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Moscow Offers To Solve Transdnestr Dispute

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  • Moscow Offers To Solve Transdnestr Dispute

    MOSCOW OFFERS TO SOLVE TRANSDNESTR DISPUTE

    Moscow Times
    Nov 17 2008
    Russia

    CHISINAU, Moldova -- First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov said
    Friday that Russia wanted to help solve Moldova's conflict with
    its separatist Transdnestr region, part of a drive to prove that
    despite its war with Georgia it can still act as an honest broker
    among its neighbors.

    Prime Minister Vladimir Putin met Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin
    to discuss the conflict during a CIS summit in the Moldovan capital.

    Shuvalov told reporters on the sidelines of the summit that Russia
    wanted to revive a Russian peace plan rejected by Moldova in 2003. "We
    really do believe that the peace plan that was proposed back then
    was effective and could have been implemented," Shuvalov said. "We
    will now try to reach new agreements, taking as our starting point
    the territorial integrity of Moldova."

    In the early 1990s, Transdnestr, which has a majority Russian-speaking
    population, broke away from Moldova, which has ethnic and cultural
    ties to neighboring Romania. Russia sent troops to intervene in the
    conflict, and some have stayed in the region as a peacekeeping force,
    though Moldova accuses them of siding with the separatists.

    The plan previously proposed by Moscow involved a federal state in
    which Transdnestr would have a large degree of autonomy and Russian
    forces would remain in the region to oversee the agreement.

    In a separate effort to prove Russia's peacekeeping credentials after
    the war with Georgia, President Dmitry Medvedev convened a meeting
    of the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan to discuss the disputed
    Nagorno-Karabakh territory.

    Also Friday, Putin met Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. He
    said cooperation between Kiev and Moscow was needed now "more than
    ever" due to the global financial turmoil.
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