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Popescu: ‘I was an informant’
BUCHAREST (AP) - Gheorghe «Gica» Popescu, the former captain of Romania's national soccer team, acknowledged yesterday being an informer for the country's secret police during the communist era. Popescu's admission comes just three days after he denied the allegations, calling a newspaper report that he had been a Securitate informant «a big lie.» In an interview with the daily Evenimentul Zilei yesterday, Popescu said he wrote four notes informing on teammates and other colleagues while he was playing at Universitatea Craiova. The defender was part of a Romanian team that qualified for three consecutive World Cups, starting in 1990 and for two European Championships. He also helped Barcelona win the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1997. When the allegations surfaced on Monday, the 41-year-old Popescu said he had only signed a document in 1985 promising to «defend the national interests» during the regime of the late dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. In yesterday's telephone interview, he defended his actions under communism. «Even if I wrote notes, I wrote good things,» he said. «I praised [those] people.» During Ceausescu's rule, the Securitate relied on an army of 700,000 informants in a country of 22 million to to keep tabs on the population. Romania's star soccer player Gheorghe Hagi, who is related to Popescu through marriage, came to his defense yesterday, saying sports had brought glory to Romania in the communist era. «We [sportsmen] were the ambassadors for Romania. They should look elsewhere» for Securitate agents, he said.
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