In January 1999, Cozma led
another series of miner protests, sparked by the
Radu Vasile government's intention to close down several money-losing mines in the Jiu Valley region. Intending to put pressure on the government, Cozma and his miners started marching towards
Bucharest. The mineriad was openly supported by the
Greater Romania Party (PRM) and by the president of this party,
Corneliu Vadim Tudor, who invited the miners to occupy the Romanian Parliament and to topple the government. At the beginning of February of the same year, however, Cozma was sentenced by the
Supreme Court of Justice to 18 years in prison for his involvement in the 1991 mineriad. This quickly prompted
a new march of the miners towards Bucharest. This time, special forces intervened and dispersed the miners at
Stoeneşti,
Olt County. Cozma and his lieutenants were captured by the
police; Cozma himself was taken to the
Rahova prison to serve his term. He was
pardoned by Romanian President
Ion Iliescu on December 15, 2004, only a few days before the end of the latter's final term in office. However, Iliescu revoked the pardon on December 16, stating that "it was a mistake". Yet Cozma was released in June 2005, when the cancellation of his pardon was ruled illegal by the
Bucharest Court of Appeal. In September 2005, he was sentenced by the
Romanian
Supreme Court to a 10-year term for the January 1999 Mineriad. His sentences overlapped, so as of June 2006 he still had to serve a 13-month
concurrent sentence in prison. On June 2, 2006, Miron Cozma's request to be released on
parole was denied by the Parole Commission of the
Rahova Penitentiary. A Bucharest court dismissed his appeal against the decision 2 weeks later. Cozma could have left the prison 6 months before time as recommended by the Parole Commission on January 3, 2007. Although the decision was upheld by a Bucharest court on January 9, it was overturned on appeal on February 20, 2007. Miron Cozma was finally released on 2 December 2007, with a restriction on entering Petroşani or Bucharest. Upon leaving Rahova, he flew to Timişoara to meet with his family and friends. He stated in his interviews that certain politicians should have been incarcerated as well, adding "Spiritul lui Miron Cozma nu moare!" ("The soul of Miron Cozma will never die!"). In June 2013, Miron Cozma claimed during an interview that the
Army had used live rounds against miners. ==Notes==