Moldovans await pivotal election result as leader warns of Russian interference

Moldovans await pivotal election result as leader warns of Russian interference


Sarah Rainsford, Eastern and Southern Europe correspondentIn Chisinau and

Paul KirbyEurope digital editor in London

grey-placeholder Moldovans await pivotal election result as leader warns of Russian interference79042050-9c47-11f0-82b3-31d97f4e1ffa.jpg Moldovans await pivotal election result as leader warns of Russian interferenceAnadolu via Getty Images

Moldovan President Maia Sandu warned voters their democracy was young and fragile and Russia endangered it

Moldovans have voted in parliamentary elections seen as critical for their future path to the European Union amid allegations of “massive Russian interference” before the vote.

The claims, first made by Moldova’s authorities, were repeated by pro-EU President Maia Sandu, who told reporters outside a polling station in the capital Chisinau the future of her country, flanked by Ukraine and Romania, was in danger.

Partial results will emerge in the coming hours, and the electoral commission said turnout by the end of voting at 21:00 (18:00 GMT) was just under 52%.

Two political forces are seen as almost neck and neck in the race: Sandu’s Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) and the pro-Russian Patriotic Electoral Bloc.

Another important factor is the more than 267,000 voters who turned out in the largely pro-Western diaspora. In a measure of the tension surrounding the vote, bomb scares were reported at polling stations in Italy, Romania, Spain and the US.

Similar scares were reported in Moldova itself.

Moldova also has a pro-Russian breakaway enclave called Transnistria along its border with Ukraine, complete with a Russian military presence. Residents in this sliver of land have Moldovan passports and most are strongly pro-Moscow, but they have to cross the Dniester river to vote.

Sarah Rainsford reports from Moldova’s administrative border with Transnistria

Moldovans have been buffeted by Russia’s full-scale war in neighbouring Ukraine, but they are also grappling with spiralling prices and high levels of corruption.

President Sandu, 53, won a second term of office last November and warned Moldovans the future of their democracy was in their hands: “Don’t play with your vote or you’ll lose everything!”

If her PAS party loses its majority in the 101-seat parliament, it will have to look for support from two of the other parties expected to get into parliament, the Alternativa bloc or the populist Our Party.

One of Sandu’s main rivals, Socialist leader Igor Dodon who is part of the Patriotic Electoral Bloc, claimed that Moldova’s pro-European authorities were planning to cancel the election because the pro-Russian opposition “is winning”. One of the parties in his bloc was barred from running two days ago because of alleged illicit funding.

In the run-up to the vote, police reported evidence of an unprecedented effort by Russia to spread disinformation and buy votes. Dozens of men were also arrested, accused of travelling to Serbia for firearms training and co-ordinating unrest. A BBC investigation uncovered a network promising to pay participants if they posted pro-Russian propaganda and fake news.

Parties sympathetic to Moscow rejected the police claims as fake and a show – created by the government to scare people into supporting them. Russia’s embassy in the UK rejected the BBC’s allegations, accusing Moldova and its “Western sponsors” of seeking to divert attention from Chisinau’s “internal woes”.

grey-placeholder Moldovans await pivotal election result as leader warns of Russian interference9e92d3b0-9c98-11f0-b741-177e3e2c2fc7.png Moldovans await pivotal election result as leader warns of Russian interference

At the edge of Moldova’s separatist enclave of Transnistria on Sunday, a long queue of cars waited to cross the river to register their vote at 12 polling stations opened beyond the administrative border, some of them more than 20km (12 miles) away.

Moldovan police checked documents and car boots before letting them pass. Most cars had several people inside, often whole families.

By mid-afternoon, the queue stretched into the distance beyond a kiosk with a Soviet-style hammer-and-sickle emblem on top, and the green-and-red striped flag of Transnistria.

Speaking to drivers, most seemed unconcerned by the inconvenience, and the atmosphere was relatively relaxed.

One man told the BBC in Russian that he was voting for change because the PAS government had “promised paradise and delivered nothing”. No-one would be more specific than that, insisting their voting preference was “secret”.



Source link

Share this content:

إرسال التعليق

You May Have Missed