Romanian ex-leader Iliescu to stand trial over deadly 1990 protest crackdown

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Former Romanian president Ion Iliescu and 13 other officials have been ordered to stand trial on charges of crimes against humanity in connection with the deadly crackdown on a Bucharest protest in 1990, the prosecutor's office said Tuesday.

Four people were killed after Iliescu called in tens of thousands of club-wielding miners to help police put down the demonstration, just months after the execution of the communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu in December 1989.

"On June 11 and 12, 1990, the authorities decided to launch a violent attack on peacefully demonstrating protesters" opposed to the new regime which Iliescu headed after his election the month before, the prosecutor's office said.

Besides the four dead, a further 1,380 injured and 1,250 arrested, according to the charge sheet.

After quashing the protest, Iliescu thanked the miners for their "high sense of civic duty."

The former president, now 87, would go to serve two further terms before leaving office in 2004.

First accused in 2005 before charges of murder and attempted murder were dropped on technicalities two years later, he denies being responsible for the violence which brought widespread international condemnation.

The legal wheels began moving again after the European Court of Human Rights criticised Bucharest in 2014 for failing to fully examine the crimes committed in the aftermath of the revolution.

Prosecutors questioned Iliescu again in 2015.

The others facing trial include former prime minister Petre Roman; Virgil Magureanu, the intelligence chief at the time; two leaders of the powerful miners' union; and a former deputy prosecutor.