There are many political beliefs in the collapse of Eastern European communism. I have the right to choose what everyone believes, what to think, what to look for, and how to achieve it. Political science is not very clear and strict. The specific rule is that if one believes in the idea that you should join a party, that does not exist. Some matches what some people and others do not accept. The same principle also applies to the country. Communism seems to be successful in China, but Eastern Europe countries failed.
Now that more than 20 years have passed since Communism collapsed in eastern Europe, countries all over the world are trying to liquidate the past. In September, the prosecutor in Romania condemned the massacre of Communist Party Prison Commander Alexandru Visinescu. Since the dictator Nikola Ceausescu, who was tried and executed in 1989, he was the first Romanian to face this claim. Mr. Bizk served as Hungarian Interior Minister from 1957 to 1961 and received support from the central right under the 2011 Act. Prime Minister Victor Oban authorized the prosecution of crimes committed in communist era. Mr. Alban started up as an opposition leader in 1989, but requested the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Hungary, reflecting the wishes of the entire region.
After the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe, each Republic held a multi-party election in 1990. Slovenia and Croatia made elections in April, as the Communist Party elected to abandon peace peacefully. Other Yugoslav republics, especially Serbia, are more or less dissatisfied with the democratization of the two republics, imposing different sanctions on the two (eg Serbian 'tariffs on Slovenian products). Other Republican Communists saw the necessity of the democratization process; in December, Serbia confirmed the rule of the former Communist Party in the Republic, and held a parliamentary election as the last member of the Commonwealth.