Six retired senior figures in the Romanian Communist Party, including Gheorghe Apostol and Silviu Brucan, write an open letter to Nicolae Ceaușescu. They call for the relaxation of Ceaușescu's demand for increased exports, the release of more food for internal consumption, the investment in new technology for the industries, the halt of a vastly expensive program of prestige projects of doubtful economic value and for the dictator to put an end to systematization.[3]
10 September - A Romanian cruiser carrying 179 people collides with a Bulgarian tugboat on the Danube, near Galați. Only 18 people are rescued from the cruiser.[6]
November
20-25 November - The 14th party congress takes place.[7]
23 November – During the XIV Congress of the RCP, first shift workers from Timișoara Mechanical Works try to organize a revolt against the communist regime. Their movement is quelled by the Securitate organs.
15 December - Demonstrators in Timișoara try preventing the arrest of Protestant clergyman László Tőkés.[7]
16 December – The Romanian Revolution begins in Timișoara when rioters break into the Committee Building and cause extensive vandalism. Their attempts to set the buildings on fire are foiled by military units.
19 December - Parts of Romania are reported to be under virtual martial law by Reuter.[13]
20 December – A general strike breaks out in all the factories in Timișoara. Timișoara is declared the first city free of communism in Romania.
21 December
A huge rally in Bucharest turns into chaos as firecrackers explode at the periphery of the gathering. Soldiers, tanks, APCs, USLA [ro] officers and Securitate officers dressed in civilian clothes crack on demonstrators, leaving casualties and significant material damage.
22 December – Army units defect to the side of the demonstrators while the Ceaușescus flee and the Council of the National Salvation Front announces that it has overthrown the government.[7]
23 December - The Ceaușescu spouses are reported to have been captured.[14]
27 December – Petre Roman is appointed Prime Minister of the Government of Romania.
28 December – For the first time, after a long break, is held a meeting of the Board of Writers' Union of Romania. Is elected a provisional steering committee, the president being Mircea Dinescu.
^Grosescu, R. (2004). The Political Regrouping of Romanian Nomenklatura during the 1989 Revolution. Romanian Journal of Society and Politics, 4(1), 97-123.
^"Ion Iliescu". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 5 April 2022.
^"Sîrbu, Ion Desideriu". www.bjc.ro (in Romanian). Cluj County Library. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
^Flavius Cristian Marcau, "Revolution of 1989: Milea's Suicide", University of Târgu Jiu, Letter and Social Science Series, Issue 4, 2013, Retrieved February 27, 2016.