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Varuj Vosganian: liberal economist and target of embarrassing claims

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  • Varuj Vosganian: liberal economist and target of embarrassing claims

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 27, 2006 Friday 4:44 PM GMT

    Varujan Vosganian: a liberal economist and target of embarrassing claims

    BUCHAREST, Oct 27 2006


    Liberal senator Varujan Vosganian, a noted economist nominated as
    Romania's first European commissioner, has become the target of
    accusations linking him to the far-right and the Communist-era secret
    services.

    Friendly and well-read, the balding 48-year-old Vosganian, who
    graduated from the Economic Institute and Faculty of Mathematics and
    is the author of several volumes on economics and poetry, always
    backed Romania's entry into the European Union.

    Vosganian, who hails from the Armenian minority and speaks fluent
    English and French, had until now been spared by the press, which
    usually thrives on "incendiary" revelations about Romanian
    politicians.

    But his nomination for the post of European commissioner has
    generated a wave of attacks against him, ranging from close ties with
    the far-right to collaboration with the Communist-era secret police,
    the Securitate.

    A Bucharest daily said Friday the senator was a member of Rost, a
    movement that promotes "Christian and national values," much like the
    far-right and anti-Semitic Iron Guard did in the 1930s.

    But speaking with AFP, Rost president Caludiu Tarziu denied any link
    to far-right extremists, saying the organisation favoured "classic
    conservatism."

    The media also accused the senator of ties with a scandal-hit
    businessman, Sorin Ovidiu Vantu. Vosganian has admitted his small
    right-wing party received funds from Vantu in the 1990s but said
    there was "nothing illegal," as all the money was declared to the
    state audit court.

    On Friday, comments by a former Securitate official were published,
    saying Vosganian had been recruited by counter-intelligence while he
    worked at a brewery.

    "It is absurd to think an accountant who never left Romania before
    1990 was recruited by a foreign intelligence service," the senator
    said, adding "I never had any link with the Securitate."

    Several politicians, led by liberal Prime Minister Calin Tariceanu,
    defended Vosganian, saying he was the victim of a smear campaign
    orchestrated by his political opponents or the secret service.

    Calling the allegations "speculations" and "affabulation," Tariceanu
    urged President Traian Basescu to "support this candidature" for the
    post of European commissioner.

    Vosganian's nomination had been the subject of tense negotiations
    between Tariceanu and Basescu, who have been at odds for months.
    Sources close to the two men have said the president only agreed to
    the nomination in exchange for Defence Minister Teodor Atanasiu's
    resignation following a row over the issue of Romanian troops in
    Iraq.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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