| Romania's Supreme Court cancelled their election because NATO's candidate was about to lose.  Romania is occupied by NATO. 
 Democracy’s been cancelled in Romania – and the Free West is as silent as the grave
 
 by Peter Hitchens
 
 It  was about this time of year, 35 years ago, when I set off eastwards  from Berlin, full of fear. I was seeking to get into Romania, then an  iron Communist tyranny. I finally made it to the capital, Bucharest,  as dusk fell on Christmas Eve. The city was by then gripped by a sort  of madness.
 
 I was warned to beware of snipers at the entrance to  my hotel, and zigzagged ludicrously through the snow with a suitcase  in one hand and a typewriter in the other. Nobody sniped, but later I  sheltered under my bed while red tracer bullets flew by the window in  the square outside.
 
 It was more or less impossible to find out  what was going on, though the city’s hospitals were full of sad,  wounded people, under thirdrate Communist healthcare.
 
 I went  because rumours had been spreading of severe discontent, which  exploded on December 21, 1989. The country’s Communist leader,  Nicolae Ceausescu, was heckled during a speech.
 
 This  unthinkable act of bravery by the hecklers started an avalanche that  took only four days to sweep the despot to his death – an ugly  kangaroo court followed by a so-called ‘execution’. This looked more  like an assassination to me, when it was shown on Christmas Day on  Bucharest TV.
 
 The general reaction of Europe and the world was  one of uncomplicated joy, as it always is when evil regimes fall (see  Syria now).
 
 But Romania has not been especially happy since. And  I was shocked to learn last week that its latest presidential  election had been cancelled. Yes, you read that right. Romania’s  Supreme Court has simply cancelled the election, because of a danger  that the wrong person would win. Let’s simplify this. Calin Georgescu,  who has said nice things about Vladimir Putin and is definitely not  politically correct, did very well in the first round on November  24. As a result he was to be one of two candidates in the decisive  second round, which should have taken place on December 8. Now the  first round has been wiped from the record and the second round will  never happen. Full new elections are promised, but can they now be  fair?
 
 I can see why many in Romania do not want Georgescu to win.  He’s not my kind of guy either. But that’s the problem with  democracy. You have to accept the outcome, or it is not democracy.  And producing thin ‘intelligence’ claims of ‘Russian  intervention’ really isn’t enough, in a grown-up country, to halt a  free poll.
 
 Two things have struck me about this event. The first  is that it happened at all. The second, equally important, has been the  absence of protest from bodies who endlessly condemn rigged  elections elsewhere. The EU Commission has, as far as I can find,  avoided saying anything. A search for Nato condemnation also  yielded no results.
 
 There has been no sign of one of those  ‘Rose’ or ‘Orange’ or ‘Dignity’ revolutions that erupt so  spontaneously where the West is contesting election results that  favour Moscow. Though I should point out, as a former revolutionary,  that organising a spontaneous uprising takes a lot of planning,  money and hard work.
 
 The whole thing looks to me like good  old-fashioned humbug, and those who have been silent about it should  be ignored when they protest, in future, about suppressions of  democracy that don’t suit them.
 
 In the meantime, it might be  reasonable to worry about how Romanians might react to the  cancellation of their democracy after only 35 years.
 
 pressreader.com
 
 Tom
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