Retired General who organised Ceausescu trial dies
A retired Romanian general who organised the summary trial of Communist leader Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife has died. Victor Stanculescu was 88.

A retired Romanian general who organised the summary trial of Communist leader Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife has died. Victor Stanculescu was 88.
His lawyer, Catalin Dancu, said Stanculescu died in a nursing home on Sunday after recently suffering a stroke.
Stanculescu held a senior position in Ceausescu’s regime and the Communist leader dispatched him to crack down on demonstrators protesting against Ceausescu’s rule in the city of Timisoara in December 1989.
He then returned to Bucharest and asked doctors to put his healthy leg in a cast to ostensibly avoid taking part in any further measures suppressing the revolt.
Ceausescu’s defence minister Vasile Milea fatally shot himself, and Stanculescu was promoted to defence minister. On December 22, he advised the Ceausescus to flee angry protests in a helicopter after the revolt spread to Bucharest.
Stanculescu then turned against the Ceausescus, and was a key organiser of their trial.
They were executed by firing squad after the summary trial on December 25, 1989. Some 72 protesters died in Timisoara and 253 were wounded, marking the start of the uprising against Ceausescu’s regime.
In 2008, Stanculescu was sentenced to 15 years in prison for his role in killing demonstrators. He was freed in 2014. He never expressed remorse for the deaths and declined to shed light on what happened during the revolt where more than 1,300 people died.
Former President Ion Iliescu said on Monday that Stanculescu had “in a decisive moment of recent history, contributed to (Romania) coming out of totalitarianism and returning to democracy.”
Stanculescu will be cremated on Tuesday. There was no immediate word on survivors.