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Post an EU jobElection officials in Moldova said they will conduct tomorrow (15 April) a recount after the country’s communist president requested the procedure in the aftermath of violent protests following general elections last week. Civil society groups warned that conditions were being created for the establishment of a police and dictatorial regime.
Moldova's ruling Communists won the 5 April elections, but the opposition said the poll was rigged. About 10,000 protesters went to the streets, some of them seizing the President’s office and ransacking the parliament (EurActiv 08/04/09).
Moldova is a former Soviet republic. Before that it was part of Romania, until 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 predominant ethnic Russian and Ukrainian population. Although internationally, Transnistria is part of Moldova, de facto its authorities do not exercise any power in that area.
The president of Moldova is elected by 3/5 of the votes 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.
Moldova's Communist party was once staunchly pro-Russian, but changed course over the Transnistria stalemate. Now it is seeking closer ties with the European Union as well as maintaining good ties with Russia, on which it depends for energy supplies.
Moldovan media consider Zinaida Greceanii, the current Prime Minister and a close Voronin ally, to be the Communists' most likely candidate for president.
The country is covered by the EU's Neighbourhood Policy (see EurActiv LinksDossier). Its leader is expected to be present at the 7 May launch of the Eastern Partnership at an EU summit in Prague (EurActiv 08/12/08).
Parliamentary elections held on 5 April were observed by a joint mission of the OSCE's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and the European Parliament.
Liberal, pro-Western opposition parties alleged that the Communist party tampered with voters' lists to secure its own victory in last week's parliamentary election in Moldova.
The country’s Constitutional Court ordered the Central Election Commission to carry out the recount after receiving the request from veteran Communist President Vladimir Voronin.
Voronin accused his opponents of organising violent protests as part of a coup plot fomented by Romania (EurActiv 09/04/09), but sought the recount on grounds of restoring trust. The opposition demands a new election and has distanced itself from the violence.
"The procedure will take a single day," Eugeniu Stirbu, election commission chairman, told reporters after the court ruled in favor of the recount. He said district councils would count the ballots and submit figures to the commission.
Stefan Creanga of the Liberal Democrats, one of three opposition parties to win seats in parliament, said most efforts would focus on the voters' lists.
"One day is enough to recount the votes. On election day, it was done in three hours," he said. "For us, it is more important to check the lists. We are getting copies of the lists at the moment and we’ll present a report on electoral fraud to the commission."
Opposition parties allege the lists included many names of Moldovans who have died or who work abroad, but had votes cast in their name on election day.
An eye-witness to the events, interviewed by EurActiv last week, reported rumours that ballot boxes had been substituted in the periphery of Chisinau. The eye-witness reported also "strange things happening" in the region of Balti, the second-largest city, where apparently all the farmers had come to vote after 7pm, while farmers usually vote early in the morning (EurActiv 08/04/09).
Meanwhile, the opposition staged a peaceful 5,000-strong rally on Sunday (12 April) reporting ill-treatment of arrested protesters, held since official builiding were ransacked.
Results of last week's poll gave the Communists nearly 50% and 60 seats -- one short of the number needed to ensure victory when the assembly later meets to elect the president.
Voronin, who has called for further integration with the West while preserving longstanding ties with Russia, has served two consecutive terms and cannot run again. He has said he wants to remain in some kind of decision-making role.
The president has moved closer to the Kremlin recently and applauded its efforts to help resolve an 18-year-old separatist rebellion in Moldova's Russian-speaking Transdniestria region.
Civil society warns of creeping dictatorship
"We believe that preconditions are being created for the establishment of a police and dictatorial regime in the Republic of Moldova," says a statement by a number of civil society representatives, obtained by EurActiv.
The authors state that the generally peaceful protest has been "used" to provoke violent and criminal acts resulting in the devastation of the Parliament and the President's buildings. They termed "inadmissible" the attempts by the ruling communists to present all as some kind of criminal act.
"The head of state is making extremely grave accusations against some political leaders, describing their actions as a "coup d’état", or "anti-constitutional plot" even before any investigations or court rulings in this regard. Such statements tend to further heighten the tensions and polarise the Moldovan society. By placing all the responsibility for the recent events on the political opposition and Romania, the authorities are creating an internal and external enemy, which may be used to justify the government's failures," the statement reads.
(EurActiv with Reuters.)