September 1991 Mineriad | |||
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Part of the mineriads | |||
Date | September 25, 1991 — September 28, 1991 | ||
Location | |||
Caused by | low wages, high prices, job insecurity | ||
Goals | Higher wages; Resignation of Prime Minister Petre Roman and President Ion Iliescu | ||
Methods | |||
Concessions |
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Number | |||
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Casualties | |||
Death(s) | 4 | ||
Injuries | 455 |
September 1991 Mineriad was a political action and physical confrontation between the miners of the Jiu Valley and the Romanian authorities, that led to the resignation of Prime Minister Petre Roman's government. Led by Miron Cozma, president of the Jiu Valley Coal Miners Union, the miners engaged in a series of actions beginning in the 1990s referred to as "mineriads" whereby large numbers of miners traveled to the Romanian capital of Bucharest and engaged in demonstrations and sometimes violent confrontations against counter-demonstrators and government authorities.
During the June 1990 Mineriad, the miners were called in by the Ion Iliescu government to "protect the Revolution" by opposing the crowds who were protesting the government (the Golaniad). As a reward, the miners were promised better wages and living conditions, promises that were not kept. [1]
Starting in September 1990, the Petre Roman government had begun shock therapy: [2] fast-paced economic and political reforms with the goal of transforming Romania's economy into a market economy, and away from the Communist planned economy. [1] Prices were to be liberalized in three stages and the subsidies for food, which compensated workers' relatively low wages, were cut, while the privatization laws brought the specter of unemployment. The workers most affected by these reforms felt that the people who gained most from this Romanian Revolution were not the workers (who came to see themselves as the underdogs of society), but a new class of businessmen and entrepreneurs. [2]
The reforms led to severe inflation (prices grew by over 200% [2] ), a large increase in unemployment (from virtually zero in December 1989 to over one million—11% of the urban workers—in 1991 [2] ) and food shortages, [3] leading to a growing popular discontent. [1]
The workers most threatened by the market were the miners, as was the case of the Donbas miners in the Soviet Union, or the Sheffield miners during Margaret Thatcher premiership in the United Kingdom. [2]
The miners demanded higher wages, lower prices and the resignation of Petre Roman's government, as well as the resignation of president Ion Iliescu. [3]
On September 25, 1991, the miners, mostly from Petroșani and Târgu Jiu, hijacked two trains bound for Bucharest and marched toward the government's capitol building, asking to meet with officials, a demand ignored by the government. [3]
In Bucharest's Victory Square, in front of the capitol building, the crowd, estimated at 10,000 people (mostly miners, but also some Bucharesters), began throwing stones and petrol bombs at the government buildings, setting a corner of the building in fire. [3] The miners were armed with sticks, metal pipes, chains, rubber hoses and axes, and were equipped with helmets and rubber boots. [1]
The police began fighting the miners and used tear gas to disperse the crowds, an action which was successful toward the evening. [3] However, the miners later reassembled in front of the Television building. [3]
President Iliescu responded with an address on public radio, in which he made an appeal for law and order and for "rational behavior and patriotic feeling". [3] Prime Minister Roman condemned the violence and asked them not to let passions dominate. [3]
The following day, on September 26, Prime Minister Roman was forced to resign. [1] [4] Nevertheless, the riots continued as the miners continued to arrive in Bucharest and demand President Ion Iliescu's resignation as well. [1] Clashes between the protesters, the Police and Army continued throughout the city, as the miners attempted to break into the Parliament building. [1] The government building was surrounded by tanks and defended with tear gas. [1]
Ion Iliescu eventually met with a representative group of miners and told them that all their demands would be, but riots continued for the rest of the day. [1]
Protests continued for a third day around the Cotroceni Palace, as the miners, continuing to demand Iliescu's resignation, stormed the palace's gates and threw rocks at the security forces, which responded again with birdshots and tear gas. At the end of the day, miners began returning to Jiu Valley. [5]
On September 28, the remaining miners was dispersed from the University Square by the gendarmes, failing in their threat of remaining on the streets of Bucharest until President Iliescu resigned. [6]
During the riots, three people were killed and hundreds of other wounded. [3] Two bystanders, Andrei Frumușanu and Aurica Crăiniceanu, were shot and killed by a Major of the Protection and Guard Service, Vasile Gabor. The Romanian authorities refused to cooperate with the courts afterwards, in a case in which evidence had been destroyed by the Romanian institutions. The families of the two victims sued the Romanian state at the European Court of Human Rights, which found the Romanian state guilty of breaking the Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights. [7]
Adrian Severin, deputy Prime Minister, argued that it was a "crypto-Communist coup d'état" and that these people belonged to the class which had privileges during the previous communist regime. [4]
Mugur Isărescu, governor of Romania's Central Bank noted that while the miners and other workers were shouting "Down with Communism!", their demands were "communist-style demands", such as job security and higher wages, and that they attacked privately owned shops—the few private enterprises that existed in Romania. [8]
In 1999, the High Court of Cassation and Justice of Romania found Miron Cozma, the leader of the miners, guilty and sentenced him to 18 years in prison. In response to this sentence, he attempted to once again march with the miners toward Bucharest, but they were stopped by the security forces and Cozma was arrested. [9]
Ion Iliescu is a Romanian politician and engineer who served as President of Romania from 1989 until 1996 and from 2000 until 2004. Between 1996 and 2000 and also from 2004 to 2008, the year in which he retired, Iliescu was a senator for the Social Democratic Party (PSD), of which he is the founder and honorary president to this day.
After the Communist rulership ended and the former Communist dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu was executed in the midst of the bloody Romanian Revolution of December 1989, the National Salvation Front (FSN) seized power, led by Ion Iliescu. The FSN transformed itself into a massive political party in short time and overwhelmingly won the general election of May 1990, with Iliescu as president. These first months of 1990 were marked by violent protests and counter-protests, involving most notably the tremendously violent and brutal coal miners of the Jiu Valley which were called by Iliescu himself and the FSN to crush peaceful protesters in the University Square in Bucharest.
Petre Roman is a Romanian engineer and politician who was Prime Minister of Romania from 1989 to 1991, when his government was overthrown by the intervention of the miners led by Miron Cozma in the September 1991 Mineriad. Although regarded as the first Romanian prime minister since 1945 who was not a communist or communist sympathiser, he was a socialist. He later self-identified as a liberal. He was also the president of the Senate from 1996 to 1999 and Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1999 to 2000.
The Romanian revolution was a period of violent civil unrest in Romania during December 1989 as a part of the revolutions of 1989 that occurred in several countries around the world, primarily within the Eastern Bloc. The Romanian revolution started in the city of Timișoara and soon spread throughout the country, ultimately culminating in the drumhead trial and execution of longtime Romanian Communist Party (PCR) General Secretary Nicolae Ceaușescu and his wife Elena, and the end of 42 years of Communist rule in Romania. It was also the last removal of a Marxist–Leninist government in a Warsaw Pact country during the events of 1989, and the only one that violently overthrew a country's leadership and executed its leader; according to estimates, over one thousand people died and thousands more were injured.
The mineriads were a series of protests and often violent altercations by Jiu Valley miners in Bucharest during the 1990s, particularly 1990–91. The term "mineriad" is also used to refer to the most significant and violent of these encounters, which occurred June 13–15, 1990. During the 1990s, the Jiu Valley miners played a visible role in Romanian politics, and their protests reflected inter-political and societal struggles after the Romanian Revolution.
Ilie Verdeț was a Romanian communist politician who served as Romania’s Prime Minister from 1979 to 1982.
The Jiu Valley is a region in southwestern Transylvania, Romania, in Hunedoara county, situated in a valley of the Jiu River between the Retezat Mountains and the Parâng Mountains. The region was heavily industrialised and the main activity was coal mining, but due to low efficiency, most of the mines were closed down in the years following the collapse of Communism in Romania. For a long time the place was called Romania's biggest coalfield.
University Square is located in Bucharest city centre, near the University of Bucharest. It is served by Universitate metro station.
Miron Cozma is a former Romanian labor-union organizer and politician, and leader of Romania's Jiu Valley coal miners' union. He is best known for his leading the miners of the Jiu Valley during the September 1991 Mineriad which overthrew the reformist Petre Roman government. Cozma was a controversial character in the 1990s, both within and outside of Jiu Valley.
The National Salvation Front was the most important political organization formed during the Romanian Revolution in December 1989, which became the governing body of Romania in the first weeks after the collapse of the communist regime. It subsequently became a political party, the largest post-communist party, and won the 1990 election with 66% of the national vote, under the leadership of then-President Ion Iliescu, who was elected with 85% of the vote.
The June 1990 Mineriad was the suppression of anti-National Salvation Front (FSN) rioting in Bucharest, Romania by the physical intervention of groups of industrial workers as well as coal miners from the Jiu Valley, brought to Bucharest by the government to counter the rising violence of the protesters. This event occurred several weeks after the FSN achieved a landslide victory in the May 1990 general election, the first elections after the fall of the communist regime of Nicolae Ceaușescu. Many of the miners, factory workers, and other anti-protester groups, fought with the protesters and bystanders. The violence resulted in some deaths and many injuries on both sides of the confrontations. Official figures listed seven fatalities and hundreds of injured, although media estimates of the number killed and injured varied widely and were often much higher.
The Lupeni strike of 1929 took place on 5 and 6 August 1929 in the mining town of Lupeni, in the Jiu Valley of Transylvania, Romania.
Doru-Viorel Ursu was a Romanian politician and lawyer. A member of the National Salvation Front (FSN), he was Minister of the Interior in the Petre Roman cabinets, carrying his mandate between the Mineriads of 1990 and 1991.
This is a list of 1990 events that occurred in Romania.
This is a list of 1991 events that occurred in Romania.
This is a list of 1999 events that occurred in Romania.
The January 1999 Mineriad was led by miners in Romania against low wages under the leadership of Miron Cozma in January 1999. Protesters marched onto Bucharest and other cities, demonstrating the government's wage policies and low wages, demanding an increase of the wages and better working conditions in the country.
The February 1990 Mineriad was a mineriad that occurred in Bucharest, the capital of Romania. Although it was at first non-violent, the protests later escalated. This Mineriad happened 18–19 February, less than a month after the January 1990 Mineriad. Despite the demonstrators' pleas to non-violence, several persons started throwing stones into the Victoria Palace Government building. Riot police and army forces intervened to restore order, and on the same night, 4,000 miners headed to Bucharest. Opposition leaders and independent media speculated that the demonstration was manipulated by the Securitate and the National Salvation Front. Miners maintained their relative innocence of the violence, claiming that the agitation and most of the brutality was the work of Ion Iliescu's government agents who had infiltrated and disguised themselves as miners.
The February 1999 Mineriad was the last of the six mineriads that occurred in Romania. It began on 16 February 1999, when 2,000–2,500 miners from the Jiu Valley left for Bucharest in around 50 buses as a protest against the 18-year long jail sentence given in absentia to Miron Cozma, the "leader" of the miners, for his actions in the September 1991 Mineriad against the Romanian Government.
Gelu Voican-Voiculescu is a Romanian politician and former dissident who served as deputy prime minister in the provisional government of Romania (1989–1990). He was also a senator of Buzau in the 1990-1992 legislature, elected on the lists of the National Salvation Front, as well as ambassador to Tunisia and Morocco.