Ristea Priboi

Ristea Priboi (born May 9, 1947) is a Romanian intelligence agent and politician. A member of the Social Democratic Party (PSD), he was a member of the Romanian Chamber of Deputies for Vrancea County from 2000 to 2004.

Biography

Born in Brădeşti, Dolj County, in 1968 he graduated from the school of the Communist regime's Securitate secret police in Băneasa, also obtaining a Law degree in 1971. In 1970, he was appointed as an officer in the Securitate's Department of Foreign Intelligence (DIE). His espionage missions included the United Kingdom (1974–1978), Sweden, France, Spain, Norway, Denmark, Belgium, the Netherlands and Greece. After the 1989 revolution that toppled the regime, he continued his work in the Foreign Intelligence Service (SIE), with his last assignment being to the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. There, he assured friendly relations between the Romanian government of President Ion Iliescu and that of Serbian President Slobodan Milošević. He contributed to the organisation of fuel smuggling to Serbia, infringing upon the embargo established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 713 as a result of the Yugoslav Wars. Romanian authorities carried out the smuggling in 1995 with the help of the secret services and of private companies controlled by former Securitate officers.[1] He formally retired in 1997.[2]

While in the Securitate, one of Priboi's roles was as deputy to General Nicolae Pleșiță, chief of the DIE department responsible for Radio Free Europe (RFE). During this time, the department coordinated a 1981 bomb attack on the RFE headquarters, perpetrated by Carlos the Jackal, as well as attempts to assassinate RFE employees and the dissident writer Paul Goma. According to investigations by historian Marius Oprea, Priboi also conducted political police activities inside Romania. Oprea asserts he was involved in the 1981 actions of the Securitate against a large group of intellectualsthe Transcendental Meditation affair. He also places him at the repression of the Brașov Rebellion of 1987, citing two witnesses who claim they were investigated by him, including one who accuses him of participation in acts of torture.[1]

In 1994, Priboi became an adviser on issues of national security for Adrian Năstase, whose hunting partner, mentor, and godfather to one of his sons he was,[1][3][4] and who was the Chamber's president (1992–1996) and vice president (1996–2000) before becoming Prime Minister in 2000.[5] Priboi was himself elected to the Chamber in 2000, taking an oath that he had never collaborated with the Securitate, saying he had only been "employed" by the agency.[1] While there, he sat on the committee for defence, public order and national security, and on the joint committee providing oversight to the activities of Serviciul Român de Informaţii.[6] He became president of this committee in February 2001, which led to public revelations of Priboi's Securitate past. The press, civil society, and part of the political opposition criticised him, while Năstase (who had backed Priboi's ascension to the position) and Iliescu came to his defence, with the latter maintaining that he should not be blamed for having been a Securitate employee. His position seemed at odds with Romania's aspiration to join NATO, with one opposition senator, Radu F. Alexandru of the National Liberal Party (PNL), labelling it "a provocation and a lack of responsibility". Priboi resigned in April, although he remained on the committee and continued as one of Năstase's closest confidants.[1][7][6][2] In November 2002, the committee cleared Priboi of involvement in internal Securitate activities and specifically the Braşov Rebellion, finding he had been engaged "exclusively" in foreign intelligence. At the same time, Oprea and fellow historian Adrian Cioroianu stated they had evidence he had been involved, respectively, at Braşov and in the Transcendental Meditation affair, prompting Priboi to announce he would sue them.[8] He did file a defamation lawsuit against Oprea and Werner Sommerauer, the Braşov worker who accused Priboi of torture, but lost in court.[9] The CNSAS, an institution charged with investigating Securitate affiliations, also investigated Priboi in March 2001, finding he did not engage in "activities of political police", prompting protest from member Mircea Dinescu, who opined that his monitoring of RFE met the "political police" designation.[10]

Unofficial sources cited by România Liberă newspaper claim that Priboi continued his intelligence work even while in the Chamber, and although numerous complaints were issued against him, no charges were allowed to proceed until the PSD lost the 2004 election. In February 2006, facing formal accusations of influence peddling and bribery on behalf of businessman Genică Boerică, and thought to have assisted in the criminal activities of Omar Hayssam, he fled the country.[11] The charges in the Boerică case were dropped in 2007, as prosecutors could not determine with certainty that he had received bribes or abused his political position. He continued to be investigated for giving and accepting bribes in a case that also involved Năstase, and did not make a public appearance in Romania until March 2008.[12] The case was sent to be tried in October 2009, but was suspended after the Constitutional Court intervened. As of 2010, Priboi is a consultant at the Bucharest branch of a Bulgarian energy company.[13]

Priboi and his wife Mariana have two children.[4][3]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Marius Oprea, "The Fifth Power. Transition of the Romanian Securitate from Communism to Nato", p.163-64. New Europe College Yearbook, issue 11/2003-2004, pg. 151-172.
  2. 1 2 (Romanian) M. Pascu, "A demisionat Ristea Priboi" ("Ristea Priboi Resigns"), Ziarul de Iaşi, 20 April 2001; accessed September 1, 2010
  3. 1 2 (Romanian) "Pionerii de ieri, teroriştii de mâine" ("Yesterday's Pioneers, Tomorrow's Terrorists"), p.32, KritiK, August 2006
  4. 1 2 (Romanian) Profile at the Romanian Chamber of Deputies site; accessed August 31, 2010
  5. (Romanian) Năstase's profile at the Romanian Chamber of Deputies site; accessed August 31, 2010
  6. 1 2 (Romanian) 2000-2004 parliamentary profile; accessed September 1, 2010
  7. Tom Gallagher, Modern Romania: The End of Communism, the Failure of Democratic Reform, and the Theft of a Nation, p.322-23. NYU Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8147-3172-4.
  8. "RFE/RL Newsline", 14 and 18 November 2002
  9. (Romanian) Cristian Vasilcoiu, Liliana Năstase, "Cetăţeanul Priboi'" ("Citizen Priboi"), Adevărul, 27 October 2008; accessed September 1, 2010
  10. "RFE/RL Newsline", 23 March 2001
  11. (Romanian) Ondine Gherguţ, "Ristea Priboi, un ofiţer bine 'acoperit'" ("Ristea Priboi, a Well-'covered' Officer"), România liberă, 7 November 2006; accessed August 31, 2010
  12. (Romanian) Dan Duca, Cristian Suţu, Dorin Petrişor, Adriana Duţulescu, "Fugarul Ristea Priboi reapare rîzînd după trei ani" ("Fugitive Ristea Priboi Reappears Laughing after Three Years"), Cotidianul, 18 March 2008; accessed August 31, 2010
  13. (Romanian) Sorin Semeniuc, "Ristea Priboi reînvie într-o afacere de 40 de milioane de dolari" ("Ristea Priboi Reappears in a $40 Million Affair"), Evenimentul Zilei, 26 August 2010; accessed August 31, 2010
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.