Vladimir Voronin
Vladimir Voronin Владимир Воронин | |
---|---|
President of Moldova | |
In office 7 April 2001 – 11 September 2009 | |
Prime Minister |
Dumitru Braghiş Vasile Tarlev Zinaida Greceanîi |
Preceded by | Petru Lucinschi |
Succeeded by | Mihai Ghimpu (Acting) |
President of Parliament | |
In office 12 May 2009 – 28 August 2009 | |
Preceded by | Ivan Călin (Acting) |
Succeeded by | Mihai Ghimpu |
Minister of Home Affairs | |
In office 1988 – 6 June 1990 | |
Prime Minister |
Ivan Călin Petru Pascari |
Preceded by | Gheorghe Lavranciuc |
Succeeded by | Ion Costaş |
Personal details | |
Born |
Corjova, Soviet Union (now Moldova) | 25 May 1941
Political party |
Communist Party (Before 1991) Party of Communists (1993–present) |
Spouse(s) | Taisia Mihailovna |
Children |
Oleg Valentina |
Alma mater |
Cooperation College All-Union Institute for Food Industry Academy of Social Sciences Soviet Academy of the Ministry of Internal Affairs |
Religion | Eastern Orthodoxy |
Vladimir Nicolaevici Voronin (Romanian pronunciation: [vladiˈmir nikoˈla.evit͡ʃʲ voˈronin], Russian: Влади́мир Никола́евич Воро́нин, Vladimir Nikolaevič Voronin) (born May 25, 1941) is a Moldovan politician. He was the third President of Moldova from 2001 until 2009 and has been the First Secretary of the Party of Communists of the Republic of Moldova (PCRM) since 1994. He was Europe's first democratically elected Communist Party head of state after the dissolution of the Eastern Bloc.
Family and education
Vladimir Nicolaevici Voronin was born in the village of Corjova, Dubăsari District of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. Despite his Russified name, his ethnic origins are Moldovan. Although Voronin is a lifelong communist who pursued unfriendly policies towards Romania at various times during the 2000s, his grandfather Isidor Sârbu was an anticommunist fighter in Romania after 1944.[1][2][3] Voronin's mother, Pelagheia Bujeniţă, died on July 2, 2005.[4]
Voronin graduated from the Cooperation College (Kooperativny technikum) of Chişinău (1961), the All-Union Institute for Food Industry (1971), the Academy of Social Sciences of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (1983), and the Academy of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Soviet Union (1991).
Early career
He began working in 1961 as the head of a bakery in the town of Criuleni. From 1966 until 1971, Voronin held the offices of vice-director of the bread factory in Criuleni and head of the bread factory in Dubăsari.
After 1971, he was active in the state administration of the Moldavian SSR, being in turn a member of the Dubăsari and Ungheni township executive committees, of the Ungheni District Executive Committee, and, starting 1983, inspector and vice-director of the Organization Section of the Central Committee of the Moldavian branch of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. In 1985, he was appointed head of section in the Council of Ministers of the Moldavian SSR. Between 1985 and 1989, Voronin served as first secretary of the Bender City Committee of the Communist Party. Between 1988 and 1990, he held the office of the Minister of Internal Affairs of the Moldovan SSR. In this capacity he advocated against the use of force to quell the anti-Soviet popular demonstrations of November 7 and 10, 1989,[5] a regretful reference to which he made when addressing the country on TV on April 8 after the police has quelled the 2009 Moldova civil unrest. Voronin was also a member of the Supreme Soviet of the Moldavian SSR of 10th and 11th legislatures.
In 1993, Voronin became the co-president of the Organizational Committee for the creation of the Party of Communists of the Republic of Moldova (PCRM). He played a central role in reviving the Communist Party after it was banned in 1991–1993. In 1994 he was elected President of the PCRM. He was a candidate for the post of President of the now-independent Republic of Moldova at the 1996 elections. In the parliamentary election in March 1998, Vladimir Voronin was elected as a Member of Parliament. He then served as member of its Permanent Bureau and as president of the PCRM's parliamentary faction, which held 40 of 101 seats.
Voronin was nominated as Prime Minister of Moldova by President Petru Lucinschi in late 1999, but the nomination was unsuccessful because Voronin did not have enough support in parliament.[6] In the parliamentary election in February 2001, he was again elected as a Member of Parliament.
Presidential career
The PCRM won 50.07% of the vote and 71 of the 101 seats in the February 2001 parliamentary election; by this time the constitution had been changed to provide for election of the President through the Parliament rather than popular vote.[6] In March the PCRM's Central Committee nominated Voronin as its presidential candidate at a plenum,[7] and on April 4, 2001 Voronin was elected as President by the Parliament. Of the 89 deputies participating in the vote, 71 voted for Voronin, 15 voted for Dumitru Braghiş, and three voted for Valerian Cristea.[8] He was sworn in at a ceremony in Chişinău on April 7, 2001.[9] The Constitutional Court ruled that the President could also lead a political party, and Voronin was re-elected as the PCRM's leader.[6]
Voronin maintained his commitment to the reduction of Moldova's chronic poverty by allocating more resources to social safety net items such as health, education, and increasing pensions and salaries. These populist aims helped to maintain support for his regime, but Moldova still remained the poorest country in Europe throughout his presidency, with around 38% of GDP coming from remittances of Moldovans working abroad (2008). Voronin's tenure as President was marked by fluctuating relations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. Voronin proceeded with Lucinschi's plans to privatize several important state-owned industries, and on occasion even broke with his own party over this issue.
From January to April 2002, opposition forces organized large demonstrations in protest against several controversial government proposals, including expanded use of the Russian language in schools, and plans for its designation as a second official language. While the demonstrations were tense at times, the government did not use force and ultimately agreed to mediation by the Council of Europe.
During his visit to the United States (December 16–20, 2002), Voronin met with President Bush and issued a joint statement with him affirming the relationship between the two countries, and acknowledging the work Moldova needed to bring about reform and privatization.[10]
In 2003, Voronin's government backtracked over signing a Russian-proposed federalization settlement with the breakaway region of Transnistria (Kozak memorandum). In 2004, Voronin branded the leadership of Transnistria "a transnational criminal group", and ordered an economic blockade of Transnistria after its authorities closed several Romanian-speaking schools.
The second mandate
In the parliamentary election in March 2005, the PCRM received 46.1% of the vote and won 56 seats in the 101-member Parliament — more than enough for the 51-vote minimum required to remain in government, but short of the 61 votes necessary to elect a president. However, President Voronin received the necessary support from the Christian Democratic People's Party, the Democratic and Social Liberal factions, after he promised to deliver on needed reforms and Euro-Atlantic integration for the country. (The latter two factions broke away from the Electoral Bloc “Moldova Democrată” following the election, leaving the Our Moldova Alliance (AMN) of the former Mayor of Chişinău Serafim Urechean as the second-largest party in Parliament, with 26 seats.) In the presidential election held in Parliament on April 4, 2005, Voronin was re-elected with 75 votes; another candidate, Gheorghe Duca, received one vote, and two votes were invalid.[11]
Political agenda during tenure
The declared main goals of his political agenda were:
- Closer ties with the Russian Federation and "integration in Europe"; solving the Transnistrian conflict; EU cooperation (and membership if possible); strong opposition to NATO membership; independence, as opposed to a unification with Romania.[12]
Events of 2009 and resignation
After the parliamentary election held on 5 April 2009, the PCRM won 49.48% of the vote and 60 seats, one seat too few to elect a President. Voronin was elected Speaker of the Parliament and retained the Presidency of Moldova with an interim status. The police crackdown of the civil unrest in April 2009 antagonized the society, and the communists were unable to secure one additional vote out of the 41 MPs from the three opposition parties; a snap parliamentary election was necessary.
In the snap parliamentary election in July 2009, the PCRM won 44.69% of the vote, which is more votes than any other individual party, and gained 48 seats, but it lost its parliamentary majority to a coalition of opposition parties which has 53 seats. However, the opposition also failed to obtain enough seats to elect a President, thereby producing more uncertainty. Voronin announced on 2 September 2009 that he intended to resign, saying that his position as acting President had become "ambiguous and doubtful".[13] He resigned on 11 September 2009.[14][15] The President sent a letter to Parliament confirming his intention to resign.[16] Mihai Ghimpu succeeded Voronin as acting president until a proper President could be elected.[17]
Post-presidential years
The pro-Western parliamentary majority on December 29, 2009 blocked Voronin's election to Moldova's permanent delegation at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe in Strasbourg.[18] In February 2010, Vladimir Voronin and his wife returned the diplomatic passports which they were keeping illegally.[19][20]
Personal life
Vladimir Voronin is married to Taisia Mihailovna (a Ukrainian) and has two children, a son Oleg and a daughter Valentina. Vladimir Voronin's CV states he is an economist, engineer, political science graduate, and jurist by education. In October 2012, Vladimir Voronin and his wife celebrated their golden marriage anniversary. He has the military rank of Major General from the former USSR Ministry of Interior (equivalent of NATO OF-6 Brigadier General – see Ranks and insignia of the Soviet military and Ranks and insignia of NATO). Some argue that he also holds Russian citizenship in addition to citizenship of the Republic of Moldova, because he used to receive a pension as a former Russian Ministry of Interior employee, from the time he lived as a private person in Moscow in 1991–1993.[21] His son, Oleg Voronin, is arguably the richest businessman in Moldova. His daughter is a physician, but unlike Oleg not a public figure. Vladimir Voronin on 19 February 2010 told journalists that the questioning of his son is an attempt of revenge against his family by the current authorities. Oleg Voronin is suspected of fiscal evasion and money laundering.[22]
Honours and awards
- Knight Grand Cross of the Grand Order of King Tomislav ("For outstanding contribution to the development and improvement of relations between the Republic of Croatia and the Republic of Moldova and the promotion of the European idea and the project of European integration.", 21 March 2007)
References
- ↑ (Russian) An early publication mentioning this fact was a 2005 article by Gheorghe Budeanu in the Romanian-language weekly Timpul, issue 328 (Russian translation of the article).
- ↑ (Romanian) Ziua, 27 March 2008 (full article in Romanian)
- ↑ Ziua, 27 March 2008 (Short version of the article in English)
- ↑ (Russian) "Mother of Moldovan President Voronin Died"
- ↑ "The Moldovan Communists: From Leninism to Democracy?" by Luke March, Eurojournal.org, September 2005.
- 1 2 3 Political Parties of the World (6th edition, 2005), ed. Bogdan Szajkowski, page 414.
- ↑ "Moldovan communists determined to keep links with West", Kommersant (nl.newsbank.com), March 7, 2001.
- ↑ "Moldovan Communist Party leader elected president", Basapress news agency (nl.newsbank.com), April 4, 2001.
- ↑ "Moldovan president sworn in", ITAR-TASS news agency (nl.newsbank.com), April 7, 2001.
- ↑ "Foreign policy – Moldova -". Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- ↑ "Moldovan parliament re-elects Voronin as president", Moldova One TV (nl.newsbank.com), April 4, 2005.
- ↑ (Romanian) Ziarul de Iasi: "Voronin: Bucurestiul nu e fratele mai mare, cu Rusia avem o relatie umana"
- ↑ "Voronin Resigns As Acting Moldovan President", Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 2 September 2009.
- ↑ "Moldovan acting president resigns". Xinhua News Agency. 2009-09-11. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
- ↑ "Last stop: Moldova's former president resigns". The Sofia Echo. 2009-09-11. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
- ↑ "Moldovan president Vladimir Voronin resigns". The Star (Malaysia). 2009-09-11. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
- ↑ "Moldova: Communists to End Rule". The New York Times. 2009-09-11. Retrieved 2009-09-13.
- ↑ "Moldova's Former President Kicked Out Of PACE Delegation". RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- ↑ "Voronin couple own illegally over ten diplomatic passports". Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- ↑ Vladimir and Taisia Voronin turned in the passports hold illegally
- ↑ Azi.md: "PRP urging President Voronin to pour light on some details in his biography"
- ↑ Moldpres, Moldovan ex-president's son suspected of fiscal evasion, money laundering
External links
Media related to Vladimir Voronin at Wikimedia Commons
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Petru Lucinschi |
President of Moldova 2001–2009 |
Succeeded by Mihai Ghimpu Acting |