country:moldova

  • #Fearless_Cities’ Movements Plot Common Path in Serbia

    ‘Municipalist’ movements from all over Europe met in the Serbian capital last weekend to exchange ideas and plan a common strategy against deeply entrenched political structures in their home countries.

    Municipalist activists from all over Europe descended on Belgrade in Serbia at the weekend for the fifth Fearless Cities conference, an event that seeks to elevate the discussion about the role that grassroots city-based groups can play in countering entrenched political structures and the rise of the far right.

    The conference last weekend was hosted by activists from Serbia’s Let’s Not Drown Belgrade [#Ne_davimo_Beograd], which was formed in 2014 to oppose a massive development project on the riverbank of the Serbian capital.

    The global municipalist movement met for the first time at the Fearless Cities Summit in Barcelona, Spain, in June 2017, at the invitation of Barcelona En Comú, with the stated goal of “radicalizing democracy, feminizing politics and standing up to the far right”.

    In a world in which it says “fear and inequalities are being twisted into hate, the movement says it is “standing up to defend human rights, democracy and the common good”.

    “It is a good opportunity to see how both smaller and bigger European cities are doing, and how we are actually on the same page for how we want to introduce citizens to decision-making,” Radomir Lazovic, one of the founders of Ne Davimo Beograd, said.

    “We are against the privatization and commercialisation of public assets, and we want to develop cities that belong to us, as citizens,” he told BIRN.

    Besides opposing the Belgrade Waterfront, Ne Davimo Beograd has supported months of protests in the Serbian capital against the government of President Aleksandar Vucic.

    The “1of 5 million” movement launched a series of protests on December 8 last year, demanding that Vucic and his governing Serbian Progressive Party resign, as well as more media freedom and fair elections.

    At the event in Belgrade, one of the panels gathered individuals from all over the Balkans, including North Macedonia, Albania and Croatia, to discuss the rise of local movements in their respective countries, and whether these movements actually have the potential to affect real change.

    Many panelists emphasized that in their home cities, members of the public often didn’t even know that they had neighbourhood councils and could have a real say in matters affecting their cities and towns.

    “Connecting and expanding our knowledge on the practices we are interested in is important, especially at a time when we see that right-wing formations and political parties are much better organized, much better mobilized and much more present in the general media with a higher impact on the general public,” said Ivana Dragsic, from the Skopje-based organization, #Freedom_Square.

    How municipalist movements can help shape the future of European politics was the main topic of discussion in #Belgrade.

    “Municipalism” emphasises the importance of allowing cities and towns to make their own decisions on issues like affordable housing, sustainable environmental policies and transparency.

    “Political parties have a problem because they … don’t follow the real process of societies,” said Ana Méndez de Andés, a member of the organization Ahora Madrid.

    “Municipalism looks at other ways of organizing. It’s about understanding that there is a need to change institutions and open up radical democratic processes starting from a scale that is closer to the citizens,” she told BIRN.

    Speakers from groups such as OccupyGaguta in Moldova, The City is For All in Hungary and Organized Society S.O.S. in Romania also presented their views at the conference, highlighting issues like participatory democracy, evictions, and environmental campaigns.

    “I am here in the Balkans because, as a Romanian, I can learn more about the experience in Southeastern Europe than I can from Western countries,” said Adrian Dohotaru, an MP in Romania and a member of Organized Society S.O.S.

    “We have a similar experience of commodification and privatization of public goods, a neoliberal system and in order to reverse this, we need to provide better policies against corruption.”

    Environmental justice was addressed by several speakers, including members of Keep Upright, KOD, from Montenegro, and Zagreb je NAS! [Zagreb is us], from Croatia.

    Other organizations like Spasi Sofia [Save Sofia] focus on promoting good quality public transport and green public spaces in the Bulgarian capital.

    “When the local government in Sofia canceled a big tramway project for the city we said: ‘This is enough. We have to really vote for ourselves because we love the city and we have to do something about it,’” said Andrej Zografski, from Spasi Sofia.

    “We have to learn from each other because we don’t have any other allies than ourselves,” he added.

    Opportunities to learn about issues specific to Belgrade were also offered at the conference, including tours of the Belgrade Waterfront and of the Kaludjerica settlment, which is often referred to as an illegal settlement due to the number of buildings built there without permits.

    Workshops to learn about different issues facing people in Serbia, like LGBT rights and the construction of hydro-power plants against public will, were offered as well.

    One of the discussions at the Belgrade event addressed the feminization of politics within a global context.

    Speakers from Colombia, Spain, Serbia and Croatia discussed the challenges of women trying to navigate and change patriarchal political systems.

    “If we don’t have a feminization of politics, we’ll lose many voices that are important in politics and, unless we change this, it’ll be difficult for these people to participate on equal terms with others,” said Laura Roth, a member of Barcelona en Comú.

    “This means distributing responsibilities in different ways and trying to break traditional gender.

    https://balkaninsight.com/2019/06/14/fearless-cities-movements-plot-common-path-in-serbia
    #villes-refuge #Serbie #asile #migrations #réfugiés #solidarité #hospitalité #municipalisme

    Ajouté à la métaliste sur les villes-refuge :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/759145

  • Selemet is a village in the Republic of Moldova: abandoned, tumbledown, forgotten – like so many. A quarter of the 5,000-strong population lives abroad, while those who remain attempt to arrest the decline

    http://www.erstestiftung.org/en/the-mayor

    Early in the morning the air in Selemet is already sweet with the scent of acacia flowers, mixed with the strong perfume of a woman in a black suit, strutting along the bumpy village street in high heels. Her claret-coloured bob matches her lipstick and the nail varnish that decorates her cared-for worker’s hands. Her arms are like those of all the other women here, who work in the fields as well as doing housework. Tatiana Badan is a strong woman in every sense of the word. She proudly wears a flag-shaped badge with the national colours of Moldova pinned to her breast; it bears the word ‘Primarul’, meaning ‘Mayor’.

    #moldavie #cartographi #shinking_cities (villages)

  • Orange snow creates eerie post-Apocalyptic scenes in eastern Europe | Toronto Star
    https://www.thestar.com/news/world/2018/03/26/orange-snow-creates-eerie-post-apocalyptic-scenes-in-eastern-europe.html


    à Polyana dans les Carpates ukrainiens

    The photos and videos haven’t been edited by the latest Instagram filter or otherwise digitally manipulated. Orange-tinted snow did blanket parts of Eastern Europe on Friday and over the weekend, creating eerie post-Apocalyptic scenes and baffling people from countries like Russia, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Romania and Moldova, the BBC reported.

    Documentation of the strange snow appeared all over social media, with some making jokes about “skiing on Mars,” according to CNN.

    While orange snow seems unearthly, meteorologists said the phenomenon actually occurs about every five years and that this instance was caused by sand from storms in the Sahara Desert mixing with snow and rain, according to the BBC.

    Unlike past occurrences, however, the concentrations of sand are much higher this time, with people even complaining of getting it in their mouths, the BBC reported.

  • Tough lessons in Transnistria | openDemocracy
    https://www.opendemocracy.net/od-russia/viktoria-pashentseva/tough-lessons-in-transnistria

    Transnistria is a self-proclaimed state on a sliver of land between Ukraine and the river Dniester. The territory’s independence is not recognised by any UN member state, who all consider it part of Moldova. Over the last few years, Transnistria’s education system has undergone radical reform with a focus on so-called “optimisation” — in other words, financial efficiency. The territory’s public purse is chronically empty, and this year’s budget has a 51.8% deficit. And unlike prices in the shops, Transnistrians’ incomes are hardly growing.

    Transnistria has to import the majority of its goods, and its own industry is losing momentum — political isolation has taken its toll, and after a financial-economic crisis over many years, cash is in short supply. Not only pensions and benefits are affected, but other public institutions, including education.

    #moldavie #transnistrie #ex-urss #union_soviétique

  • Dodon : Transnistria comprehends it has no future without Moldova — Politics, Europe — EADaily
    https://eadaily.com/en/news/2017/12/13/dodon-transnistria-comprehends-it-has-no-future-without-moldova

    Moldovan President Igor Dodon has announced that he never changed his mind about the status of Transnistria. The president said that even while being the leader of the Socialist Party, he always spoke for federalization of the republic.

    We have never changed this position. We did say it was not important how they would call it, federation or a special status. It is important for us what is inside this political part of the solution. And we came forward with a proposal on the solution. If our colleagues, partners from the left bank agree this will be good,” Dodon said.
    According to Moldova’s leader, “Transnistrian residents do comprehend that they have no other future than a common one with Moldova.” According to the president, Tiraspol are coming to the same idea.

    Vers un rapprochement entre la Transnistrie et la Moldavie ?

    La reprise des négociations était annoncée par Le Courrier des Balkans mais derrière #paywall (bis @cdb_77 ?)

    La Moldavie va reprendre les négociations avec les sécessionnistes de Transnistrie - Le Courrier des Balkans
    https://www.courrierdesbalkans.fr/La-Moldavie-va-reprendre-les-negociations-avec-les-secessionniste

    C’est un conflit gelé qui dure depuis l’effondrement de l’URSS. La petite république de Transnistrie refuse toujours de reconnaître l’autorité de Chișinău, clamant qu’elle est un État indépendant. Les deux parties vont à nouveau négocier fin novembre à Vienne sous un format « 5+2 ».

    5+2 ie Transnistrie, Russie, Moldavie, Ukraine, OSCE + Union européenne, États-Unis

  • The wall of insanity -

    Israel has opted for another wall, this time around Gaza. Israel will pay for it

    Gideon Levy Aug 13, 2017
    read more: http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.806489

    The next time a cap gun is fired or a toy balloon is launched at Israel from the Gaza Strip, the army will start building a steel dome over the Strip to prevent it. The ceiling will also cut off the territory from the sky. After all, we’re talking about national security. When the first crack forms, and another balloon is launched or cap gun fired, the defense establishment will proceed to the next phase: flooding the Gaza Strip with water until it is completely submerged. After all, we’re talking about Israeli security.
    Until that happens — the plans have already been drawn up — the modest, hard-up Israeli army is making do with smaller measures: It’s building a new “barrier” around the Strip, the father of all the fences and the mother of all the walls with which Israel is surrounding itself, six meters high and reaching tens of meters underground. Israel is becoming a state with a wall at its heart: There’s nothing it likes more than to surround itself.
    History is replete with megalomaniacal rulers who built palaces. For now, Israeli megalomania settles for walls. The separation barrier and the border fence, the Good Fence on the Lebanese border and the bad fence, the entire country is fences. Just give defense officials an excuse and they will surround us with a fence costing billions. For that, money can always be found.
    The fence of horrors on the Egyptian border to keep out African refugees and the separation wall facing barefoot residents of the Deheisheh refugee camp in the West Bank. Now it’s the turn of the Gaza border fence to stop tunnels from being dug under the fence that it is replacing. Next thing you know, there will be an electronic fence around the Israeli-Arab city of Umm al-Fahm, in response to the terrorism emanating from there as well.
    The chief of the Southern Command made the announcement, the military correspondents quoted him slavishly and Israel responded with either a yawn or a Yes!. The method is tried and true: First you create a demon (the tunnels); then you find it a megalomaniacal solution. And there you have it, another $800 million Zionist project, to be built by workers from Moldova and asylum seekers from Africa. There we have it: another wall.

  • Women migrant workers’ journey through the margins: Labour, migration and trafficking
    This report is produced by UN Women’s Economic Empowerment Section for the “Promoting and Protecting Women Migrant Workers’ Labour and Human Rights” Project, supported by the European Union. This report is the second of three designed to build on the growing body of scholarship pertaining to gender and migration, and is a resource for the creation of gender-sensitive policies and practices aimed at empowering women migrant workers.

    The second report continues to draw from the cases of Moldova, the Philippines and Mexico, and uses primary and secondary research to provide a detailed account of the lived realities of women migrant workers. The report focuses on specific sectors with high concentrations of women migrant workers, as well as the global issue of trafficking, to illuminate the gender-specific vulnerabilities and risks faced by women throughout their migration trajectory, and highlights the agency of women workers as they navigate challenges to claiming labour and human rights across borders.


    http://www.unwomen.org/en/digital-library/publications/2017/2/women-migrant-workers-journey-through-the-margins
    #migrations #travail #exploitation #femmes #genre #trafic_d'êtres_humains #traite #rapport

  • Women working worldwide: A situational analysis of women migrant workers

    This report is produced by UN Women’s Economic Empowerment Section for the “Promoting and Protecting Women Migrant Workers’ Labour and Human Rights” Project, supported by the European Union. This report is the first of three designed to build on the growing body of scholarship pertaining to gender and migration, and is a resource for the creation of gender-sensitive policies and practices aimed at empowering women migrant workers.

    This report draws from the cases of Moldova, Philippines and Mexico to provide a comprehensive analysis that accounts for differences and similarities between migration systems. Specifically, through the use of legal reviews and legislative comparison, the report provides an analysis of existing mechanisms, frameworks, legislation and policies vis-à-vis women migrant workers, with particular attention paid to the alignment of national legislation with international frameworks, like CEDAW.

    Finally, the report concludes by providing a set of recommendations aimed at global and regional actors, including the ratification of international treaties, enforcement of CEDAW and the creation of a new international instrument to promote and protect the rights of women migrant workers.

    http://www.unwomen.org/en/digital-library/publications/2017/2/women-working-worldwide#view
    #femmes #travail #femmes_migrantes #migrations #genre #rapport

  • Pro-Russian candidates win presidential elections in Bulgaria and Moldova - World Socialist Web Site
    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2016/11/17/bulg-n17.html

    Pro-Russian candidates win presidential elections in Bulgaria and Moldova
    By Markus Salzmann
    17 November 2016

    Pro-Russian presidential candidates won run-off elections in both Bulgaria and Moldova on Sunday. The results have caused domestic and international tensions and have deepened the crisis of the European Union (EU), because the EU and NATO member Bulgaria and strategically located Moldova, situated between Romania and Ukraine, will both now orient more strongly towards Moscow.

    #bulgarie #Moldavie #russie #élections #europe #équilibres_géopolitiques

  • Moldova’s women in crisis | openDemocracy

    https://opendemocracy.net/od-russia/marina-shupac/moldova-women-s-hopes-women-s-fears

    For the past few years, Natalia has been working as a kindergarten teacher in her hometown of Chișinău. One day, Natalia informed her boss that she was pregnant, and was soon fired without any compensation or maternity allowance. Losing a job is a tragedy for the average citizen of Moldova: it’s hard to find another, especially if you live outside the city.

    The costs are even greater for women. Women’s rights activists point to gender inequality amidst Moldova’s on-going economic, political and social crisis — with devastating results. As the UN special rapporteur wrote in a 2014 report on extreme poverty in Moldova: “Women continue to have limited economic opportunities compared with men, despite important recent progress towards equality in education.”

    #moldavie #discrimination #inégalités #droit_des_femmes

  • Bodyguards showcase their skills at annual Kyiv competition (photo, video) - watch on - uatoday.tv
    http://uatoday.tv/society/bodyguards-showcase-their-skills-at-annual-kyiv-competition-497028.html

    Who is the best bodyguard of them all? That is what one competition in Ukrainain capital Kyiv over the weekend sought to find out.

    Teams came from far and wide to test their skills - Bulgaria, Georgia, Romania, Moldova, the US and Switzerland were all represented.

    Among the tests: how to protect the president if he’s out for a walk and an intruder attacks.

    Ukraine’s participants included members of the secret service and other security forces who usually spend their time protecting politicians, civil servants and celebrities.

  • Ukraine bans journalists who ’threaten national interests’ from country | World news | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/sep/16/ukraine-president-bans-journalists-from-country

    President Petro Poroshenko has banned two BBC correspondents from Ukraine along with many Russian journalists and public figures.

    The long-serving BBC Moscow correspondent Steve Rosenberg and producer Emma Wells have been barred from entering the country, according to a list published on the presidential website on Wednesday. The decree says those listed were banned for one year for being a “threat to national interests” or promoting “terrorist activities”.

    BBC cameraman Anton Chicherov was also banned, along with Spanish journalists Antonio Pampliega and Ángel Sastre, who went missing, presumed kidnapped, in Syria in July.
    […]
    Andrew Roy, the BBC’s foreign editor, said: “This is a shameful attack on media freedom. These sanctions are completely inappropriate and inexplicable measures to take against BBC journalists who are reporting the situation in Ukraine impartially and objectively and we call on the Ukrainian government to remove their names from this list immediately.’

    The reason for the BBC correspondents’ ban was not clear, but media coverage of the conflict with the rebels – whom the authorities and local media often call “terrorists” – has been a sensitive subject.

    Russian television has covered the Ukrainian crisis in a negative light, frequently referring to the new Kiev government as a “fascist junta”, while international media has focused on civilian casualties and the use of cluster munitions in populated areas by both sides.

    • Ah ben non !

      Ukraine’s ban of foreign journalists ignites international ire
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/ukraines-ban-of-foreign-journalists-ignites-international-ire-398113.html

      Prominent foreign journalists briefly found themselves in the company of Kremlin cheerleader and Chechen strongman leader Ramzan Kadyrov in Ukraine’s recently released list of sanctioned individuals.

      The move ignited such a furor that President Petro Poroshenko immediately reversed the decision.

      The nearly 400 sanctioned individuals, announced on Sept. 16 by the presidential administration, face travel and financial restrictions for one year. Those on the list were said to represent an “actual or potential threat to national interests, national security, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine,” according to the decree.

      While figures like Kadyrov and separatist leaders Denis Pushilin and Igor Plotnitsky are justifiably on the list along with top Russian officials, several well-respected foreign journalists were inexplicably singled out.

      Many expressed shock and anger that BBC journalists Emma Wells, Steven Rosenberg and Anton Chicherov were categorized as a threat to Ukraine’s national security – especially considering that Rosenberg had been attacked in Russia last year for investigating the deaths of Russian soldiers in Ukraine.

      The Ukrainian authorities quickly switched to damage-control mode.

    • In Reversal, Ukraine Removes 6 Journalists From Banned List
      http://www.voanews.com/content/cpj-osce-blast-ukraine-on-foreign-journalists-entry-ban/2967882.html

      Ukraine has removed six European journalists from its list of persons banned from the country, but a leading press freedom watchdog says all journalists should be removed from the list.
      […]
      The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) welcomed the reversal, but said the Ukrainian government “should remove all journalists and bloggers from the list and allow them to cover the region freely.”

      Earlier Thursday, The Organization for Security and Cooperation (OSCE) in Europe called for Poroshenko “to amend his decree and exclude journalists from it,” adding that Ukrainian authorities “should facilitate the work of journalists and abstain from creating administrative obstacles to the entry.

      The OSCE called the ban “a severe threat to the rights of journalists to freely collect information.

      Poroshenko signed a decree Wednesday that imposed sanctions on 388 companies and individuals deemed to represent an “actual or potential threat to the national interests, national security, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.

      The 34 journalists and seven bloggers originally included on the sanctions list come from Bulgaria, Estonia, Germany, Hungary, Israel, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Macedonia, Moldova, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Spain, Switzerland, and Britain. All but one are OSCE participating states.

      Le titre a été passablement adouci, puisque l’original était

      CPJ, OSCE blast Ukraine on foreign journalist entry ban

    • Foreign Ministry under fire for ‘incompetent’ sanctions list
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/foreign-ministry-under-fire-for-incompetent-sanctions-list-398216.html

      The scandal over Ukraine’s now notorious blacklist of prominent international journalists has flared up yet again, as the Foreign Ministry digs itself in deeper in trying to justify the move.

      Oksana Romaniuk of Reporters Without Borders on Sept. 18 published a list of journalists said to have been compiled by the Foreign Ministry in late February. The list, a photograph of which Romaniuk posted on Facebook after receiving the documents from an unknown source, apparently served as the basis for the sanctions list signed by President Petro Poroshenko on Sept. 16, which included BBC journalists Emma Wells and Steven Rosenberg, among others.

      The Foreign Ministry responded publicly to Romaniuk’s post, reminding her on Facebook that the documents she published, under Ukrainian legislation, were meant to stay confidential – apparent confirmation that the documents were legitimate. The ministry also noted that the list in question had not served as the basis for the finalized sanctions list.

      After the publication of the list of sanctioned journalists triggered international outrage, Poroshenko quickly backtracked and canceled the bans on six of them.

      But now the entire list is under scrutiny, as the documents provided by Romaniuk exposed a worrying detail: several international journalists were apparently sanctioned for their “anti-Ukrainian coverage of events,” with nobody quite sure how such determinations about a reporter’s work are made.

      The sanctioning of foreign journalists for “anti-Ukrainian coverage” follows “the Kremlin’s pattern of behavior all while they (Ukrainians) are declaring new principles,” Romaniuk told the Kyiv Post, saying the list was an “absolute embarrassment” for Ukraine at a time when Ukraine needs international support the most.

      We are having our lawyers prepare documents to send to the ministry to ask them who exactly decides what constitutes ‘anti-Ukrainian’ coverage, and what exactly the criteria are,” Romaniuk said.

      The best thing they could do now is admit that they made a mistake and promise that those responsible will be held to account,” she said, noting that she believed the list was hastily prepared at the last moment.

      Ukraine spent so much time preparing (to introduce) these sanctions … now they’ve released the sanctions and they are so badly prepared. I think they were designed for some internal reasons, to show that something big has been done ahead of elections,” she said.

      The plan backfired, she said, because whoever prepared the list exhibited negligence, incompetence, and a complete lack of understanding of the media.

  • With Russia Boxed In, Frozen Transdniester Conflict Could Heat Up
    http://www.rferl.org/content/with-russia-boxed-in-frozen-transdniester-conflict-could-heat-up/27044816.html

    The Ukrainian parliament’s vote this month to break off most forms of military and intelligence cooperation with Moscow over the conflict with Russian-backed rebels in eastern Ukraine threatens to upset an uneasy peace in Moldova’s breakaway Transdniester region.
     
    The Verkhovna Rada voted on May 21 to scrap a series of bilateral agreements on military cooperation with Russia, including a key provision that allows Moscow to send forces by land across Ukraine to the breakaway region.
    […]
    The move effectively cuts off Russian access to the around 1,500 soldiers it maintains in Transdniester, a sliver of land that borders Ukraine — but not Russia. The Russian deployment there is divided into an internationally mandated peacekeeping force of around 380 troops, with the rest being regular soldiers as part of its 14th Guards Army.
    […]
    Hill [former head of the OSCE Mission to Moldova and now ascholar at the Wilson Center, a nonpartisan research group based in the United States] says it’s difficult at this stage to predict the consequences, but that all sides would likely go to great lengths to avoid a resumption of hostilities.

    “My observation is that nobody there, on either the Moldovan side or the Transdniester side, really wants to start fighting again,” he says. “Both sides fear provocations — the creation of incidents that might create pressure on the other side.”

    Ce qui va donc nettement compliquer les liaisons entre la Russie et ses troupes en Transnistrie.

    Quant aux effets sur l’économie de la Transnistrie… qui doit ne pas être loin du record du monde de la contrebande. J’imagine que les tarifs vont s’en ressentir.

    Whatever happens, one casualty of the Ukrainian decision is likely to be Transdniester’s struggling economy — both the legitimate trade in steel, manufactured goods, and textiles, and the thriving illicit trade in contraband cigarettes, booze, and — recently — frozen chicken parts.

    Any impact on the black market, however, would depend on the willingness of officials in Ukraine, Moldova, and Romania to enforce their own customs laws.

  • Moldovans demand justice for vanishing $1 billion, lack of government action
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/russia-and-former-soviet-union/moldovans-demand-justice-for-vanishing-1-billion-lack-of-government-action


    An estimated 40,000 Moldovans took to the streets on May 3 to protest suspected corruption in a $1 billion banking scandal tied to Russian banks.
    © Tatiana Darie

    CHISINAU, Moldova - Tens of thousands of Moldovans took to the streets on May 3 in the Moldovan capital of Chisinau to demand justice for a banking scandal that saw $1 billion vanish from three of the country’s biggest banks. They are calling for some political leaders in the ruling pro-European coalition to step down for their lack of action over the scandal and poor governance.

    The participants dispersed peacefully in the central square at midday, chanting slogans such as “Moldova is ours,” "We are Moldova," and “The thieves must go to jail.”

    Moldovans are looking for answers after $1 billion disappeared from three local banks. Banca de Economii, Banca Social and Unibank, issued a total of $1 billion in loans to unidentified recipients, a staggering amount of money that equals about 15 percent of the 2013 gross domestic product of $7.9 billion in a nation of less than four million people.

    Prosecutors and American auditors investigated the questionable transactions that took place in November, just a few days before the country’s parliamentary elections, which saw pro-European parties scoring a narrow lead over the pro-Moscow Socialist Party.

    The American investigations firm Kroll issued a report early March, but Moldova’s central bank authorities claim the firm does not allow to make the report public. However, details of the report leaked to the press found that Banca de Economii (Savings Bank) issued $600 million in loans to companies backed by Russian banks.
    (…)
    Not very far from Ulinici, a 67-year-old was holding hands with his wife and listening to the speakers. The pensioner said he is closely following the developments in the country and believes it’s important to come out and speak up against the injustices.

    The current and past governments of this country always tried to separate us, based on our ethnicity and language, so that we could not unite and respond to such events,” said Mihai Popa. “But I am an optimist, I think we can achieve change, if we stand united.

    Plus de 1% de la population, à l’échelle de la France ça donne dans les 750 000 manifestants.

  • Manœuvres russes en Transnistrie

    Russian troops hold drills in Moldova’s separatist region | Daily Mail Online
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/ap/article-3031683/Russian-troops-hold-drills-Moldovas-separatist-region.html

    Russian troops have conducted military exercises in Moldova’s pro-Russia separatist region.

    Russian news agencies on Thursday quoted an army representative saying that 400 troops and 30 pieces of weaponry were involved in drills in Trans-Dniester, a narrow strip of land squeezed between Moldova and Ukraine.

    Predominantly ethnic Russian Trans-Dniester broke away from Moldova in 1990 over fears that Moldova planned to reunite with Romania. Russian troops have been stationed in Trans-Dniester since a 1992 war which killed more than 1,500 people.

    Army spokesman Oleg Kochetkov said that troops used 100,000 rounds of ammunition during the drills that involved armored personnel vehicles and grenade launchers.

  • Le point sur les projets de gazoducs par le Ministre de l’énergie russe, Alexandre Novak
    (en deuxième partie, après les considérations sur les « négociations » entre l’Ukraine et la Russie…)

    Russia may ease Ukraine’s gas terms, but Kiev must settle its bills | Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/03/11/us-russia-crisis-novak-gas-idUSKBN0M70IQ20150311

    Russia has a long-term goal of bypassing Ukraine as a transit country. It ships around 40 percent of its gas to Europe via Ukraine, while the rest goes via Belarus, Moldova, the Nord Stream subsea pipeline to Germany and the Blue Stream subsea pipeline to Turkey.

    In December last year it canceled plans to build the South Stream gas pipeline under the Black Sea to Bulgaria and onwards into southeast Europe.

    It is now planning an alternative export route, unofficially called Turkish Stream, with a capacity of 63 bcm per year.

    Instead of extending the pipeline further to Europe, Gazprom now plans to sell its gas at a hub on the Turkish-Greek border, requiring those European countries who want access to the gas to build links to the hub.

    Now counties should be building (onshore links) on their own. The routes could be different - they may come to Italy if they want. This is not our business anymore,” he said.

    Novak added that the costs of the offshore parts of Turkish Stream would be “comparable” to those of the South Stream project. The budget to build the offshore section of South Stream was previously estimated at up to 17 billion euros ($18.3 billion).

    Russia is also planning to ramp up gas exports to Asia to reduce its reliance on sales to Europe.

    Russia plans to ship gas to China via two yet-to-be-built pipelines: Power of Siberia, supplied exclusively by two Siberian gas fields, and Altai, which is to connect the Russian gas pipeline system from West to East.

    Russia and China reached agreement on the Power of Siberia pipeline last May. Novak said he hoped for a firm contract for Altai in the first half of this year.

    These (two) projects are not linked to each other... (The contract signed last May) will be implemented irrespective of whether Altai happens or not,” Novak said.

    He added that Russia was sticking to plans to deliver its first gas to China via Power of Siberia at the end of 2018 or start of 2019. Russia and China are not discussing a pre-payment or loan for the Power of Siberia project anymore, he said.

    Donc, Gazprom laisse l’Europe se débrouiller à partir de la frontière turque : le « troisième paquet » sera respecté.

  • Street of millionaires in a poor Ukrainian town
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/street-of-millionaires-in-a-poor-ukrainian-city-383111.html

    In 2014, OCCRP [Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project] reporters in Moldova noticed that judges in their country were issuing numerous rulings of the same kind: a Russian firm would be ordered to pay a considerable sum of money to an offshore company to settle a previous debt that it had guaranteed on behalf of another company – a company always controlled by a Russian company and a Moldovan citizen.

    The involvement of the Moldovan citizen ensured that Moldovan courts would have jurisdiction, and Moldovan judges consistently ruled that the Russian companies must pay—legalizing the transfer of dirty money out of the Russian Federation. The money was then transferred from the same Moldovan bank to the same Latvian bank safely within the European Union.

    The laundromat’s complex cleanse-and-spin cycle made up of dozens of offshore companies, banks, fake loans and proxy agents moved $20 billion from Russia to the European Union from 2010 to 2014. While it is impossible to know exactly where all the money came from and ended up, its most likely that they elaborate system was set up to hide money stolen by corrupt politicians or earned through criminal activity.

    As it turns out, Ukrainian citizens played an important role in the scheme. They were involved at various stages of the operation, mostly as phony directors of the web of fake companies.

    Enquête sur les prête-noms dans cette entreprise de blanchiment d’argent russe (20 Mds de dollars depuis 2010) tous domiciliés dans un petit village ukrainien Myronivka)

  • German minister hopes Moldova stays committed to Europe - Yahoo News
    http://news.yahoo.com/german-minister-hopes-moldova-stays-committed-europe-133352310.html

    Germany’s foreign minister said Monday that he hopes Moldova will stay on its pro-European path after the former Soviet republic elected a government backed by a Communist party.

    Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Germany wouldn’t “withdraw any offer” to Moldova, but said “it is Moldova’s turn to react.

    Pro-European parties won the Nov. 30 election, but failed to agree on a governing coalition, and they need the support of the Communist party, which favor slower reforms. Moldova signed an association agreement with the EU in June, angering Russia.

    Argl ! participation des communistes au gouvernement !
    Les chars russes bientôt dans la capitale !!!

    Chișinău, 2015 = Paris, 1981

  • #Football : scandale pour la construction d’un stade de 5000 places en #Gagaouzie, #Moldavie pour le compte de l’#Azerbaïdjan

    Sports complex stalls in Moldova’s Gagauzia amid shady deals
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/russia-and-former-soviet-union/sports-complex-stalls-in-moldovas-gagauzia-amid-shady-deals-353647.html

    A vanity project started by Azerbaijan to honor former President Heydar Aliyev, whose son is the current president of the former Soviet republic, has turned into a huge scandal. Critics see an international corruption scheme behind the planned construction of Heydar Aliyev Sports Complex in Moldova’s Gagauziya region. 

    Three years ago, the Azerbaijani government vowed to construct a sports complex in the small city of Ceadir-Lunga, with 22,000 residents. At first, Moldovans liked the idea. But since then the project has been stained with charges of unfair land allocation. A local governor turned out to have a special interest in the project, which may not be as charitable as it looks at first glance.

    The promised complex was said to have a soccer stadium of 5,000 seats, tennis courts, training football fields, weightlifting hall with 400 seats, a hotel with 200 rooms and more. For Ceadir-Lunga, the promise seemed very generous.

    Joyeuse confusion des intérêts privés (dont Ilham Aliyev) et public (la municipalité de Ceadir-Lunga.

    Au passage, l’article rappelle que l’Axerbaïdjan a semé dans le monde entier des statues de Heydar Aliyev. Et s’en sert, en interne, comme témoignage du rayonnement international du pays.

    In recent years, the Azeri government has installed statues of Heydar Aliyev – a former Soviet KGB top official known as a terrible abuser of human rights — in many countries, including Moldova.

    Article de RFE-RL sur le sujet (octobre 2012)

    Azerbaijan’s Biggest Export : Heydar Aliyev
    http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijan-biggest-export-heydar-aliyev/24727872.html

    But over the past decade tributes to Aliyev have been cropping up in cities all over the world, from Belgrade to Cairo and now all the way to Mexico City.

    Take a look at this interactive map by RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service keeping track of the world’s Heydar Aliyev statues. The first statue of Aliyev abroad is believed to have been unveiled in Kars, Turkey in 2001 by Heydar Aliyev himself, who passed away two years later.

    Au moment de l’inauguration de la statue de H. Aliyev à Mexico dans le Jardin de la Reforma


    … suivi du retrait pour un endroit moins prestigieux.
    http://www.theartnewspaper.com/in-the-frame/2013/1

  • Qu’est-ce qui force au travail forcé ? | OIT

    http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed_norm/---declaration/documents/publication/wcms_243391.pdf

    L’étude :

    The current analysis is based on surveys carried out in eight countries [Guatemala, Nepal, Niger, Bolivia, Côte d’Ivoire, Armenia, Georgia, Republic of Moldova], with three different target groups: all members of a household (5 years of age and above); children (5 to 17 years of age); and returned adult migrants. These three populations were chosen according to the form of forced labour that was more likely to take place in the country. The main purpose of this chapter is to study the factors that make individuals vulnerable to forced labour.

    La définition du travail forcé selon l’OIT :

    According to the ILO’s survey guidelines, an individual is considered to be working in forced labour if he or she was not freely recruited and faced some form of penalty at the time of recruitment, had to work and lives under duress and the menace of any penalty or cannot leave the employer because of the menace of a penalty (…)

    Les hommes plus exposés que les femmes :

    The counter-intuitive finding of the study is that women and girls are generally less likely to be in forced labour irrespective of their age. Being female as opposed to male reduces the probability of a household member aged 5 or older being in forced labour by 0.21 percentage points (in the Niger), to 9.89 percentage points (in Guatemala). (…)

    Un effet protecteur de l’éducation :

    With the exception of Guatemala where, surprisingly, the literate were more likely to be in forced labour (4.14 percentage points), being literate leads to a maximum 1.15 percentage point decrease in the probability of household members being in forced labour. Individuals in households with literate heads were less likely to be in forced labour. For children, what matters is the literacy and education level of the household’s decision-maker. (…)
    The education of the fathers, which impacts household income, has a negative effect on forced labour. Having an educated father reduces the probability of an employed child ending up in forced labour by 0.17 per cent in the Plurinational State of Bolivia to 2.82 per cent in Côte d’Ivoire. If a child is in a household with an educated mother, the decrease can be by about as much as 5.65 per cent. (…)

    Un fort effet des chocs de revenu et de la faim :

    Direct measures of wealth are not used in the estimation model due to the importance of credit in the measurement of forced labour. Instead, measures such as income shocks and food security are used. (…) In terms of food security, data were only available for Nepal where food security had a negative effect on the probability of household members ending up in forced labour. This effect is extremely high, about 5.57 percentage points for household members as a whole, irrespective of their age, and about 13.77 percentage points for children. (…)

    Pour les migrants revenus au pays, deux puissants facteurs de risque : être endetté...

    In the surveys that targeted returned migrants, no direct information was available on the income levels of the migrants prior to migration. The only information that could be used as proxy is whether they borrowed to finance their trip. Borrowing from third parties, even from relatives and friends as opposed to not borrowing at all, leads to an increase in the probability that an individual will end up in forced labour. While borrowing in itself has a significant impact on the individual’s vulnerability to forced labour, the amount borrowed appears not to have much impact. Those who borrowed from relatives and friends as opposed to not borrowing faced an increase in the probability of being in forced labour by about 0.35 percentage points in the Republic of Moldova to 8.43 percentage points in Armenia. (…)

    … et être un travailleur agricole :

    Skilled agricultural workers faced an increase in probability of being in forced labour across all three countries due to their occupation as opposed to being in the reference occupations. The returned migrants in the Republic of Moldova and Armenia faced between a 0.83 percentage point and a 37.54 percentage point increase in probability of being in forced labour if they were skilled agriculture workers as opposed to workers in professional occupations. In Georgia, they faced a 23.50 percentage point increase in their probability of being in forced labour if they were in skilled agriculture as opposed to professional occupations.

    (p. 29 sqq.)

    #travail
    #travail_forcé
    #exploitation

    • Je n’en suis pas sûr. Le rapport comporte trois parties.
      La première cherche à mesurer l’ampleur du travail forcé au niveau mondial. La prostitution y est prise en compte : « Dans l’étude de 2012, on estime que 22 pour cent des personnes en travail forcé sont victimes d’exploitation sexuelle et 68 pour cent sont victimes de travail forcé dans des activités économiques telles que l’agriculture, la construction, le travail domestique ou le secteur manufacturier » (résumé en français, http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---ed_norm/---declaration/documents/publication/wcms_243425.pdf).
      La deuxième partie cherche à mesurer les profits induits par le travail forcé. La prostitution est également prise en compte : « on estime que le total des profits tirés du travail forcé dans l’économie privée mondiale s’élève à 150 milliards de dollars par an. La majeure partie des profits est générée en Asie, dont deux tiers provenant de l’exploitation sexuelle. »
      La troisième partie, celle que je cite ici, ne porte pas sur le même corpus de données globales : elle repose sur plusieurs enquêtes locales. Je ne pense pas que la prostitution ait été mise à l’écart - le rapport ne le dit pas explicitement - mais il y a sans doute un biais dans le choix des terrains (plutôt ruraux, hors Europe, Amérique du Nord et Asie du Sud-Est, etc.), qui limite le poids du travail sexuel forcé.

  • Regional Migration Report: Eastern Europe

    http://issuu.com/eui-publications/docs/carim-east_eastern_europe?mode=embed&layout=http%3A%2F%2Fskin.issuu.com%2Fv%2

    signalé par @isskein que nous remercions

    Eastern European countries, i.e. Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine, share a common land border with the European Union. This border divides nations, communities, families and while the border has moved, through European history, the people on either side rarely have. They, in fact, built strong cultural and personal ties in the periods of living together, ties that endured subsequent divisions by state lines. These ties influence the ongoing mobility of Eastern Europeans today. The present report sheds some light on the various issues concerning migration and mobility in the region. It gathers the fruit of over two years work done by the CARIM-East network of correspondents and proposes a collection of informative chapters on various migration topics, treated from three perspectives: demographic, legal and socio-political.

    #migrations #asile #europe_est

  • Ukraine conflict exacerbates tensions in the Caucasus - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2014/03/29/cauc-m29.html

    Ukraine conflict exacerbates tensions in the Caucasus
    By Clara Weiss
    29 March 2014

    The Ukraine conflict is exacerbating the already tense situation in the Caucasus. Following the US and European Union-backed coup in Kiev, moves are now underway to speed up the inclusion of Georgia and Moldova into the EU and NATO, and strengthen ties with Azerbaijan. Both Georgia and Azerbaijan have lined up behind the imperialist powers and the right-wing government in Kiev in their campaign against Russia.

    The Caucasus has been a renewed focal point of imperialist interests since the dissolution of the Soviet Union and subsequent independence of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia. The region provides access to the Caspian Basin—one of the largest energy reserves in the world—and serves as a bridge between Europe and Central Asia.

    #ukraine #russie #caucase