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  • Transdnestr Voters Back Union With Russia

    TRANSDNESTR VOTERS BACK UNION WITH RUSSIA
    By Nabi Abdullaev - Staff Writer
    Gleb Garanich / Reuters

    The Moscow Times
    Tuesday, September 19, 2006. Issue 3500. Page 1.

    Election official Pyotr Denisenko announcing the referendum results
    Sunday.

    The vast majority of voters in Moldova's separatist province of
    Transdnestr on Sunday backed independence and eventual unification
    with Russia.

    More than 97 percent of registered voters supported independence,
    according to Transdnestr officials.

    About 300,000 voters, or nearly 79 percent of those who are registered,
    showed up at the polls.

    Only Georgia's breakaway province of Abkhazia, which held its own
    independence vote in 1999, has recognized the referendum.

    Still, the vote was a victory for the Kremlin as it seeks to expand
    its influence in the former Soviet republics.

    "The referendum demonstrated that our society is united in its desire
    to become part of Russia," said Svetlana Antonova, Transdnestr's
    deputy information minister. Antonova spoke by telephone from the
    province's capital of Tiraspol.

    Officials in the Moldovan capital of Chisinau and at the European
    Union dismissed the referendum. But Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
    praised it, calling the vote "democratic and open."

    Lavrov noted that hundreds of monitors from former Soviet republics
    and Europe observed the referendum.

    "They could watch the people's will," he said.

    But Lavrov's ministry was reluctant to go too far, refraining from
    officially acknowledging the controversial vote and commenting on
    its results.

    Russia earlier pledged to respect Moldova's territorial integrity.

    In Chisinau, meanwhile, Natalya Vishanu, a spokeswoman for Moldovan
    President Vladimir Voronin, said in an interview: "We don't consider
    it a referendum, and we don't accept its outcome."

    The Moldovan government issued a statement Monday saying the referendum
    sought to "torpedo" Moldovan unification talks and called on other
    countries not to acknowledge the vote.

    The European Council and the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe, the continent's premier human-rights groups, and the EU
    also refused to recognize the referendum.

    None of this appears to be deterring Transdnestr leaders from taking
    steps to integrate with Russia.

    Transdnestr leader Igor Smirnov said Monday that the province's
    authorities would begin changing the legal code to make it conform
    to Russian legislation. He said government bureaucracies would be
    reconfigured in the image of Russian ministries and state agencies.

    Transdnestr also wants the Russian ruble be the province's only
    official currency, Smirnov said.

    The entire integration process is expected to take from five to seven
    years, said Valery Litskai, the province's foreign minister.

    "If anyone thinks that Russia is going to acknowledge the referendum,
    and that tomorrow everyone in Transdnestr will be granted Russian
    citizenship, and Transdnestr will become an integral part of Russia,
    I'd have to say this isn't going to happen," Litskai said, Interfax
    reported.

    Transdnestr seceded from Moldova in 1990, as the Soviet Union was still
    in the midst of collapsing. A short but bitter war ensued in 1992,
    with hundreds killed on both sides. Transdnestr's population is roughly
    equally divided between ethnic Moldovans, Russians and Ukrainians.

    Like the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad, bordered by Poland, Lithuania
    and the Baltic Sea, Transdnestr, which is surrounded by Moldova and
    Ukraine, would stand apart from the rest of Russia were it to become
    part of the country.

    Sunday's vote strengthens Russia's hand insofar as other unrecognized
    states in the former Soviet Union are concerned, officials and
    analysts from Russia and Transdnestr said. All those unrecognized
    states, most of which are in the Caucasus, are Russia-leaning.

    While Western governments have backed independence for Kosovo and
    Montenegro, they have refused to recognize similar bids in Transdnestr;
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia, in Georgia; and the Nagorno-Karabakh
    republic, claimed by Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    Sergei Markov, a Kremlin-connected political analyst, said the Kremlin
    would seek to leverage Western support for Kosovo's independence into
    Russian recognition of Transdnestr and South Ossetia.

    Antonova, the Transdnestr deputy information minister, acknowledged
    the referendum's timing was meant to help Russia.

    In recent years, Moldova, Georgia and Azerbaijan have been drifting
    out of Moscow's orbit as they seek closer ties with the West.

    "The results of the referendum were predictable, and although they
    will not have any real legal consequences related to joining Russia,
    nevertheless, this is a signal to the international community that
    cannot be ignored," said Vadim Gustov, head of the Federation Council's
    Committee for CIS Affairs, Interfax reported.

    Gustov's colleagues in the Federation Council and the State Duma voiced
    similar views. Duma Deputies Sergei Baburin and Viktor Alksnis went
    so far as to propose that Russian authorities establish an official
    process for eventually recognizing Transdnestr's independence.

    The bloc of former Soviet republics known as GUAM -- Georgia, Ukraine,
    Azerbaijan and Moldova -- last week managed to insert an item on the
    United Nations General Assembly agenda dealing with the so-called
    frozen conflicts in Georgia, Moldova and Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The Georgian diplomats who spearheaded the move called it a sign of
    GUAM's successful foreign policy, while Lavrov downplayed the inclusion
    of the frozen conflicts on the General Assembly's agenda. Lavrov
    noted that 16 member-states voted for inclusion, 15 were against it,
    and 65 abstained.

    The General Assembly's 61st session began last week and will run
    until mid-September 2007. It was not immediately clear when the frozen
    conflicts item would be dealt with by the General Assembly.
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