From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adrian Năstase (born June 22, 1950) is a Romanian politician who was the
Prime Minister of Romania from December 2000 to
December 2004.
He competed as the Social Democratic Party (PSD) candidate in
the 2004 presidential
election, but was defeated by centre-right Justice and Truth (DA) Alliance candidate
Traian
Băsescu.
He was the President of the Chamber of Deputies from
December 21, 2004 until 15 March 2006, when he resigned due to
corruption charges.
Biography
Family
background
Năstase was born in Bucharest to a family that originated from
Hanul de Pământ village, Tărtăşeşti commune, Dâmboviţa County. His father, Marian
Năstase, was an officer of the Royal Romanian Army. His
father was marginalized after the rise of communism in 1947, but he
got his position back after he joined the Romanian Communist Party. Soon
after, he became part of the Romanian Communist nomenklatura, serving
as director in the Education Ministry. His mother is named Elena
and he has a sister, Dana Barb (née Năstase).
Communist
period
Adrian Năstase finished high school at Nicolae
Bălcescu High School (now Saint Sava National
College) and then graduated from the University of Bucharest,
receiving degrees from both the Department of Law and the
Department of Sociology. He worked at various times as a professor,
judge, and as president of several organizations involved with law
and international relations.
While a student, he married the daughter of Communist dignitary
Grigore
Preoteasa but then divorced her. On 31 July 1985, he married
Dana Miculescu, the daughter of Angelo Miculescu, another important
Communist personality. They have two sons, Andrei (b. 12 February
1986) and Mihnea (b. 23 June 1993).
As was the case with many of Romania's post-1989 political
elites, Năstase was a member of the Romanian Communist Party before
the Revolution during the era of Nicolae Ceauşescu. Although he was
young, he was trusted by senior Communist leaders and sent as
Romania's representative to various international conferences on human rights. In 1983
he published an article called "Human rights - a retrograde
concept", in which he attacked the Freedom House for its annual "rank" which
called Communist Romania a "Not Free" country. Năstase, 1983
In 1989, he participated in a Romanian-Soviet Youth conference
in Moscow and another one in
Pyongyang, North Korea. In an
interview given to Russian Komsomolskaya Pravda he talked
openly against Perestroika.[1]
Post-1989 political
career
Năstase was first elected to the Chamber of Deputies of
Romania as member of the National Salvation Front party
on June 9, 1990 and served as the Minister of Foreign Affairs in
the governments of Petre
Roman and Theodor Stolojan (June 28,
1990–October 16, 1992).
In 1992, he was re-elected to the Chamber of Deputies as a
member of the Democratic National Salvation Front (FDSN) and served
as the President of the Chamber of Deputies. Between 1993 and 1997,
he was also the executive president of the Party of Social
Democracy in Romania (PDSR, formerly the FDSN).
When the PDSR lost the 1996 elections,
Năstase became leader of the opposition PDSR parliamentary group,
vice-president of Chamber of Deputies, and member of Standing
Bureau and Member of the Romanian delegation to the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe where he was the
Recording Secretary of Council of Europe commission on judicial
problems and human rights with reference to illegal activities by
religious sects.
After the victory of the PDSR in the 2000 legislative elections
and the re-election of Ion Iliescu as President of Romania,
Năstase was elected president of the PDSR, which soon changed its
name to the Social Democratic Party
(PSD) after merging with another party. Năstase remained PSD president until
April 2005 when he was replaced as PSD president by
former foreign minister Mircea Geoană at a PSD party congress. At the same congress,
Năstase was elected to be PSD executive president, the second most
senior position in the party.
Term as Prime Minister of
Romania
Năstase was confirmed by the Parliament as Prime Minister on
December 28, 2000, following his appointment to the position in
days before by President Ion Iliescu. He held the position
concurrently with his leadership of the PSD. His four years
as Prime Minister were characterized by unprecedented political
stability in post-communist Romania, continuous economic growth,
and a foreign policy strongly oriented toward the West. Romania
joined NATO, and committed
Romanian troops in support of international efforts in the Balkans,
Afghanistan, and Iraq.
His government completed accession negotiations with the European Union
(EU) and aggressively passed legislation and implemented a number
of reforms required for EU accession, anticipated to take place in
2007 or 2008. His government successfully negotiated the lifting of
visa restrictions on Romanians traveling to EU Schengen treaty countries.
The privatization of large state-owned companies continued, with
the selling of money-losing steel enterprise Sidex of Galaţi to the Indian company Ispat and of the oil company Petrom to Austrian company OMV.
Adrian Năstase with George W. Bush.
Inflation decreased
and the Romanian
leu became stronger. However, critics pointed out that this was
at least partially due to an influx of foreign currency into
Romania from the estimated two million Romanians working abroad.
GDP also grew substantially during each year of his term, with a
growth of 8.3% achieved in 2004, the highest in the region. Average
wages similarly grew, although they did not match the pace of
economic growth. For example, in 2004 wages grew by 10.4%, with a
9.2% inflation rate, thereby leading to a real wage growth of 1.2%,
in a year when GDP grew by 7%.
The Năstase government did not make substantial inroads on a
number of important issues in Romanian society, such as
agricultural policy: about 42% of Romanians continued to work in
agriculture (compared to 3% of French and 19% of Poles). Critics also pointed out that economic
growth was not evenly distributed among the social classes, and the
percentage of people living below the poverty level remained high,
especially in the rural areas.
Although the government took initial steps toward meaningful
judicial reform, the government was repeatedly criticized,
including by the EU, for failing to combat substantially widespread
corruption, including at the highest levels.
2004
presidential candidacy
The 2004 presidential election cycle marked the end of the
second term of President Ion Iliescu, who, according to the
constitution, could not serve another term. The PSD selected Năstase
to be its presidential candidate. His running mate (selected to be
prime minister in the event of a Năstase win) was then Foreign
Minister Mircea
Geoană.
Throughout the autumn of 2004, opinion polls predicted Năstase
would win, boosted in areas and among sectors where the PSD traditionally
received strong support: in rural areas, in small and medium sized
towns in the south and east of the country, and among pensioners
and labor groups. The PSD, which remained by far the largest single
political party in the country, was also expected to rely on its
network of local party organizations to ensure voters came to the
polls.
Năstase was ahead by a substantial margin during the November 28
first round of the presidential elections, although
he received less than 50 percent of the vote, and therefore was
required to compete in a December 12 run-off election against
second place center-right Justice and Truth
(DA) Alliance candidate Traian Băsescu. Independent civil
society organizations alleged incidents of fraud in Năstase's favor
during the first round of the elections, including alleged multiple
voting by PSD supporters as a result of poor controls on voter
identification, and flaws in the electronic vote tabulation.
At the time the polls closed on the evening of the run-off
election, major media outlets released the results of exit polls
showing a tie between Năstase and Băsescu. Nonetheless, Băsescu and
his supporters interpreted the results as clear indication of a
victory. Tens of thousands of Băsescu's supporters converged on University Square in the
center of Bucharest, and
in other parts of the country, to celebrate his presumed victory.
The next morning, authorities released figures confirming Băsescu's
win. Năstase received only 48.77% of the total vote.
Năstase later attributed his surprise defeat to a number of
factors, including what he characterized as a failure of Humanist Party politicians
to campaign on his behalf (the Humanist Party had an electoral pact
with the PSD at the time); and the endorsement of Băsescu by Greater
Romania Party (PRM) leader Corneliu Vadim Tudor. Other likely
factors include Băsescu's strong performance during the second
presidential debate, as well as persistent allegations of
corruption against Năstase and the PSD.
Despite Năstase's presidential defeat, the PSD still won the
largest bloc of seats in the Parliament in the concurrent
legislative elections. Following the elections and in the interim
period before Băsescu's DA Alliance was able to form a coalition
majority, the PSD succeeded in obtaining sufficient support within
the parliament to elect Năstase as president of the Chamber of Deputies.
Former PSD Prime Minister Nicolae Văcăroiu was elected president
of the Senate in the same circumstances.
Năstase resigned as Prime Minister the day after Băsescu's
inauguration. Later on, at the request of Cozmin Gusa, the campaign
manager of Traian Băsescu, who resigned from Băsescu's party after
he got elected, requested the release of the official results
regarding the alleged fraud of the 2004 elections. The
investigation concluded that there were no hard evidence of this
fraud and that the elected president, Traian Băsescu, had no proofs
to make that statement. The accusation of stealing the elections
heavily helped Băsescu win the elections, some political analysts
argue.
Allegations
of corruption and other controversies
Allegation regarding highway construction concessions without
competitive bidding
In 2003 and 2004, Năstase was accused of giving construction
rights for one motorway (Braşov–Borş) without a competitive and open bidding
process, to the American Bechtel
Corporation after some high level talks between Năstase and the
company leadership. The Năstase government claimed that this no-bid
process was a necessity based on the short time allowed under their
agreements with international funders to get the project started,
and defended it as legal on the basis that it was a "national
security" project.[2]
2004 secret meeting
recording
In October 2004 Năstase was recorded in a PSD meeting showing
his alleged concern about an alleged 700 million USD bribe received by a
government member upon the privatization of state-run petroleum
company Petrom. Năstase has
been recorded saying: "Today I have asked the General Prosecutor to
investigate this, because if someone from the Government got $700
million and did not bring in his contribution to the election
campaign, then he is twice guilty." An article, including the audio
recording [3], was
published by Evenimentul Zilei on December 4,
2004. Adrian Năstase declared afterwards it was only a joke.
2006
blocking of accounts
In November 2006, the National Anticorruption Department decided
three bank accounts belonging to the ex-prime minister to be
frozen. According to the prosecutors, the blocked sums account for
a suspected corruption act.[4]
Gifts
from Ion Ţiriac
On 4 November 2004, Năstase received from Ion Ţiriac a Mercedes S500 (worth USD100,000) for a bet
they had [4]. The Romanian
law requires high-ranking officials to declare any gift worth more
than USD200 in less than 30 days after they receive it, but Năstase
failed to declare it as of 7 December. Both Ţiriac and Năstase
stated that the bet was actually a joke meant to create publicity
for a government project aimed at building over 400 gyms.
Eventually Năstase refused to accept the car, and asked Ţiriac to
donate instead 20,000 balls (soccer, handball, volleyball) for the
newly built gyms.
In the TV debate of the presidential election, Năstase declared
that he was considering quitting his hobby of hunting. However, on 22-23 January 2005,
Năstase took part in a boar hunt in Balc, Bihor County, which was dubbed a
'massacre' by the Romanian press, ecologist organizations and other
hunters. In the two-day hunt, 185 boars were killed, 23 by Adrian
Năstase.[5]
The hunting property Năstase uses is rented and maintained by
Ţiriac, who invests heavily in it (in the range of millions of USD) and uses it to
invite very important and wealthy persons from all over the world
to facilitate business deals.
2006 "Aunt Tamara"
scandal
In January 2006, Năstase included on a legally required wealth
disclosure statement an inheritance of over 1 million euros from
his wife's elderly aunt. Năstase claimed that the aunt, who had
lived modestly on a pension, had come upon the fortune by selling
jewels she had owned for decades and investing some of the funds in
real estate. The media speculated that the Năstases used the
inheritance as an opportunity to launder money and carry out
illegal land deals. Năstase "temporarily suspended" himself as
executive president of PSD while prosecutors investigated the
alleged crime.
Undervalued
land leads to resignation of posts
In 1998, Năstase bought a 700 m² lot in a posh neighborhood of
Bucharest, from
controversial businessman Gabriel Bivolaru, for a price that was
estimated by real-estate agents to be less than 1/25 of its worth.
On this land, his company built a luxury apartment building.
Initially, an inquiry by the National Anti-corruption Prosecutor's
Office failed to bring charges. In November 2005, the case was
reopened by the prosecutors and on 7 February 2006 he was
officially charged with taking a bribe and with trafficking
influence.
As a result of this charge, Năstase lost a vote of confidence
among his party’s leadership and decided to resign on March 15,
2006 as speaker of the lower chamber of parliament and as executive
president of the Social Democrats.
August 2008 Parliament
decision
On August 13, The Parliament rejected the request of National
Anticorruption Department to begin a trial against Adrian Nastase.
The Parliament said that there was not enough evidence in order to
start the trial.
Publications
Năstase has published over 150 pieces on International
law in Romanian and foreign journals, and has held over 140
talks at international meetings; publications include:
- Human Rights: a Retrograde Concept
- The Political Idea of Change
- International Economic Law II
- Parliamentary Humor
- Romania and the New World Order
- The Construction of Europe and Constitutional
Supremacy
- Romania's Treaties (1990–1997)
- Personal Rights of the National Minorities
- Regulations in International Law
- The Battle for Life
- Romania-NATO
2002
- NATO Enlargement.
See also
External
links
References
- Goşu, Armand, "25 noiembrie 1989: Năstase,
avocatul lui Nicolae Ceauşescu" ("November 25, 1989: Năstase,
advocate for Nicolae Ceauşescu"), Evenimentul
Zilei, December 3, 2004;
- Năstase, Adrian, "Drepturile omului, un concept retrograd" ("Human Rights - A
Retrograde Concept"), Concepţii şi controverse în domeniul
drepturilor omului, în viitorul social, magazine of the Academia Ştefan Gheorghiu, Jan-Feb 1983,
45-50. Reprinted by Academia Caţavencu, 16 November
2004 in its Scînteia
supplement, a collection of authentic articles written during
Communist
times by today's politicians, in a format parodying the
official Communist Party paper Scînteia;
- Roibu, Iuliana "Autostrada Borş-Braşov,
construita de Bechtel" ("Borş-Braşov motorway to be built by Bechtel"), Evenimentul Zilei, December 16,
2003.
- Realitatea
TV, Adrian Năstase, pus sub
acuzare February 7, 2006
- Gândul, "Adrian Năstase în atenţia DNA
în dosarul „Aurul Dacic“", 8 March 2006
| Adrian
Năstase cabinet (2000- 29 December
2004) |
|
| Prime Minister |
|
|
| Minister of State |
|
|
| Ministers |
|
|
| Minister-Delegate |
Gabriel
Oprea/Gheorghe Emacu (Public Administration) • Eugen Dijmărescu/Vasile Radu
(Commerce) • Acsinte Gaspar/Şerban
Nicolae (Relation with Parliament) • Vasile Puşcaş (Chief Negotiator
with the EU) • Ovidiu
Muşetescu (Authority for Privatization) • Ionel Blănculescu (Coordinating
Control Bodies) • Marian Sârbu/Bogdan Niculescu-Duvăz
(Relation with Social Partners) • Şerban Valeca (Research
Activity)
|
|
| PDSR/PSD
minister • PSDR
minister (merged into the PSD in 2001) • PUR minister |
|