Showing posts with label moldova unrest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moldova unrest. Show all posts

Come On USA And EU Don't Shirk Your Responsibilities

Posted by carlyluvsunited on Monday, 8 June 2009

moldova citizens queue to apply for visas to escape the communist governmentThere are grim times in Europe’s corner of despair. Restoring some stability and a fair democratic system to Moldova is important, first and foremost, because Moldovans deserve a government that is fair and democratic.

Moldovan citizens are queuing up in their 1000s filling forms out to apply for citizenship of neighbouring Romania at the main post office in Chisinau.

Three floors of Moldova’s parliament building are a charred ruin. So is democracy in Moldova, a former Soviet republic that is now Europe’s poorest country. Of Moldova’s 3.5mn people at the time of independence, 15% have already left the country to seek better lives elsewhere. More than 63% of Moldova’s young people say they want out.

In early April, a disputed election victory by Moldova’s ruling Communists triggered protests. Political opponents and disaffected people, many of them young and with few prospects of finding jobs, took to the streets. A violent few broke into the offices of the country’s president and its parliament building, which was set on fire.

In response, the Communists blamed the violence on the opposition political parties, which it called “fascists”, and on Romania and Romanian irredentists in Moldova. The police cracked down on young people and took hundreds into custody. Several died, apparently from beatings.

President Vladimir Voronin later granted the detainees amnesty. Nevertheless, many remain in detention and Voronin continues to hurl accusations at the opposition and Romania of organising a coup d’état. Legal proceedings have been opened against opposition parties.

Restoring stability and a fair democratic system to Moldova is important, first and foremost, because Moldovans deserve a government that is accountable. Stability is also important because the country borders on Romania, a European Union member state. The two countries share a language and culture, and, until Stalin separated them, were even part of the same state.

A vocal minority of Moldova’s people believe that merging their country with Romania would put the country into the express lane to EU membership, with its generous financial perks and, perhaps most enticing of all, passports that would enable them to escape a no-hope economy to build lives elsewhere.

Many Moldovans, indeed, already have Romanian passports so that they can travel and work in the EU. Some Romanian officials, including President Traian Basescu, have bandied about the idea of distributing Romanian passports to as many as a million Moldovan citizens, a quarter of the entire population. Of course, the Moldovan government balks at any attempt to lure away its citizens.

The United States should do more to help bring stability to Moldova. Together with the EU, the US can help ensure a credible investigation of the post-election violence and complaints against the police. Amerca should be more energetic in demanding that the Moldovan authorities respect the rule of law, issue a roster of all detained persons, provide them access to lawyers and family members, and guarantee that they are not harassed.

Opposition leaders and democracy watchdogs say Moldova’s election process was fundamentally flawed. The country’s broadcast media, especially its television stations, gave a disproportionate amount of air time to the ruling Communists during the election campaign. The Communists are alleged to have rigged the balloting by adding names to the voter rolls and reviving the dead for the day.

In the long run, the US and EU should support civil society organisations in pressing Moldova’s government to guarantee more equitable distribution of television time, to stop police harassment of opposition political leaders and workers as well as journalists, to reform the police and end the ruling party’s abuse of state institutions, and to allow all political parties more opportunity to inspect election rolls and monitor polling stations. They should insist that opposition parties are included in a dialogue.

The US can put weight behind its demands by placing conditions on its financial assistance to Moldova. The EU has even more leverage. Moldova is more dependent on the EU than any other former Soviet republic.

More than half of the country’s trade is with the Union, and Moldova receives significant EU financial assistance. Most Moldovan emigrants work in the EU, and almost 75% of Moldova’s population support EU membership.

Romania, too, should play its part and offer to sign a basic treaty and a border agreement with Moldova.

The last thing impoverished Moldovans need is an autocratic, unaccountable government that lacks sufficient imagination to find a way to revive the country. And just about the last thing the EU needs is an influx of hundreds of thousands of migrants fleeing poverty, political repression, and despair in Moldova and other countries of the former Soviet Union. — Project Syndicate

Traian Basescu Is True To His Word

Posted by carlyluvsunited on Friday, 17 April 2009

traian basescu romania president moldova unrest
President Traian Basescu said Romania would not allow a "new Iron Curtain" to descend between Romania and Moldova, where almost four out of five Moldovans are of Romanian descent.

Romania will speed up citizenship applications for Moldovans, the president has pledged _ after recent violent anti-government demonstrations in the former Soviet republic.

He told Romanian lawmakers on Wednesday he would fast track citizenship for Moldovans who have at least one Romanian grandparent. Moldova was part of Romania until 1940, when it was annexed to the Soviet Union. Some 120,000 of Moldova's 4.1 million people already have Romanian citizenship and another 650,000 or so are waiting to obtain it, officials say.

Moldovan Communist lawmaker Vladimir Turcan reacted angrily Thursday, saying the country could pass a law banning Moldovans from having more than one citizenship "to protect the state."

Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin accused Romania last week of trying to overthrow the government by supporting anti-communist protesters. He expelled Romania's ambassador and introduced visas for Romanians.

The protesters, mainly young people favoring closer EU ties, accused the Communists of rigging their victory in April 5 elections. They stormed the parliament and the president's office, leading to a crackdown in which 90 people were injured and 200 arrested. Some 75,000 people in Moldova's pro-Russian separatist region of Trans-Dniester are believed to have Russian citizenship. The region is not recognized internationally.

Moldovans need visas for Romania since it joined the EU. Basescu's offer to Moldovans repeated a pledge he made after Romania joined the European Union in 2007.

Romania will NOT bow down to communists again, it happened once and it wont be happening again. Moldovans are considered by most Romanians to be Romanian anyway and we will fight for their right to freedom from crooked and corrupt government.

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