Title: MOLDOVA: Transnistrian Separatist Movement
1MOLDOVA Transnistrian Separatist Movement
- The Nistru River divides Transnistria from the
rest of Moldova
2MOLDOVA
- Formerly the Moldavian SSR in USSR
- Located between Romania and Ukraine
- Landlocked, though Black Sea very close by
3MOLDOVA
- Small slightly larger than Maryland
- 33,843 square kilometers
- Most densely populated of all former SSRs
- Roughly 4½ million people
- 131 people per square kilometer
- Poorest country in Europe
- GDP per capita 1,800
4TRANSNISTRIA
One of two separatist regions of Moldova
Greatest threat to Moldovan state
territorial integrity
5- Transnistria
- (In Yellow)
- Border formed
- by Nistru River
The remainder of Moldova is known as Bessarabia
6Nistru (Dniester) River (Romanian name)
(Ukrainian name)
. Separates
Transnistria from Bessarabia(Seen here at
Tighina)
7HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
Images of Chisinau (formerly Kishinev)
8REPUBLIC OF MOLDOVA(formerly Bessarabia)
- Ethnic Romanian majority historically tied to or
part of Romania itself
- Capital at Chisinau
- Government mostly controlled by Romanian
majority
- Chisinau is recognized as possessing Transnistria
but has no effective control over the region
9TRANSNISTRIA(Transnistrian Moldovan Republic)
- Declared independence from Moldova in 1991 short
civil war ensued
- Capital at Tiraspol
- Internationally recognized as part of Moldova
- However, Tiraspol has effective control over the
region, not Chisinau
10SOVIET-ERA TRANSNISTRIA
- 1917-1940 Moldavian Autonomous Oblast
- Autonomous part of Ukrainian SSR
- Some Slavs present but Romanian majority
11WORLD WAR II
- 1941-1942 Nazis overrun Moldova
- Romanians fight alongside Germans
- 350,000 Romanians die in fighting
- 1944 Soviets re-take region
- Begin policies of Russification
- Alienates Romanians, many deported
- Replaced with ethnic Russians and Ukrainians
- Led to increased ethnic tensions
- 1947 Present border established
12RESULTS OF WW2 IN TRANSNISTRIA
- Becomes part of Moldavian SSR in USSR
- Stalins successors not as ruthless with ethnic
Romanians, however Romanian ethnicity still
suppressed by Russification
- Soviet 14th Army headquartered in Moldavia,
1956
13INDEPENDENCE
- 1989 Weakening of USSR leads
to increased Moldovan
self-determination
- Government declares Romanian official language,
discusses reunification w/ Romania
- Minority Russians and Ukrainians uneasy
- 1990 Transnistrian Republic declared at
Tiraspol
- Not recognized by Chisinau
- Fighting breaks out
14TRANSNISTRIAN CIVIL WAR
- 1991 Moldova declares independence from USSR, so
pro-Soviet Transnistria joins USSR
- March-June 1992 Fighting breaks out
- 1,500 dead, thousands of refugees
- Allegations that the Russian 14th Army aided
rebels
- July 1992 Ceasefire brokered by Russia
- Results in a demilitarized security zone along
Nistru
15REASONS FOR CONFLICT
- Language, ethnic, ideological differences
- Moldovas possible reunification with Romania
- Economic disparity and values
- Presence of Russian 14th Army
- Government issues
16REASONS FOR CONFLICTLanguage Differences
- Romanian Moldovans speak Romanian, returned to
Roman script
- Most Romanian speakers are bilingual and speak
Russian also
- Russian and Ukrainian ethnicities especially in
Transnistria speak Russian and Ukrainian, use
Cyrillic script
- Most are not bilingual
17REASONS FOR CONFLICTLanguage Differences
- Moldovan government makes Romanian official
language reinstates Latin script
- Russians and Ukrainians grow uneasy as government
continues to lean toward Romania and shift away
from Soviet Russification
- Seen as origin of conflict, though there are many
other factors
18REASONS FOR CONFLICTEthnic Differences
INCLUDES TRANSNISTRIA
SOURCE CIA Factbook
19REASONS FOR CONFLICTEthnic Differences
- Ethnic Russians and Ukrainians threatened by
Chisinaus leanings toward Romania
- Romanian Moldovans eager to reclaim culture
suppressed by Soviet regime
- However, conflict not entirely on ethnic lines
- Some ethnic Romanians in Transnistria assuming
Transnistrian identity even taking leadership
positions in the rebel state
- 70-75 of Moldovan Russians and Ukrainians live
outside Transnistria yet are able to co-exist
with Romanians in those regions
20REASONS FOR CONFLICTPossible Reunification
- Moldovas historic political, ethnic, and
cultural ties lie with Romania, not Russia
- Russians and Ukrainians fear a possible
re-unification between Moldova and Romania
- Not likely to happen at least in the
foreseeable future but the topic has been
discussed by Moldovan government officials
- Resulting state would leave Russians and
Ukrainians as very small minorities
21REASONS FOR CONFLICTEconomic Disparity
- Transnistria contains 14 of Moldovas total
population
- However, it accounts for 35 of Moldovas
national income
Tiraspol, capital of Transnistria
22REASONS FOR CONFLICTEconomic Disparity
- Soviet industrial investment largely concentrated
in Transnistria
- Transnistria slightly wealthier than rest of
Moldova (still one of the poorest regions in all
of Europe)
- Strengthened regions ties with Russia and USSR
- Encouraged flow of ethnic Russians to region
- Bessarabia largely was excluded from these
factors
- Even now, Transnistria still very Soviet-based
while the rest of Moldova has opened up somewhat
23REASONS FOR CONFLICTRussian 14th Army
- 5,000 Russian troops stationed in Transnistria
- Well-armed peacekeeping force
- Provided units, training, and weapons to rebels
during civil war
- Chisinau believes army is a destabilizing force
- Tiraspol sees army as protection from Chisinau
- Russias status as peace broker compromised
24REASONS FOR CONFLICTGovernment
- MOLDOVAN GOVERNMENT
- President Vladimir Voronin is a Communist
however government is a republic
- Government usually leans toward closer relations
with Romania, though has improved relations with
Russia under Voronin
- Organized crime rampant some corruption though
to a lesser extent than in Transnistria
Vladimir Voronin
25REASONS FOR CONFLICTGovernment
- TRANSNISTRIAN GOVERNMENT
- Relic of the Soviet era
- Reputation for human rights violations
- Also thought to be a hotbed for drugs, weapons
and terrorists
- Communist President Igor Smirnov regarded as
corrupt
- Received 103.6 of the vote in one region in the
2001 election hmmm
Igor Smirnov
26TRANSNISTRIALast outpost of Communism
IMAGES OF TIRASPOL
Lenin Street and Statue
27Sports an escape from politicsor is it?
Sheriff soccer team, based in Tiraspol
28Sheriff Sports Complex
- Cost 200 million double Moldovas annual
budget
- Believed by many to be paid for by illicit arms
sales through Igor Smirnovs son Vladimir
29TRANSNISTRIA AND THE WEAPONS TRADE
- Transnistria known as a worldwide leader in legal
and illegal arms sales
- Mystery of rocket-mounted dirty bombs reported
to be missing from Tiraspol Airport
- None there now what happened to them?
- Did Russia take them back when USSR collapsed?
- Were they sold or stolen, and if so, who has
them?
- Weapons used by rebels and insurgents in
Chechnya, Abkhazia, and Africa linked to Tiraspol
30FUTURE OF TRANSNISTRIA
- Possible resolutions
- Special status Transnistria granted autonomy
within Moldova
- Similar to Gagauzia (Turkic) already in Moldova
- Probably most likely resolution, but not a done
deal
- Transnistria wins independence
- Instability could prove difficult for all
involved
- Transnistria becomes irredentist, joins Ukraine
- Highly unlikely
31REVIEW
- Transnistria has a Slavic majority Moldova as a
whole has a Romanian majority
- Some tensions resulting from conflict in WW 2
- However, conflict is not entirely an ethnic
matter
- Transnistria broke away from Moldova as a result
of several factors, including
- Romanian majority beginning to assert itself as
political power in post-Soviet Moldova
- Fears of a Moldovan reunification with Romania
- Historic ties to Ukraine and Russia
- Rest of Moldovas historic ties are to Romania
32REVIEW
- A complicating factor is the presence of the
Russian Army, seen by both sides as favoring
Transnistria
- Has additional effect of undermining Russias
credibility as a peace broker
- Corrupt government and large-scale illicit arms
sales further complicated the matter
- Most likely solution special status/autonomy for
Transnistria, however that does not appear to be
an immediate possibility
33- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- (All accessed throughout April 2005)
- http//berclo.net/inden.html
- http//e-gov.moldova.md/moldova(en).nsf
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bessarabia
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chisinau
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Moldova
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_Moldova
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Moldova
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igor_Smirnov
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moldavian_SSR
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moldova
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republic_of_Moldova
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiraspol
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transnistria
- http//encarta.msn.com/map_701517096/Tiraspol.html
- http//isurvived.org/Transnistria.html
- http//kishinev.moldline.net/
- http//manila.djh.dk/borders/stories/storyReader4
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