The process of disintegration of Romanian rule in Transnistria started to unfold almost as soon as 1944 began. German operative troops entered northern Transnistria in January 1944. By the end of the month, the Romanians had lost control over the region's northern counties. Partisans, along with the Germans and their Cossack auxiliaries, frequently attacked Romanian officials of all ranks and commandeered their vehicles. Romanian gendarmes, severely outnumbered and in fear for their lives, remained in their quarters. The
pretor of
Trostineț raion was killed by German soldiers. On 29 January 1944, on account of Transnistria's transformation into a
de facto military rear area, Ion Antonescu ended the civilian administration of the region and dismissed Governor Alexianu. At the same time or roughly two weeks later (15 February 1944), the very name "Transnistria" was dropped; the region – now under General Gheorghe Potopeanu (from 1 February 1944) – officially became a territory under military administration. On 15 March 1944, Potopeanu ordered the withdrawal of all remaining personnel from the region. The last Romanian-perpetrated massacre during the Holocaust in Transnistria also took place on 15 March 1944, when Romanian gendarmes killed 4 Jews in
Slobidka. Shortly before being liberated by the Red Army, Transnistria's urban centers were transferred from Romanian to German control: Bershad roughly 1 week before its liberation, Balta and Zhmerynka both on 16 March and Tiraspol on 19 March. The Romanian mayor of Odessa was deposed by the Germans on 24 March, being replaced by a Russian engineer and German collaborator named Petrushkov. The Germans officially took over the region on 1 April 1944. The Red Army entered Transnistria on 14 March 1944, taking the town of
Bershad.
Tulchyn followed on 15 March,
Mohyliv-Podilskyi on 20 March,
Balta on 29 March and
Rîbnița on 30 March.
Yampil was liberated on 17 March 1944.
Zhmerynka was liberated by the Red Army on 21 March.
Pervomaisk (of which Golta was a part) was taken on 22 March, followed by
Ochakiv on 31 March. The Soviets reached
Berezivka on 31 March. On 1 April, Governor Potopeanu was deposed by the Germans and what remained of Transnistria (the 5 administrative centers not yet liberated by the Red Army as of 1 April:
Ananiv,
Odessa,
Ovidiopol,
Tiraspol and
Dubăsari) came under official German control. On March 28, the Red Army took Nikolaev and the next day crossed the lower Bug river in force. On April 5, Razdelnaia fell, and therewith the Odessa-Tiraspol highway was cut. On the 19th, after a brief but bitter fight, the Red Army re-entered Odessa. On the April 12,
Tiraspol was occupied, and four days later all Transnistria was again in Soviet hands. During the final days, the Germans concentrated on destruction in Odessa, since evacuation was impossible. Port installations, some industrial facilities, and transportation junctions were blown up (even the electric power plant, various mills, stores of bread, sugar, and other foods were destroyed). Of Odessa's population, scarcely 200,000 remained; many had hidden in the vicinity while some had sought safety in the countryside. And some had left westward with the Romanians and Germans: only those most compromised had left; the bulk of the residents had stayed in the region. People feared Soviet repressions, but "there was no other way out", according to German sources. It is worth noting however, that there was still a very small piece of Transnistrian territory still left under Romanian rule as late as August 1944, according to an
OKH map depicting the situation on the Romanian front as of 20 August. This area comprised a Westwards salient created by the Dniester river, centered around
Coșnița (today part of the
Dubăsari District of the
Republic of Moldova).
Reduction of the Transnistria Romanian population Today east of the Dniester there are only 237,785
Romanian-speaking residents left, a small percentage of the overall population of the region, most of whom live in the actual
Transnistria break-away republic. But historically they were the majority: according to the results of the Russian census (quoted in Romanian sources) of 1793, 49 villages out of 67 between the Dniester and the
Southern Bug were Romanian. And further east of the Transnistria Governorate there were many neo-Latin communities: indeed the Romanians/Moldavians in Ukraine – east of the Bug river – were calculated by a German census to be nearly 780.000 (probably an excessive number), and plans were made to move them to Transnistria in 1942-43. But nothing was done. Indeed, when the Soviet Union regained the area in spring 1944, and the
Soviet Army advanced into the territory driving out the
Axis forces, many thousands of Romanians/Vlachs of Transnistria were killed in those months and deported to
gulags in the following years. So, a political campaign was directed towards the rich Moldavian peasant families, which were deported to
Kazakhstan and
Siberia as well. For instance, in just two days, July 6 and July 7, 1949, over 11,342 Moldavian families (more than 40,000 inhabitants of Ukraine Oblasts) were deported by the order of the Minister of State Security, I. L. Mordovets, under a plan named "Operation South". The Census statistics for
Romanian-speaking population in territories east of the Dniester river are the following: •
1939: 230.698 (according to the 1939 Soviet census), of which 170.982 in the Moldavian ASSR and 26.730 in Odessa Oblast. •
1941: 197,685 inside Transnistria Governorate •
2001: 307,785 (177,785 living in actual Transnistria zone + 60,000 living in Odesa Oblast + 70,000 living in the rest of Ukraine) == See also ==