Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Mircea Druc

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President
  
Name
  
Mircea Druc

Preceded by
  
Position created

Role
  
Politician

Political party
  
Succeeded by
  
Religion
  
Eastern Orthodoxy



Born
  
July 25, 1941 (age 83) Pociumbauti, Riscani district, Romania (
1941-07-25
)

Education
  
Moscow State University, Saint Petersburg State University

Mircea druc unirea este posibila planeta moldova are di tati rezolvati problemele la bucuresti


Mircea Druc (born 25 July 1941, in Pociumbăuţi, Rîşcani district) is a Moldovan and Romanian politician who served as Prime Minister of Moldova between 26 May 1990 and 22 May 1991.

Contents

He was appointed as Prime Minister after the opposition walked out from the parliament, as a protest to the policies of the nationalist Popular Front of Moldova.

His government purged non-Moldovans from cultural institutions and changed the outlook of the education system to be centred towards Romanian-language education, away from the Russian-centric education system of the Soviet era. Street names and the symbols of the state were changed to show the Romanian heritage of Moldova. After revolts against the pro-Romanian discriminatory policy of the government spread in Transnistria and Gagauzia, he threatened to unleash a civil war similar to that in Lebanon and Ulster.

In May 1991 he was removed from his position after an overwhelming vote of no confidence. After his dismissal he came under scutiny for questionable financial dealings. He was also accused of promoting subjugation of the Russian speakers.

Mircea Druc Flacra TV Mircea Druc despre Unire integraren UE

When asked about the union with Romania, he answered that first, there need to be a few hundred Romanian-Moldovan joint ventures and some tens of thousands of mixed marriages.

He ran as an independent candidate with a single-issue platform of union of Romania and Moldova in the 1992 Romanian presidential election, receiving 326,866 votes (2.75%).

Druc stayed in Romania, where he worked for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs between 2001 and 2004. In 2004 he joined the nationalist Greater Romania Party. He is currently working at the Commerce and Industry Chamber of Romania, involved in projects for trans-border cooperation between Romania, the Republic of Moldova and Ukraine.

In the 2008 Romanian legislative election, Druc ran for a place in the Romanian Parliament in a constituency in Suceava County, being a candidate of the Democratic Liberal Party.

Mircea druc revenirea la patria mama este singura sansa pentru republica moldova


References

Mircea Druc Wikipedia


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