Chapter 785: Black October
The first update
Although it took a little longer than expected, August and his team finally pulled up a march of more than 2,000 people. Pen? Interesting? Pavilion wWw. biquge。 info Of course, all this was organized and plotted using Vojnea's identity to unite those who supported the Democratic Socialist Party and put pressure on the federal government, represented by Constantinescu.
What was once a trick used by the democrats against the communist parties in Eastern Europe is now being used by Yanayev in turn. Heavenly reincarnation, retribution is unpleasant, and sooner or later the sins you have done will have to be repaid.
Lie, this is the first weapon to bring down Constantinescu.
The resignation of Isscu, the leader of the Social Democratic Party, from all positions in the party because of bribery, became a pretext for being very skillful
By suggestion, the original bribery resignation turned into an attempt ****** push the right-wing Democratic Council to the forefront of public opinion.
The crowd at the gathering believed that Isescu was innocent, just as they believed unconditionally in the Social Democrats. They saw it as an unjust verdict and tried to put pressure on the presidential palace to gain the right to freedom in Isescu.
A large number of pro-parliamentary citizens gathered at the entrance of the presidential palace - because of the constitution, Constantinescu really did not dare to expel these people at will, for fear of being branded as a dictator. And the people who supported the parliament and some of the guys who had taken the money to put on a show held up signs with all sorts of radical slogans. These include the release of their supportive President Isescu, the trial for democracy and freedom, and a series of other sharp sarcasm.
It was already a cold late autumn in Romania in October, but it did not slow down the enthusiasm of the gathering people, who were wrapped in cotton clothes and down jackets shouted loudly as they marched in the direction of the presidential palace. Although a march broke out against him under Konstantinescu's nose, he did not choose to take any action.
He thought it was nothing more than a trivial accusation, and it was of the unwarranted kind.
The roadside was filled with signs and demonstrations, and white cardboard was marked with insulting words in bright red lettering and signs threatening to oust Constantinescu from the presidential palace. Despite attempts by the police to evict the men and physical clashes, more and more people joined the demonstrations. Looking out of the car window, Constantinescu saw that they had two demands.
One is to release Issescu, and the other is to demand a new presidential election.
They actually think that a legitimate election is invalid, which is already a drama of street politics. At this moment, Konstantinescu realized that something was serious, and if he continued to let things go without strengthening management, he didn't know what the situation would become next.
Constantinescu, through the Minister of the Interior, gave the Bucharest Police Station an order to clear the scene, and if he was kept down before the signs were gone, it would be impossible to keep them down after the next escalation.
"You tell him directly, if I see people on both sides of the street this afternoon holding signs of disapproval, then he, the chief of police, will get out of here! It's as simple as that, do you understand? I don't care what he says, I don't want to hear justifications, you tell him that the presidential palace only wants to see the results and doesn't care about the process. ”
After saying that, Konstantinescu hung up the phone very angrily.
As soon as he calmed down, Konstantinescu began to think about the secrets behind this mushrooming parade. It seems that all this looks like Isescu is manipulating him behind his back, using public opinion to force himself to release him.
The more this was the case, the harsher Constantinescu's attitude became, and he did not want to become the second unlucky Cole.
In doing so, however, he fell into Voinea's trap.
Under Konstantinescu's tough attitude, the Bucharest police department immediately took action, and they did not want to be ordered by the president to be directly kicked out of the police station. Riot police, armed with shields, quickly arrived at the scene to stand guard and tried to disperse the people.
This is not the police who defended the interests of the people in 1989, and after all these years of "reform", they have become accomplices of the oligarchic tyranny. Want the state's violent apparatus to speak for the bottom? It's just wishful thinking. I wonder if the people who supported freedom in helping the National Salvation Committee to overthrow Ceausescu's tyranny will have a trace of regret when they face the bomb-proof police who are waiting for them.
The unarmed, signboard-holding people finally tried the horror of the bourgeois political transformation. Armed to the teeth, the riot force began to attack, their steady pace and the terrifying beating of batons causing them to retreat gradually. In 1989, the military and police could not bear to turn their guns on the people, but this group was different.
As a violent machine in the service of interest groups, no matter how many people die, they will not be involved. The upheavals in Eastern Europe were a group of parasites that sought national interests to fool the masses into helping them overthrow Ceausescu's tyranny under the banner of democracy, freedom, and human rights. Disappointingly, however, when communism became a thing of the past, their lives became even worse.
At least in Ceausescu's time, everyone had the right to education. And now a significant number of them can only live in sewers, wrapped in a filthy life like rats.
A world of difference.
The angry masses finally chose to erupt after they had nowhere to vent their demands.
It's no longer a slogan of no freedom, no death, but they need work, they need bread.
Everything went round and round and returned to the original point before the October Revolution. The workers called for equality and bread, chanted the slogan of capitalism, and achieved the redistribution of benefits.
They rushed to the police, trying to contend with the hard, cold batons with their flesh and blood. Trying to smash the thin cardboard in his hand on top of their stab-proof vests, everything looked so pale and weak.
However, this is only a signal, a signal of rebellion against the shameless bourgeois rulers. They deceived the people, even more authoritarian and cold-blooded than Ceausescu.
On October 5, 1997, more than 50 demonstrators were hospitalized with serious injuries in the Romanian capital, after tragic street clashes took place. The Romanian government said it would continue to arrest the remaining demonstrators and remove all instability in the capital.
This October, it is called black.
The people began to become disillusioned with the bourgeois government. (To be continued.) )