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  • Dniester conflict frozen after 15 years

    Dniester conflict frozen after 15 years

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe /6909192.stm

    Published: 2007/07/21 15:12:47 GMT

    Fifteen years ago Russia and Moldova signed a ceasefire ending the civil war
    in Moldova's region of Trans-Dniester.
    Petru Clej looks at how the relationship between Moldova and its breakaway
    region has evolved under the watchful eye of Moscow.

    Trans-Dniester (Pridnestrovie in Russian, Transnistria in Romanian) is the
    most populous and most Western of the four breakaway regions of the former
    USSR.

    It has a population of 555,000, larger than that of Abkhazia, South Ossetia
    and Nagorno-Karabakh taken together.

    It is also the region where a re-ignition of a military conflict is least
    likely. The conflict in Trans-Dniester - unlike those in the other three
    regions - was not an ethnic one.

    The population is a mix of Moldovans (32%), Russians (30%) and Ukrainians
    (29). There was no ethnic cleansing on a large scale, although a number of
    Moldovans who felt threatened by the Tiraspol regime took refuge across the
    river Dniester.

    Fear of Romania

    But Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin, himself born in Trans-Dniester, has
    made it clear that force would never be used to reintegrate the region into
    Moldova.


    By signing this agreement we proved to the whole world that the instigator
    and direct participant to this war was the Russia Federation
    Mircea Snegur, President of Moldova in 1992

    The agreement signed 15 years ago by Russian President Boris Yeltsin and his
    Moldovan counterpart, Mircea Snegur, ended what had been in effect a civil
    war.

    The conflict started on 2 March 1992 - the day Moldova became a member of
    the United Nations, having declared independence from the USSR six months
    earlier.

    The Trans-Dniester leadership had declared "independence" even before the
    break-up of the Soviet Union, in September 1990, in protest what they saw as
    "moves towards reunification with Romania".

    The region, invented by Soviet leader Stalin in 1924, was merged with the
    Romanian province of Bessarabia after its annexation in 1940, resulting in
    the Moldavian SSR, the precursor of today's Republic of Moldova.

    Anything Romanian or pro-Romanian was viewed with suspicion in
    Trans-Dniester, and this was one of the battle-cries of 1992: "We do not
    want Union with Romania."

    Russian support

    The conflict itself lasted four months and claimed an unknown number of
    dead, possibly more than 1,000.


    Trans-Dniester separatists enjoyed the tacit support of the Russian troops
    stationed there, led by General Alexander Lebed, a veteran of the Afghan war
    and later presidential contender.

    In fact, the 21 July 1992 agreement still serves as a de-facto framework for
    relations between Chisinau and Tiraspol, albeit by default.

    It established "peacekeeping forces", with Moldovan, Trans-Dniester and
    Russian participation and apart from minor skirmishes no clash has since
    taken place.

    All attempts to solve the conflict through political means have so far
    failed.

    Petru Lucinschi, Mircea Snegur's successor as president, signed in 1997 a
    memorandum with Mr Yeltsin and Trans-Dniester leader Igor Smirnov on
    creating a "common state". The agreement was never put in practice.

    In 2003, current President Vladimir Voronin made a spectacular U-turn and
    rejected at the last moment the "Kozak memorandum", named after Russian
    President Putin's advisor who negotiated it, which would have given
    Trans-Dniester large powers within a loose federation.

    The involvement of the US and European Union, alongside Moldova,
    Trans-Dniester, Russia, Ukraine and the Organisation for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe, has been equally unsuccessful.

    In the meantime, Trans-Dniester is continuing on its path to independence -
    although no country recognises its aspirations.

    Last September, the region voted overwhelmingly in favour of separation from
    Moldova and for joining Russia.

    Frozen conflict

    And although officially Russia does not recognise the Tiraspol regime, it
    has started invoking the Kosovo precedent, accusing the West of double
    standards, for advocating independence for the nominally Serbian province,
    but opposing the same treatment for Trans-Dniester.


    In fact, Russia remains the paramount player in the region.

    It still maintains troops and military equipment in Trans-Dniester, and
    recently President Putin suspended participation from the Treaty for the
    reduction of Convention Forces in Europe.

    Russia is angry over the non-ratification of the treaty by Nato countries
    and the Western insistence on Russian troops withdrawing from Moldova and
    Georgia.

    Speaking on the occasion of the 15th anniversary of the ceasefire, Mr Snegur
    puts the blame of the conflict squarely on Russia.

    "In fact, at that time we were at war directly with Russia. What could we
    do, faced with a monster? By signing this agreement we proved to the whole
    world that the instigator and direct participant to this war was the Russia
    Federation," Mr Snegur said.

    "I even wonder why they signed the document, which amounts to a recognition
    of their involvement," he added.

    But Trans-Dniester leader Igor Smirnov, in his 17th year in power, rejects
    Western calls for Russian troops to leave.

    "Against the background of failures of Western peacekeepers in the Balkans,
    Iraq, Afghanistan and other 'hot spots', they offer us to replace Russian
    peacekeepers with an international contingent," he said.

    "If those who adhere to that idea force us, they will get a new bloodshed,"
    Mr Smirnov told Itar-Tass news agency.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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