Berne incident
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Berne incident consisted in the brief seizure of the Romanian embassy in Bern, Switzerland by a group of Romanian émigrés who opposed the communist regime. It occurred between February 14 and February 16, 1955.
Contents |
[edit] Events
The attack was planned and led by Oliviu Beldeanu, a sculptor born in 1924 in Dej. At the age of 15 he became a member of Frunză Verde ("Green Leaf"),[1] a youth organisation associated with the fascist Iron Guard, but after the end of World War II he joined the anti-communist resistance movement. In 1949, he fled to the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, only to return a few months later, allegedly as an agent of the UDBA.[2] In 1951, Beldeanu arrived in Italy; he later settled in Konstanz, West Germany.
In 1954 Beldeanu began preparing the assault on the Romanian embassy: he travelled several times to Switzerland, acquired the needed weapons and tools, and held training sessions with the other members of the group (Ion Chirilă, Stan Codrescu, Dumitru Ochiu and Tudor Ciochină).
On the evening of February 14, 1955, the group drove from Konstanz to Berne, broke into the embassy around midnight and entered the embassy's driver's residence. The members of the group then proceeded to discreetly search for secret documents.[3]
Around 2:00 AM Aurel Şeţu, the embassy's driver (and most likely a Securitate agent) returned and entered into an altercation with Codrescu and Ochiu, following which Şeţu got shot. For unclear reasons he only got to a hospital six hours later, where he died. After the shooting most of the embassy's staff fled.
The Swiss police was notified and surrounded the building, but without intervening. The group demanded the release from Romanian prisons of several important personalities, such as Dinu Brătianu. On the night of February 15/16, Dumitru Ochiu exited the embassy, carrying with him a number of documents; he was immediately arrested by the Swiss police.[4] The rest of the group surrendered the next day.
[edit] Motivations
According to its organizers, the attack's purpose was to attract international attention to the abuses, injustices and human rights violations perpetrated by the communist Romanian government, as well as exposing the espionage activities of the Romanian embassy in Switzerland.
However, the Romanian government of the time accused the Iron Guard structure in exile (under the leadership of Horia Sima) and Western intelligence agencies of masterminding a fascist anti-Romanian plot with the complicity of the Swiss authorities.
Some commentators have suggested that the group was indeed acting on behalf of a foreign intelligence service, looking for documents related specifically to covert Romanian agents in the Western program of parachuting agents into areas of the Eastern Bloc.[5]
[edit] Aftermath
The members of the group were tried in Berne and were handed lenient sentences: Oliviu Beldeanu was sentenced to four years in prison, Stan Codrescu (who had shot Aurel Şeţu) to three and a half years, Ion Chirilă to three and a half years and Dumitru Ochiu to a year and four months.
In Romania, protest gatherings were staged in several towns and a large commemorative meeting held in Bucharest on the occasion of Aurel Şeţu's burial.
Oliviu Beldeanu's fate turned tragic after he was released from prison in 1957, as the communist regime did not intend to leave his action go unpunished. He was lured to West Berlin and abducted by Stasi and Securitate agents,[6] then taken to Bucharest, subjected to a kangaroo trial, and executed on February 18, 1960.
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
- (Romanian) Ştejărel Olaru, "Cei cinci care au speriat Estul" ("The Five Who Frightened the East"), in Timpul, September 2003
- Cristian Troncotă, Istoria serviciilor secrete româneşti: de la Cuza la Ceauşescu ("History of the Romanian Secret Services: from Cuza to Ceauşescu"), Editura Ion Cristoiu S.A., Bucharest, 1999 ISBN 973-99233-0-5