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Moldawische Präsidentschaftswahl scheitert, vorgezogene Neuwahlen wahrscheinlich

Veröffentlicht 07. Dezember 2009 - Aktualisiert 29. Januar 2010
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Moldova
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Die sich dem Westen zuneigende Koalition Moldawiens scheiterte heute (7. Dezember) bei ihrem Versuch, ihren Kandidaten vom Parlament zum Präsidenten wählen zu lassen und damit Monate des Stillstands zu beenden. Das nicht zur Ruhe kommende Land steht nun vor vorgezogenen Neuwahlen.

Moldovan Communist Party lawmakers walked out of parliament in Chisinau while a crucial vote to elect a new president was held. Marian Lupu, the candidate of the Alliance for European Integration, obtained only 53 votes, short of the 61 needed to have him elected as head of state. 

By leaving parliament, the Communist lawmakers, marshalled by former President Vladimir Voronin, repeated a strategy they had already used on 10 November, preventing communist dissidents from voting for Lupu. According to Moldova's constitution, after two failed attempts to elect a president the country now heads for early parliamentary elections. 

Lupu, 43, an academic and former communist, represents the centre-left and his coalition partners are hoping his political standing will attract some traditional communist supporters. 

He has also won backing from Russia (see EurActiv 13/10/09), which provides Moldova with crucial gas supplies, by emphasising the need for a "balanced" foreign policy and opposing any moves to join NATO. 

Before the vote, Voronin, who loathes Lupu and regularly heaps public abuse on him, said his party was looking beyond Monday's vote to an early parliamentary election in 2010. "Unfortunately, we do not see any other alternative," he told journalists on Friday. 

The Alliance, which broke the communists' eight-year grip on power in a July poll, has set its sights on taking Moldova into mainstream Europe. 

Reversing the communists' policy, it has agreed a $590 million bail-out programme with the International Monetary Fund. 

It says it wants to upgrade institutions and business practices to bring the country into line with European Union standards to make Moldova more appealing to foreign investors. 

The country suffers from widespread corruption, its media has a tradition of toeing the line of those in power, and the judiciary, police and state security apparatus are politicised. 

It also has an unresolved conflict in Transnistria - a strip of land on its eastern border, populated mostly by Russian speakers, that broke away in 1990. Home to the country's industry, Transnistria is demanding independence. But Chisinau will give it only autonomy. 

(EurActiv with Reuters.)
Stellungnahmen: 

Following the failed vote in the chamber, the parliament’s president Mihai Ghimpu anounced that the country will hold early parliamentary elections, the Romanian press reported. 

Ghimpu, who is from the Liberal party, a member of the Alliance for European Integration, added that in the meantime, changes would be made in the constitution, and eventually Marian Lupu would be elected as president. 

Vlad Filat, president of the Liberal Democratic Party of Moldova, also a member of the Alliance for European Integration, said that the country's budget did not provide any funding for early elections. 

"If we are faced with such a situation, we will also revise the budget law," he was quoted as saying. 

Hintergrund : 

Moldova is a former Soviet republic, and was part of Romania before being annexed by the Soviet Union in World War II. It is landlocked between Romania and Ukraine. Moldovans speak Romanian, although the country's constitution calls it the 'Moldovan language'. Russian is also widely spoken. 

Transnistria, a Moldovan region east of the Dniester River, has been considered a 'frozen conflict' area since the disintegration of the Soviet Union. It has a predominantly ethnic Russian and Ukrainian population. Although internationally Transnistria is part of Moldova, de facto its authorities do not exercise any power there. 

The president of Moldova is elected by a three-fifths majority of the vote in parliament. The Communist Party elected their fellow member Vladimir Voronin in 2001, and he was re-elected in 2005. Having completed two terms, he now has to step down. 

Elections held in April were marred by violence and fraud (EurActiv 08/04/09). The poll gave the ruling communists control of 60 seats in the parliament, just one short of electing their candidate Zinaida Greceanu as president. After successive votes in the 101-seat parliament failed to elect a president, early elections were called, held on 29 July. The pro-European opposition, consisting of the Liberal Democratic party, the Liberal party, the Democratic party and 'Our Moldova', won a combined majority of 53 seats. 

On 8 August, the pro-European parties agreed to create a government coalition, called the Alliance for European Integration (EurActiv 18/08/09). On 28 August, they elected Liberal party leader Mihai Ghimpu as parliamentary speaker, in a vote boycotted by the communists. 

On 11 September Voronin announced his resignation (EurActiv 11/09/09). Mihai Ghimpu took over as acting president pending early elections next year. 

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