Diana_Iovanovici_Șoșoacă

Diana Iovanovici Șoșoacă

Diana Iovanovici Șoșoacă

Romanian lawyer and politician


Diana Iovanovici Șoșoacă (born 13 November 1975) is a Romanian lawyer and far-right politician.[3][4]

Quick Facts Member of the Senate of Romania, Parliamentary group ...

Personal life

Diana Iovanovici Șoșoacă was born on 13 November 1975[5] in Bucharest, Romania.[6] Her paternal grandparents were from Skopje, modern North Macedonia; Iovanovici Șoșoacă has stated that "half of me is from Skopje". Her paternal grandparents and their whole family migrated to Romania, with her grandfather having fought during World War II at the Battle of Stalingrad. According to Iovanovici Șoșoacă, an aunt of hers was imprisoned for fighting against the communist regime of Romania. Iovanovici Șoșoacă's mother is Alice Florescu Bleotu, a gynecologist and specialist in esotericism. Iovanovici Șoșoacă is married to Dumitru Silvestru Șoșoacă, who is her third husband.[7]

Details about her studies are scarce. Some sources claim she obtained a law degree from the Romanian-American University in Bucharest, and then worked for Eugen Dijmărescu [ro], Minister of Commerce in the Năstase cabinet.[8] According to her own recounting, she studied law at the University of Bucharest, at the urging of an uncle, who was president of the Prahova County Tribunal.[9]

Political life

Iovanovici Șoșoacă gained notorious popularity in 2020 after she published several messages against COVID-19 restriction measures on social media sites such as Facebook.[6][10][11] Iovanovici Șoșoacă is a former member of the Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR) and part of the Senate of Romania for the Iași County since 21 December 2020.[5][12] She later said that she did not want to enter the Parliament of Romania but that she was forced by other people who pressured her.[13] On 10 February 2021, she was excluded from AUR's parliamentary group after AUR members Claudiu Târziu and Sorin Lavric proposed her exclusion for not following the party's strategy.[14] Subsequently, on 30 May 2022, she joined S.O.S. Romania, a party founded in November 2021.[1] Iovanovici Șoșoacă is one of the main anti-vaccine figures of the COVID-19 pandemic in Romania.[15][16] She also supports a Romanian withdrawal from the European Union[17] and holds an anti-immigration rhetoric centered on the Syrian-born Romanian physician Raed Arafat.[18][19]

On 12 December 2021, Iovanovici Șoșoacă was accused by the Italian television channel Rai 1 of having kidnapped the journalist Lucia Goracci following an interview about COVID-19 pandemic. The journalist decided to leave the apartment where the interview was planned to be held after the senator told her that if the person who translate does not translate correctly she will pause them and correct them. Furthermore, one of the teammates tried to enter and a room without consent where the senator had important documents. Therefore the senator did not want them to leave before the police come and question their suspicious acts but the door was never locked as Gorraci left the apartment before police came in. The journalist was later arrested under accusations of possible theft and trespassing made by the senator towards her, and she was released only following the intervention of the Italian embassy in Romania.[20]

Iovanovici Șoșoacă has also been recurrently criticized in Romanian media for her ties with Russia.[21][22][23] The Russian state-controlled Sputnik news agency labeled her "the politician of the year 2021 in Romania".[24][25] Furthermore, in March 2022, in the midst of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Iovanovici Șoșoacă together with 3 other parliamentarians met with the Russian ambassador in Bucharest "on the theme of the memorandum related to the Peace of Bucharest", discussing a "position of neutrality of Romania" in the invasion, without the approval for representation by the Parliament leadership. One of those parliamentarians was PSD deputy Dumitru Coarnă, who was expelled from the party shortly after the meeting.[26][27]

Additionally, Iovanovici Șoșoacă was appreciated by Killnet (a pro-Russia hacking group which launched in 2022 a series of cyberattacks on multiple Romanian websites), after she said that Romania must not get involved in the war in Ukraine.[28] In March 2023, she proposed a law project on the Romanian Parliament for the annexation by Romania of Northern Bukovina, the Hertsa region, Budjak, Northern Maramureș and Snake Island from Ukraine, as they were "historical territories" that belong to Romania as stated in the law project.[29] In retaliation, Ukraine announced it would impose sanctions against Iovanovici Șoșoacă, labeling her as a threat to Ukrainian national security.[30] In February 2023, she accused the United States of having caused the 2023 Turkey–Syria earthquakes using a seismic weapon.[31] Moreover, on 21 November, Diana Șoșoacă interrupted a secret session in the Parliament of Romania, during which the massacres committed by Hamas during the 2023 Israel–Hamas war were presented, screaming "Palestine".[32] She took a soft pro-Palestine stance during the conflict, claiming that Romania should be neutral and mediate the conflict, that Hamas does not represent all Palestinians and that Israel is also commiting war crimes.[33]

Notes

  1. Iovanovici Șoșoacă was elected in the Romanian Senate from the PNR on the lists of the AUR based on a protocol between the two parties, signed on 20 October 2020.[2]

References

  1. Realitatea.NET (30 May 2022). "Diana Șoșoacă, într-un nou partid, după excluderea din AUR - S-a înscris în S.O.S. România". Realitatea.NET (in Romanian). Retrieved 30 May 2022.
  2. Pușcaș, Florin (10 February 2021). "Ninel Peia, președintele partidului din care face parte Diana Șoșoacă: 'Încă mai așteptăm ca AUR să revină la gânduri mai bune'". stiripesurse.ro (in Romanian). Archived from the original on 10 February 2021.
  3. "Diana IOVANOVICI-ȘOȘOACĂ" (in Romanian). Senate of Romania. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  4. Balaban, Georgiana (7 December 2020). "Detalii despre Diana Șoșoacă. Cine e noul senator AUR". Știrile Kanal D (in Romanian).
  5. Nazarie, Ilinca; Ionescu, Roxana (7 December 2020). "Alegeri parlamentare. Cine este Diana Șoșoacă, viitorul senator AUR la Iași?". Mediafax (in Romanian).
  6. Costiță, George (10 February 2021). "Diana Șoșoacă, dată afară din grupul AUR. Senatoarea îl acuză pe colegul Sorin Lavric de misoginism". Digi24 (in Romanian). Archived from the original on 10 February 2021. Retrieved 10 February 2021.
  7. "Șoșoacă vrea ca România să invadeze Ucraina. A depus un proiect de lege pentru anexarea mai multor teritorii" [Șoșoacă wants Romania to invade Ukraine. She submitted a bill for the annexation of several territories]. www.digi24.ro (in Romanian). 21 March 2023. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  8. Moraru, Iulia (22 November 2023). "Diana Șoșoacă neagă că a transmis live ședința secretă unde s-au prezentat imagini din Israel". Evenimentul Zilei (in Romanian). Retrieved 24 November 2023.

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