reserve. [6]

He was indicted and convicted in the Trial of CPEx Members (September 17, 1990 - April 20, 1992). He was accused in the indictment of ordering some military units to go on combat alert, but he stated that he had no such assignments and that he did not enter any military unit during those days. [5] On March 25, 1991, the Bucharest Territorial Military Court pronounced his acquittal, which was later challenged with an extraordinary appeal filed by the general prosecutor. Following this extraordinary appeal, Constantin Olteanu was definitively sentenced to 11 years and six months in prison. On May 29, 1993, he requested the suspension of the sentence. The request was examined by the Bucharest Territorial Military Court, which decided to suspend the execution of the sentence for a period of 12 months. In 1994 there was a pardon signed by the president of Romania, Ion Iliescu. [7]

In his later years he was an associate university professor at the Faculty of History of the Spiru Haret University in Bucharest and taught the courses Military History of Romania in the 20th century and History of the Second World War from 1939 to 1945.

References

  1. "Members of the Communist Party" (PDF). cnsas.ro.
  2. "Membri ai Comitetului Central al Partidului Comunist Român (IV)<". Archived from the original on 2014-02-01. Retrieved 2011-09-08.
  3. Ziarul de Mureș, 12 noiembrie 2007 - Incursiune în trecut, culisele politicii
  4. "Edilii Capitalei între 1944 și 1989". Jurnalul Național. 2004-06-05. Retrieved 2024-09-01.
  5. 1 2 3 Viața Militară nr. 197/2004 - Nicolae Ceaușescu nu a înțeles că era “programat” să iasă din scenă. Interviu realizat cu generalul-locotenent (r) dr. Constantin Olteanu
  6. Decretul nr. 46 din 11 ianuarie 1990 privind trecerea în rezervă a unor generali
  7. Radu Eremia (2016-05-14), "Apostolii Epocii de Aur, episodul #21. Constantin Olteanu, primarul comunist care a modernizat Bucureștiul", Adevărul, retrieved 2018-05-02
Constantin Olteanu
ConstantinOlteanu.jpg
Minister of National Defense
In office
29 March 1980 16 December 1985