Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 10 – An article
in today’s “Nezavisimaya gazeta” highlighting opposition by Transdniestria and
Gagauzia to the pro-EU protests in the Moldovan capital of Chisinau is another
indication that some in Moscow are hoping to use these two groups in the north
and south of that country to block any further Moldovan moves toward Europe.
The Moscow paper’s Svetlana Gamova
writes most of those taking part in the demonstrations in Chisinau are “oriented
toward the integration of the country in the European Union” while many in the Slavic-majority
Transdniestria in the north and the Christian Turkic Gagauzia in the south
favor integration with Russia (ng.ru/cis/2015-09-10/1_moldavia.html).
Dmitry Konstantinov, the speaker of
the Gagauz autonomy Popular Assembly, told her that the Gagauz are offended by
the appearance of Romanian flags among the Chisinau demonstrators. “Our own
path,” he said, “is to the East.” If Chisinau continues in a Western direction,
Gagauzia will seek “a civilized divorce” from Moldova.
The Gagauz parliamentary leader
added that he and his colleagues are making contact with Moldovan politicians
who share their opposition to a turn toward Europe and are prepared to act on
it. Gamova for her part says that the 1994 Moldovan law setting up the Gagauz
autonomy “gives the Gagauz the right to self-determination if Moldova changes
its status.”
That is somewhat disingenuous, of
course, although it may reflect current Moscow thinking. The Moldovan act does
not say that Gagauzia can choose to leave Moldova if it changes its foreign
policy direction but allows that only if Moldova changes its borders by
becoming part of Romania or in some other way.
Also opposed to what is going on in
Chisinau, Gamova writes, is the “unrecognized republic of Transdniestria” in
Moldova’s north. Its leader, Yevgeny Shevchuk, has declared that as a result of
the Chisinau demonstrations, “the situation is destabilizing and Tiraspol
insists on its right to a civilized divorce from Moldova.”
Last weekend as many as 100,000
people came into the streets of the Moldovan capital, the largest protest since
the early 1990s, to demand a change in the government and immediate
parliamentary elections. The protest
continues with protesters camped on in some 150 tents in the main square of the
city, fed and otherwise supported by residents of the capital.
Many but far from all of the
demonstrators were and are pro-European, Arkady Barbaroshie, the director of
Chisinau’s Institute of Public Politics, says. Many are simply disappointed with
the current government, including some ethnic Russians and other Russian
speakers.
Many of the participants are calling
on the organizers of the protests, the Civic Platform Dignity and Truth, to
form a political party to compete in new elections. Its leadership supports
integration with the EU and is consulting about its further moves with “ambassadors
of ‘civilized countries,’” that is, Western ones, Gamova writes.
After those meetings, one of the leaders
of the group told the crowd that the EU is calling on the Moldovan authorities
to enter into dialogue with the protesters, another step that undoubtedly is
setting off alarm bells in Moscow and leading officials there to consider how
they might stop what they undoubtedly see as another “color” revolution in the
offing.
So far, Gamova writes, the
demonstrators have advanced the following demands: “the resignation of the
president, head of parliament and prime minister, the holding of immediate
elections for parliament, direct election of the president, the formation of a
government of national salvation, the retirement of the head of
Teleradio-Moldova and of the law enforcement organs, and bringing to justice those
officials who are guilty of corruption.
In addition, she says, “the
activists called upon the West not to give new loans to the existing
authorities and to declare them persona non grate in the EU and the US.” If the
authorities do not meet their demands, the protesters said their next step
would be to declare a general strike.
Moldova’s prime minister, Vladimir Strelets,
said he was ready to meet with the protesters and to offer “’a road map’” for
overcoming the crisis but suggested that outside forces were behind efforts to
force the government from office. “On its own initiative,” he said, “the government
will not go into retirement. That would be an act of cowardice and
irresponsibility.”
President Nicolae Timofti also said
he would not resign because he is “convinced that such a decision would bring
instability to the Republic of Moldova. The vacuum of power would cause a new political
crisis” that would be used by internal and external “forces” against the
Moldovan people.
“I recognize,” he declared, “that my
positions for Europe, for NATO and regarding the illegal creation on our
territory of a Russian military base have made me into a target for revanchist,
neo-Soviet, anti-Western and anti-national forces.” But such attacks will not turn him from his European
path.
To judge from Gamova’s article, some
in Moscow must be thinking that they could only gain if they set Transdniestria
and Gagauzia against him.
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