Boston Herald

Ion Ficior, infamous Romanian prison commander, at age 90

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BUCHAREST, Romania — Ion Ficior, who was incarcerat­ed for the deaths of 103 political inmates while in charge of a communist-era labor camp in Romania, has died. He was 90.

Mr. Ficior died yesterday at Jilava prison hospital, according to Bianca Filote, spokeswoma­n for the government Institute for Investigat­ing the Crimes of Communism. The institute began to pursue Mr. Ficior and other former prison guards in 2013 in a bid to make them finally accountabl­e for wrongdoing during the communist era, handing over evidence to prosecutor­s.

Prison hospital spokeswoma­n Denisa Ene confirmed to The Associated Press that a prisoner, suffering various chronic medical conditions, had died, but declined to provide further details.

Mr. Ficior was serving a 20year sentence there for crimes against humanity. He was imprisoned in March 2017, but denied wrongdoing and said he was merely following orders.

But Andrei Muraru, who initiated the investigat­ion of Mr. Ficior, said he “showed a complete lack of mercy toward his victims, who endured prolonged suffering, were skeletal inmates, or defenseles­s elderly people,” he told the AP.

Mr. Ficior was commander at the Periprava labor camp from 1958 to 1963.

During his trial, former detainees accused him of beatings, a lack of food and medicine, overwork and unheated cells.

Romania had about 500,000 political prisoners under the Communist regime, about one-fifth of whom died while in detention, according to historians. Many were locked up for merely falling afoul of the communist regime.

A general amnesty was granted to political prisoners in 1964.

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