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Former Romanian President Ion Iliescu (file photo)
Former Romanian President Ion Iliescu (file photo)

Romanian prosecutors have indicted former President Ion Iliescu for crimes against humanity for his role in the bloody aftermath of the December 1989 revolt that toppled dictator Nicolae Ceausescu's regime.

Iliescu's indictment, the latest step in a long-running investigation, was revealed 29 years to the day since the uprising, which had begun in the western city of Timisoara, reached Bucharest.

Iliescu, now 88, had been a senior figure in Ceausescu's government before falling out with the dictator. He went on to lead a provisional government -- the National Salvation Front -- which took control of the country after Ceausescu fled Bucharest on December 22.

Iliescu served three terms as president of post-Communist Romania.

Four other individuals, including former deputy prime minister Gelu Voican Voiculescu, were also indicted on December 21.

"Iliescu and Voiculescu directly spread misinformation through televised appearances and press releases, contributing to the institution of a generalized psychosis," the indictment said.

Their actions and statements intentionally increased the risk of "instances of friendly fire, chaotic shooting, and contradictory military orders," prosecutors said, adding that 862 people were killed after Ceausescu's flight.

The men's actions also helped lead to "the conviction and execution of the Ceausescus after a mockery of a trial," prosecutors alleged.

Voiculescu on December 21 denied any wrongdoing.

Iliescu, in a rare public comment on the issue in April, had said: "I can hold my head high in the face of the judgement of history."

With reporting by g4media.ro and digi24hd.ro
Kenzhebek Abishev, Oralbek Omyrov, and Almat Zhumagulov appear in court in October.
Kenzhebek Abishev, Oralbek Omyrov, and Almat Zhumagulov appear in court in October.

ALMATY, Kazakhstan -- A Kazakh court has sentenced three men to lengthy prison terms in a case that prosecutors said was linked to a political movement founded by a fugitive tycoon.

The court in Almaty on December 21 found Kenzhebek Abishev, Oralbek Omirov, and Almat Zhumaghulov guilty of disseminating terrorism. Zhumaghulov was also found guilty of inciting ethnic hatred.

Prosecutors alleged that the three, who were arrested in November 2017, planned a holy war by spreading the ideas of the Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan, an organization that has been branded a terrorist group by Kazakh authorities and banned in March.

All three defendants pleaded not guilty when the trial started on October 1, calling the case against them politically motivated.

In late November, Zhumaghulov and Omirov slashed their forearms during their trial in protest.

The Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan was founded by Mukhtar Ablyazov, an outspoken critic of President Nursultan Nazarbaev and his government.

Kazakh rights groups have said the three men should be considered political prisoners.

Ablyazov was the head of a bank known as BTA. He is wanted in Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine on suspicion of embezzling some $5 billion.

He has denied all the charges.

Several politicians and activists have fled Kazakhstan in recent years, fearing for their safety or anticipating politically motivated prosecution.

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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