Pension

We want Russia to come, say Moldova protesters


  • By Lucy Williamson
  • BBC News, Chisinau

Image caption,

Moldova is dependent on Russian energy – and last year the Kremlin cut its gas supply to the country by half

Beneath Moldova’s soaring parliament building, a parade of its most precarious file slowly past – bussed in by the thousand from across the country, each with their private tale of poverty and frustration.

“We’re a laughing stock – the government is mocking us,” some cry.

Capped in a blue woollen hat, Ala thrusts her wide pale face close to mine, and says: “There are people with four or five children who literally have nothing to eat.”

Energy bills here now consume more than 70% of household income, according to Moldova’s president.

Ala tells me they swallow half of her pension.

“When we elected this government, they promised to raise salaries and pensions, but so far we haven’t seen a penny,” she says.

Sunday’s protests, organised by Moldova’s pro-Russian Sor party, are being closely watched by governments across Europe and beyond. Most protesters travelled to the capital city Chisinau by bus, with their costs reportedly covered by the Sor party.

Russia has said the accusation is an attempt by Moldovan authorities to distract attention from their own social and economic failures.

Moldova, strategically located on the border with Ukraine, and harbouring its own pro-Russian breakaway region, is dependent on Russian gas.

Last year Moscow cut its supply to Moldova by half, putting pressure on the government in Chisinau, as it seeks to hold together its Romanian and Russian-speaking populations.

Protests over the rising price of gas and electricity began last autumn.

Speaking at a public briefing last Monday, President Sandu said that Russia had already attempted to destabilise the situation in Moldova via the energy crisis, which she said “was expected to cause major discontent among the population and lead to violent protests”.

The plan now, she said, involved “diversionists with military training […] who would undertake violent action, carry out attacks on buildings of state institutions or even take hostages”.

57 people from nations friendly to Russia – including a group of Serbian football fans and several boxers from Montenegro – were denied entry to Moldova in the past few days, after checks by security services.

And Moldova’s airspace was unexpectedly closed for several hours this week.

“It’s very clear that Russia is an aggressor state,” Rosian Vasiloi, head of Moldova’s border police, told the BBC. He said the threat had existed since 24 February, when the Ukraine war began, but he emphasised that it was “different now; it’s a mix of threats from inside and outside Moldova”.

As long as Ukraine continues to fight, and wins the war, he believes the risks for Moldova are lower.

“If Ukraine falls, Moldova is next,” he said. “But I’m not afraid.”

Since the war began, President Sandu’s government has tried to diversify the country’s energy sources, and wean it off dependence on Russian gas, but attacks on Ukraine’s infrastructure and the cost of importing electricity from Romania hasn’t made that easy.

She has said the alleged Russian plot would rely on “internal forces” such as the opposition Sor party, and has called for parliament to pass tougher security laws.

Marina Tauber, Sor’s general secretary, who led today’s protest outside parliament, says that her party not opposed to the EU and wants good relations with all sides.

But there are those in her party who admit they would welcome Russian intervention.

Image caption,

Marina Tauber of the pro-Russian Sor party says it wants good relations with all sides

Orhei – an hour’s drive north of the capital Chisinau – is a Sor stronghold where we meet party Councillor Iurie Berenchi.

“We’re not afraid,” he told me, “Because if Russia wanted to take Moldova, they’d do it in half a day.”

When asked if she would welcome that, Ms Berenchi is unequivocal.

“In my personal opinion, yes,” he said. “With Russia we’d be much better off than we are now.”

Many people in Chisinau see closer ties with the West as a way to secure Moldova’s independence and democracy at a critical time. President Sandu’s party has a solid majority in parliament.

But the view from the crowd outside that parliament on Sunday was different, and there’s the risk the pressure could widen the splits in Moldova’s diverse society.

The risk is clear when Ala and her friends were asked whether they believe Russia wants to infiltrate Moldova, as their president fears.

“Yes, let them come!” they shout. “We want them to come here. We want to be part of Russia!”



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