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Politics : Foreign Policy Discussion Thread

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From: Thomas M.12/15/2024 2:29:28 PM
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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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