Snegur was born on 17 January 1940 in Trifănești, then Kingdom of Romania.[1] In 1957, Snegur graduated from the high school in Frumușica, Florești District, and went on to study at the Agricultural State University of Moldova, from which he graduated in 1961, and where he completed a PhD in agricultural sciences at the university's Department of Animal Husbandry in 1972.[2][3]
Professional career
As a trained agronomist, Snegur worked as the director of kolkhoz in the village of Lunga, Florești District, from 1961 to 1968.[4] From 1968 to 1973, he was the director of the Experimental Station of Field Crops.[4] From 1973 to 1978, Snegur was the director of the Main Agricultural Science Directorate of the Ministry of Agriculture.[4] From 1978 to 1981, he worked as the general director of the Selectia Research Institute of Field Crops in Bălți.[4][2][5]
In 1981, he became the secretary of the Communist Party committee of Edineț District, an office he held until 1985.[4] That year, he became Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, serving until 1989.[4] On 26 March 1989 Snegur was elected member of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union in the 11th and 12th convocations.[4]
On 29 July 1989, Snegur was appointed Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of Moldavia, serving in this role until 27 April 1990.[4] During his term, he supported the bill to make Moldovan the official language and the return of the tricolor flag of Moldova.[6][1] On 27 April, he became the chairman of the Supreme Soviet of Moldavian SSR.[4] On 3 September, he became President of the Moldavian SSR.[2][4]
Presidency (1991–1997)
On 23 May 1991, Snegur became the president of the Republic of Moldova, still a constituent republic of the USSR.[1] on 27 August 1991, Moldova declared its independence from the Soviet Union and Snegur became the first president of Moldova as an independent state.[1] Snegur decided to run as an independent candidate in the December 1991 presidential election, running unopposed after the Popular Front's efforts to organize a voter boycott failed.[2]
In an address to the Parliament of Romania in February 1991, Snegur spoke of a common identity of Moldovans and Romanians, referring to the "Romanians of both sides of the Prut River".[7] Despite this Snegur proved to be opposed to immediate reunification with Romania, which led to a split with the Popular Front of Moldova in October 1991. He instead sported the idea of a political union that would keep the political sovereignty of each state whilst engaging in economic and military cooperation (known as the "one people, two States" plan).[8]
Later years of presidency (1995–1997)
In 1995, Snegur founded the Party of Rebirth and Conciliation of Moldova with former members of the Agrarian Party of Moldova. Snegur ran as the Party of Rebirth and Conciliation's candidate in the 1996 presidential election, where he won a plurality, but not a majority, of votes in the first round. However, Parliamentary speaker Petru Lucinschi surprised the nation with an upset victory over Snegur in the second round. Snegur continued as President until 15 January 1997.[2]
He published his memoirs in the book "Labyrinth of Destiny: memoirs" in 2007.[9]
Personal life
In 1960,[10] he married Georgeta Snegur (23 April 1937 – 23 December 2019),[11] and had a daughter, Natalia Gherman, who was acting prime minister of Moldova in 2015, and a son.[2]
Death
Snegur died on 13 September 2023, at age 83.[12][13][14] President Maia Sandu declared mourning day for 16 September with a nationwide minute of silence at 12:00 PM.[15][16] The state funeral took place on 16 September, with an early memorial service in the Nativity Cathedral of Chișinău, and the coffin was laid to rest at the Palace of the Republic, from where the funeral procession left, passing through Great National Assembly Square until arriving at the Central Cemetery, where he was buried.[17]
^Problems, Progress and Prospects in a Post-Soviet Borderland: The Republic of Moldova. Trevor Waters. "In an address to the Romanian parliament in February 1991 (on the first official visit to Romania by any leader from Soviet Moldova since its annexation), the then President Snegur strongly affirmed the common Moldovan-Romanian identity, noting, 'We have the same history and speak the same language,' and referred to 'Romanians on both sides of the River Prut'. In June 1991 the Romanian parliament vehemently denounced the Soviet annexation of Bessarabia and Northern Bucovina, describing the territories as 'sacred Romanian lands'."