Monday, August 13, 2007

SRI empire


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-- ZIUA is the first to provide you with a scheme of the phone call intercepting the SRI (Romanian Secret Service), headed by George Maior, has got absolute control of, as far as all the information is concerned.
Because of the outdated legislation and of no national center for interception, all phone wires reach the SRI. The National Anti-Corruption Department, the Foreign Intelligence Service, the UM 0962, the Department to Fight and Prevent Organized Crime and Terrorism and the Intelligence Department in the Ministry of Defense have to ask for surveillance via the SRI and it is from the SRI as well that information reaches them. In fact, the SRI officials and the people who use the data know what evidence prosecutors have got, even when the evidence is on someone in their scope.
On grounds of an authorization signed by a prosecutor or of a warrant released by a judge, the SRI demands phone operators to intercept some phone calls just when people are on the phone. Telecommunication service providers are shown neither the warrant nor the reason for such intercepting, as it is all up to the SRI decision, just as the emerging information is.
The secret services use their own intercepting equipment illegally. The outcome may not be used in court, but it becomes an instrument for blackmail. (...)

Razvan Savaliuc
Ziua luni 13 august 2007 http://www.ziua.net/english

Lustration law and things made clear



In the malefic politics hierarchy, our life in postcommunism has been more harmed by the occult moves made in December 1989 and in June 1990 by the FSN (Front for National Salvation) members in power than by what happened in the last communist decade. In the last years of the totalitarian regime, the Communists would consolidate their domination in keeping with the system's outlook and no one was expecting something good to happen any more. The political decisions made by Ion Iliescu and his gang in December 1989 and June 1990 compromised the democratization process just when everyone was expecting what was best.
Therefore civil society representatives' claim that the lustration should ban the access to public opinions for those guilty of the events in 1989 and the coal miners' attacks is based on juridical, logical and ethical criteria more than those promoting lustration at any costs for the last years of communism and just for those enjoying high ranks in a bureaucratic hierarchy engulfing the entire society. The plotting of plans for repression, murder, manipulation and the committing of such deeds were facts much more severe than the obedience and profiteering of some people, who had no choice or courage to escape the totalitarian influence. Those involved in the events in December 1989 and the coal miners' attacks in 1990 and 1991 were the second and third hand staff of the nomenclature and the political police services. Although they had the right solutions of the open society at hand, they chose the malefic scenarios because they wanted so. They thought they were allowed to do anything, because they enjoyed support from millions of brainwashed people thinking that the execution of the Ceausescu couple meant the end of the communist dictatorship. They will have to pay now.
Despite the obstacles set against democratization and capitalism by the FSN conservatives, they went on presently. But after realizing how much they had harmed the nation by helping Iliescu and Romania do misdeeds, lots of councilors, activists, ministers, presidents and more chose different ways. The list is long, but their deeds (and advice) have been forgotten.
They stood by Iliescu and Roman in December 1989. If the request to enlarge the categories the lustration law is on is met, it will effect on all the parties. And this is not about surprises of the Mona Musca kind, but about politicians and civil society representatives whose biographies are built on the association with the rulers in December 1989-June 1990. In was in this period that the foundations of the corrupted and clientele-based democracy were achieved. And the system is still alive. Some will even be candidates to seats in the Parliament of Europe. The campaign for a clean Parliament mustn't ignore them.
Although the settling of clearer criteria for lustration is welcome, the state of things is more complicated. If the new lustration criteria get to be applied, this will harm a few hundred of those accomplices in December 1989, as well as in the four coal miners' attacks in 1990 and 1991. The fact that they chose a different kind of politics after these events doesn't delete their malefic association to the rulers of the respective times, since they had a choice, unlike under the communist regime. Now those who will vote for the law will make a choice. And many of them are in that category of the 1989-1991 accomplices. A vicious circle.

Dan Pavel
Ziua luni 13 august 2007 http://www.ziua.net/english