Connect with us

Reintegration

Updates on Transnistria: Engaging in a dialogue or drowning in allegations?

Published

on

Reading Time: 5 minutes

A lot of meetings took place lately: the representatives of the Bureau for Reintegration Policies of Moldova (BRP) met with the representatives of the European External Assistance Service, the European Commission and the Delegation of the European Union to the Republic of Moldova, OSCE high officials met with Moldovan and Transnistrian authorities, members of the Joint Control Commission (JCC) made several attempts to enter into dialogue, and the list can go on.

Still, one issue remains untouched – since October 2020, the agenda of the JCC meetings have never included critical matters regarding establishing illegal border checkpoints in the Security Zone and the worsening human rights situation in the Transnistrian region. The agenda containing such matters got repeatedly rejected by the Transnistrian side, according to the BRP representatives. The JCC meetings have been postponed. That seriously affects the proper functioning of the peacekeeping mechanisms and, what’s more important, it obstructs the freedom of movement and disrupts the daily activity of people on both banks of the Dniester who must circulate due to their jobs, visit their relatives, see a doctor, use public and private services, etc.

On February 4, another JCC meeting was supposed to take place. The previous situation where the sides didn’t agree on the discussions agenda occurred again. “Suggestions were made to withdraw the ‘problematic’ topics, to examine them in another format on the Commission’s platform, and for ordinary meetings to be held without these topics,” the BRP informed.

The Delegation of the Republic of Moldova reiterated that the JCC is obliged to react and come up with solutions to all violations that destabilize the situation in the Security Zone and affect the rights of its inhabitants. Therefore, these issues are extremely important and cannot be ignored in the Commission’s regulatory work.


The Joint Control Commission (JCC) is a peacekeeping and joint military command structure composed of forces from Moldova, Transnistria, and Russia that operate in the Security Zone – a demilitarized zone, east of the Dniester, on the border between the Republic of Moldova and Ukraine.


See also: Moldova and Transnistria failed to have discussions during a new meeting of the Joint Control Commission. Causes & Solutions

The Moldovan side condemned the “destructive position” of their Transnistrian colleagues in the JCC. It was also noted that, while trying to distract the Commission and public opinion from acute problems, “Tiraspol’s force structures are resuming their provocative actions in the Security Zone.” On February 3-4, two additional illegal checkpoints were established in the Bender area.

“The actions described are nothing more than a new act of restricting free movement in the Security Zone and openly defying the basic documents of the peacekeeping operation.”

In his turn, Transnistria’s JCC Co-Chairman, Oleg Belyakov, mentioned that the representatives of the Delegation of the Republic of Moldova disrupted the JCC meeting by “trying, for a long time, to include in the agenda issues that are not within the competence of the Commission”. The official believes that the claims and contradictions that take place within the JCC are artificial, that they are made on the initiative of the Moldovan side only, and do not contribute to the work within the peacekeeping mechanisms.

“For almost half a year, the JCC cannot assess the situation in the Security Zone. This is nonsense from the point of view of all approaches to peacekeeping mechanisms. The Moldovan side insists on discussing its politicised issues that have nothing to do with the Joint Control Commission.”

At the same time, Belyakov said that the Transnistrian side is aware of the situation in the region. “We do not know what the situation is with the Moldovan component, the Ukrainian component of the peacekeeping mechanisms, how security regimes are established. Although there is a whole plan that provides for mutual work in the fight against the pandemic, the prevention of coronavirus in peacekeeping units,” said Oleg Belyakov. That is while the Transnistrian force structures establish new checkpoints and issue new rules in the Security Zone, without consulting other sides, claiming that is necessary in the name of fighting the COVID-19 pandemic.

On February 4, Deputy Prime Minister for Reintegration, Olga Cebotari, had a videoconference discussion with the representatives of the European External Assistance Service, the European Commission and the European Union Delegation to the Republic of Moldova.

The Moldovan official mentioned Chisinau’s priorities for the current year, including protecting the fundamental rights of citizens living in Transnistria, restoring free movement in/from the localities on the left bank of the Dniester, providing the necessary support to fight the COVID-19 pandemic on the left bank of the Dniester and Bender, implementing the Berlin+ package and solving the most pressing problems to the population, as the BRP informed.

At the end of January, Thomas Mayr-Harting, Special Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office for the Transnistrian Settlement Process paid an official visit to Moldova. The OSCE representative had common meetings with several Moldovan and Transnistrian officials, including President of the Republic of Moldova, Maia Sandu, and the Transnistrian leader, Vadim Krasnoselski.

He noted that a lasting and comprehensive solution to the Transnistrian conflict would require a broad consensus within the Republic of Moldova, as well as among international partners in the settlement process. Thomas Mayr-Harting approved the Transnistrian decision “to eliminate the checkpoints installed in the context of the pandemic, which will greatly contribute to reducing tensions and creating favourable conditions for combating the pandemic in a spirit of unity and solidarity,” as it was announced in a press release of the organisation.

“People on both sides of the Dniester need a real commitment from the parties to put aside their differences and move forward in the regulatory process.”


At the international level, the OSCE Mission Chairmanships convene meetings in the 5+2 format to mark the progress reached by the sides and establish new objectives and timelines to advance the settlement process. The 5+2 format includes the Republic of Moldova and Transnistria (sides), the OSCE, Russian Federation, and Ukraine (mediators), and the European Union and the United States (observers).

Since 1994, the mission has participated as an observer in the JCC, gathering information on the situation in the Security Zone.


Apparently, the authorities in Transnistria don’t intend to actually remove the illegal checkpoints. On the contrary, these checkpoints are used as leverage when negotiating or blackmailing the Moldovan side. All the discussions and efforts remain inefficient, as long as the involved parts seem to be acting when meeting in the 5+2 format, while some interests and actions are in total opposition to the declarations.

Some of the 37 checkpoints, which were illegally established in March 2020, were removed. In the meantime, others appeared.

Officially justified as a protective measure by the Transnistrian administration, the closed roads blocked 320 000 citizens of the Republic of Moldova residing in the Security Zone, cutting back their access to healthcare, food, and medicines for months. At the beginning of the last summer, the situation was very close to a real armed conflict. People being kept artificially isolated, fined for violating the restrictions, receiving inappropriate medical care, having no access to their bank cards and being short on their supplies, came close to the edge.

Still, Tiraspol authorities continue to insist that the measures are necessary until the pandemic is “completely defeated”, despite the insistent requests made by Chisinau authorities and international partners.

Photo: Ilya Varlamov| zyalt.livejournal.com

Jurnalistă that speaks English very well. De aia Maria are grijă că prietenii noștri străini să nu piardă nicio informație valoroasă despre actualitatea din Moldova.

Society

“They are not needy, but they need help”. How Moldovan volunteers try to create a safe environment for the Ukrainian refugees

Published

on

Reading Time: 3 minutes

At the Government’s ground floor, the phones ring constantly, the laptop screens never reach standby. In one corner of the room there is a logistics planning meeting, someone has a call on Zoom with partners and donors, someone else finally managed to take a cookie and make some coffee. Everyone is exhausted and have sleepy red eyes, but the volunteers still have a lot of energy and dedication to help in creating a safe place for the Ukrainian refugees.

“It’s like a continuous bustle just so you won’t read the news. You get home sometimes and you don’t have time for news, and that somehow helps. It’s a kind of solidarity and mutual support,” says Vlada Ciobanu, volunteer responsible for communication and fundraising.

The volunteers group was formed from the very first day of war. A Facebook page was created, where all types of messages immediately started to flow: “I offer accommodation”, “I want to help”, “I want to get involved”, “Where can I bring the products?”, “I have a car and I can go to the customs”. Soon, the authorities also started asking for volunteers’ support. Now they all work together, coordinate activities and try to find solutions to the most difficult problems.

Is accommodation needed for 10, 200 or 800 people? Do you need transportation to the customs? Does anyone want to deliver 3 tons of apples and does not know where? Do you need medicine or mobile toilets? All these questions require prompt answers and actions. Blankets, sheets, diapers, hygiene products, food, clothes – people bring everything, and someone needs to quickly find ways of delivering them to those who need them.

Sometimes this collaboration is difficult, involves a lot of bureaucracy, and it can be difficult to get answers on time. “Republic of Moldova has never faced such a large influx of refugees and, probably because nobody thought this could happen, a mechanism of this kind of crisis has not been developed. Due to the absence of such a mechanism that the state should have created, we, the volunteers, intervened and tried to help in a practical way for the spontaneous and on the sport solutions of the problems,” mentions Ecaterina Luțișina, volunteer responsible for the refugees’ accommodation.

Ana Maria Popa, one of the founders of the group “Help Ukrainians in Moldova/SOS Українці Молдовa” says that the toughest thing is to find time and have a clear mind in managing different procedures, although things still happen somehow naturally. Everyone is ready to intervene and help, to take on more responsibilities and to act immediately when needed. The biggest challenges arise when it is necessary to accommodate large families, people with special needs, for which alternative solutions must be identified.

Goods and donations

The volunteers try to cope with the high flow of requests for both accommodation and products of all kinds. “It came to me as a shock and a panic when I found out that both mothers who are now in Ukraine, as well as those who found refuge in our country are losing their milk because of stress. We are trying to fill an enormous need for milk powder, for which the demand is high and the stocks are decreasing”, says Steliana, the volunteer responsible for the distribution of goods from the donation centers.

Several centers have been set up to collect donations in all regions of Chisinau, and volunteers are redirecting the goods to where the refugees are. A system for processing and monitoring donations has already been established, while the volunteer drivers take over the order only according to a unique code.

Volunteers from the collection centers also do the inventory – the donated goods and the distributed goods. The rest is transported to Vatra deposit, from where it is distributed to the placement centers where more than 50 refugees are housed.

When they want to donate goods, but they don’t know what would be needed, people are urged to put themselves in the position of refugees and ask themselves what would they need most if they wake up overnight and have to hurriedly pack their bags and run away. Steliana wants to emphasise that “these people are not needy, but these people need help. They did not choose to end up in this situation.”

Furthermore, the volunteer Cristina Sîrbu seeks to identify producers and negotiate prices for products needed by refugees, thus mediating the procurement process for NGOs with which she collaborates, such as Caritas, World Children’s Fund, Polish Solidarity Fund, Lifting hands, Peace Corps and others.

One of the challenges she is facing now is the identifying a mattress manufacturer in the West, because the Moldovan mattress manufacturer that has been helping so far no longer has polyurethane, a raw material usually imported from Russia and Ukraine.

Cristina also needs to find solutions for the needs of the volunteer groups – phones, laptops, gsm connection and internet for a good carrying out of activities.

Hate messages

The most difficult thing for the communication team is to manage the hate messages on the social networks, which started to appear more often. “Even if there is some sort of dissatisfaction from the Ukrainian refugees and those who offer help, we live now in a very diverse society, there are different kind of people, and we act very differently under stress,” said Vlada Ciobanu.

Translation by Cătălina Bîrsanu

Continue Reading

Featured

FC Sheriff Tiraspol victory: can national pride go hand in hand with political separatism?

Published

on

Reading Time: 4 minutes

A new football club has earned a leading place in the UEFA Champions League groups and starred in the headlines of worldwide football news yesterday. The Football Club Sheriff Tiraspol claimed a win with the score 2-1 against Real Madrid on the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium in Madrid. That made Sheriff Tiraspol the leader in Group D of the Champions League, including the football club in the groups of the most important European interclub competition for the first time ever.

International media outlets called it a miracle, a shock and a historic event, while strongly emphasizing the origin of the team and the existing political conflict between the two banks of the Dniester. “Football club from a pro-Russian separatist enclave in Moldova pulls off one of the greatest upsets in Champions League history,” claimed the news portals. “Sheriff crushed Real!” they said.

Moldovans made a big fuss out of it on social media, splitting into two groups: those who praised the team and the Republic of Moldova for making history and those who declared that the football club and their merits belong to Transnistria – a problematic breakaway region that claims to be a separate country.

Both groups are right and not right at the same time, as there is a bunch of ethical, political, social and practical matters that need to be considered.

Is it Moldova?

First of all, every Moldovan either from the right or left bank of Dniester (Transnistria) is free to identify himself with this achievement or not to do so, said Vitalie Spranceana, a sociologist, blogger, journalist and urban activist. According to him, boycotting the football club for being a separatist team is wrong.

At the same time, “it’s an illusion to think that territory matters when it comes to football clubs,” Spranceana claimed. “Big teams, the ones included in the Champions League, have long lost their connection both with the countries in which they operate, and with the cities in which they appeared and to which they linked their history. […] In the age of globalized commercial football, teams, including the so-called local ones, are nothing more than global traveling commercial circuses, incidentally linked to cities, but more closely linked to all sorts of dirty, semi-dirty and cleaner cash flows.”

What is more important in this case is the consistency, not so much of citizens, as of politicians from the government who have “no right to celebrate the success of separatism,” as they represent “the national interests, not the personal or collective pleasures of certain segments of the population,” believes the political expert Dionis Cenusa. The victory of FC Sheriff encourages Transnistrian separatism, which receives validation now, he also stated.

“I don’t know how it happens that the “proud Moldovans who chose democracy”, in their enthusiasm for Sheriff Tiraspol’s victory over Real Madrid, forget the need for total and unconditional withdrawal of Russian troops from Transnistria!” declared the journalist Vitalie Ciobanu.

Nowadays, FC Sheriff Tiraspol has no other choice than to represent Moldova internationally. For many years, the team used the Moldovan Football Federation in order to be able to participate in championships, including international ones. That is because the region remains unrecognised by the international community. However, the club’s victory is presented as that of Transnistria within the region, without any reference to the Republic of Moldova, its separatist character being applied in this case especially.

Is it a victory?

In fact, FC Sheriff Tiraspol joining the Champions League is a huge image breakthrough for the Transnistrian region, as the journalist Madalin Necsutu claimed. It is the success of the Tiraspol Club oligarchic patrons. From the practical point of view, FC Sheriff Tiraspol is a sports entity that serves its own interests and the interests of its owners, being dependent on the money invested by Tiraspol (but not only) oligarchs.

Here comes the real dilemma: the Transnistrian team, which is generously funded by money received from corruption schemes and money laundering, is waging an unequal fight with the rest of the Moldovan football clubs, the journalist also declared. The Tiraspol team is about to raise 15.6 million euro for reaching the Champions League groups and the amounts increase depending on their future performance. According to Necsutu, these money will go directly on the account of the club, not to the Moldovan Football Federation, creating an even bigger gab between FC Sheriff and other football clubs from Moldova who have much more modest financial possibilities.

“I do not see anything useful for Moldovan football, not a single Moldovan player is part of FC Sheriff Tiraspol. I do not see anything beneficial for the Moldovan Football Federation or any national team.”

Is it only about football?

FC Sheriff Tiraspol, with a total estimated value of 12.8 million euros, is controlled by Victor Gusan and Ilya Kazmala, being part of Sheriff Holding – a company that controls the trade of wholesale, retail food, fuels and medicine by having monopolies on these markets in Transnistria. The holding carries out car trading activities, but also operates in the field of construction and real estate. Gusan’s people also hold all of the main leadership offices in the breakaway region, from Parliament to the Prime Minister’s seat or the Presidency.

The football club is supported by a holding alleged of smuggling, corruption, money laundering and organised crime. Moldovan media outlets published investigations about the signals regarding the Sheriff’s holding involvement in the vote mobilization and remuneration of citizens on the left bank of the Dniester who participated in the snap parliamentary elections this summer and who were eager to vote for the pro-Russian socialist-communist bloc.

Considering the above, there is a great probability that the Republic of Moldova will still be represented by a football club that is not identified as being Moldovan, being funded from obscure money, growing in power and promoting the Transnistrian conflict in the future as well.

Photo: unknown

Continue Reading

Politics

Promo-LEX about Maia Sandu’s UN speech: The president must insist on appointing a rapporteur to monitor the situation of human rights in Transnistria

Published

on

Reading Time: 2 minutes

The President of the Republic of Moldova, Maia Sandu, pays an official visit to New York, USA, between September 21-22. There, she participates in the work of the United Nations General Assembly. According to a press release of the President’s Office, the official will deliver a speech at the tribune of the United Nations.

In this context, the Promo-LEX Association suggested the president to request the appointment of a special rapporteur in order to monitor the situation of human rights in the Transnistrian region. According to Promo-LEX, the responsibility for human rights violations in the Transnistrian region arises as a result of the Russian Federation’s military, economic and political control over the Tiraspol regime.

“We consider it imperative to insist on the observance of the international commitments assumed by the Russian Federation regarding the withdrawal of the armed forces and ammunition from the territory of the country,” the representatives of Promo-LEX stated. They consider the speech before the UN an opportunity “to demand the observance of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by the Russian Federation with reference to this territory which is in its full control.”

“It is important to remember about the numerous cases of murder, torture, ill-treatment, forced enlistment in illegal military structures, the application of pseudo-justice in the Transnistrian region, all carried out under the tacit agreement of the Russian Federation. These findings stem from dozens of rulings and decisions issued by the European Court of Human Rights, which found that Russia is responsible for human rights violations in the region.”

The association representatives expressed their hope that the president of the country would give priority to issues related to the human rights situation in the Transnistrian region and would call on relevant international actors to contribute to guaranteeing fundamental human rights and freedoms throughout Moldova.

They asked Maia Sandu to insist on the observance of the obligation to evacuate the ammunition and the military units of the Russian Federation from the territory of the Republic of Moldova, to publicly support the need for the Russian Federation to implement the ECtHR rulings on human rights violations in the Transnistrian region, and to request the appointment of an UN Human Rights Council special rapporteur  to monitor the human rights situation in the Transnistrian region of the Republic of Moldova.

**

The Promo-LEX Association concluded that 14 out of 25 actions planned within the National Action Plan for the years 2018–2022 concerning respecting human rights in Transnistria were not carried out by the responsible authorities.

The association expressed its concern and mentioned that there are a large number of delays in the planned results. “There is a lack of communication and coordination between the designated institutions, which do not yet have a common vision of interaction for the implementation of the plan.”

Promo-LEX requested the Government of the Republic of Moldova to re-assess the reported activities and to take urgent measures, “which would exclude superficial implementation of future activities and increase the level of accountability of the authorities.”

Photo: peacekeeping.un.org

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Latest News

Society2 years ago

“They are not needy, but they need help”. How Moldovan volunteers try to create a safe environment for the Ukrainian refugees

Reading Time: 3 minutes At the Government’s ground floor, the phones ring constantly, the laptop screens never reach standby. In...

Important2 years ago

#WorldForUkraine – a map that shows the magnitude of the world’s actions against Russian aggression

Reading Time: 2 minutes The international community and volunteers from all over te world have launched #WorldForUkraine as a platform...

Important2 years ago

How is Moldova managing the big influx of Ukrainian refugees? The authorities’ plan, explained 

Reading Time: 3 minutes From 24th to 28th of February, 71 359 Ukrainian citizens entered the territory of Republic of...

Opinion2 years ago

Russia And Ukraine At The Beginning of 2022

Reading Time: 4 minutes This opinion piece was written by Dr. Nicholas Dima. Dr. Dima was formerly a Professor of Geography...

Culture2 years ago

The man raising children on Nistru river

Reading Time: 7 minutes On the Nistru, near the village of Varnița, a few colored pens with blue dots in...

Culture2 years ago

The village of the first astronomer in the Republic of Moldova

Reading Time: 5 minutes From eight in the morning till noon, every Thursday and Sunday, people lay their merchandise on...

Culture2 years ago

The prodigal son returns and turns his grandparents’ home in a tourist attraction on Nistru river

Reading Time: 7 minutes On the road towards the school, a well-maintained rural house catches your eye, yellow stags painted...

Advertisement

Opinions

Advertisement

Trending