Few of you might know today it is election day for the Republic of Moldova. Moldovans have to elect the president, as well as answer to the question of whether Moldova should change its Constitution for a future EU membership.

While the election results seem to be pretty clear in favor of the current, pro-european president Maia Sandu:

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Things are different regarding the vote for the referendum:

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The “Da” yellow bar, for someone who does know a bit of Russian, means yes (Da is actually one of the few words that Romanian and the Slavic languages have in common). The blue bar on the right means No and as you can see is a bit longer as of now. These are just the preliminary results, as votes are being counted as we speak. The hope comes from the urban centers, where votes are still to be counted, and more people support the European direction than the rural areas (Although at the current growth rate, the Yes camp doesn’t seem to be hitting the 50%+1 mark) and the diaspora which has a solid majority in favor of the revision of the constitution:

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As I understood, the diaspora vote will only account for something like 5-10% of the total result (which is a bummer, since the diaspora has increased a lot in the latest years), it will not be the average (I’ll update this part of the post if things are different).

Why is this important?

Moldova is a small country, sandwiched between the war-torn Ukraine, and the already EU and NATO member Romania. Its current land and some more which is part of Ukraine, (also known as Bessarabia) belonged to the medieval-era Principality of Moldova, which lost it to the Tsarist (Russian) Empire in 1812. That Moldova later united with Wallachia to form the modern-day Romania in 1859. After WWI, Bessarabia united with Romania and stayed so until the Ribbentrop-Molotov pact between Nazi Germany and the USSR in 1939, when Romania retreated its administration following a Soviet ultimatum. The current borders of modern Moldova were drawn by them, as it was only an administrative province.

Nowadays, compared to Ukraine and Georgia, Moldova is the EU candidate in Eastern Europe which is the most advanced on the path to accession. The referendum has currently passed the threshold for validation, which means that enough people have voted, irrespective of their option. If the majority of the votes are no, it will be a huge blow to Maia Sandu and her pro-European program. Besides that, the economic situation might get worse with some foreign investors fleeing the country. It is highly likely that Maia Sandu herself will even lose the elections in the 2nd turn - which would bring even more trouble for Moldova and for Ukraine, which already has two hostile neighbors (Russia and Belarus). If the referendum does pass, but with a small majority, there will be room for contestation, and it will be a huge headache going forward. It is necessary that the referendum will pass with an as high percent of Yes votes as possible, in order to eliminate any doubt concerning the European integration of Moldova.

If you’ve reached all the way here reading this, thank you! Here in Romania it is 01:28 AM Monday morning, just like in Moldova, so the polling stations have closed a while ago (my Friendica node also seems to currently have a 2-hour delay, so you might see this post even later when I’m already sleeping). But across the Atlantic, voting booths should still be open.

As anyone has seen with the Brexit, the results of a referendum can hardly be overturned, if at all.

If you have any friend or acquitance from Moldova, go tell them to go out there and vote, and vote Yes no matter the other option they’re choosing for president (I hope they vote for Maia Sandu tho, but I believe in the free will of the others). There is no way one could choose “No”, absolutely no way! By choosing this, they will choose for their country to have relations with a country under international embargo.

Source of the pics/realtime info: Referendum, Presidential Elections (it’s basically the same page but I made it easier for you since it’s only in Romanian and Russian. To view the diaspora votes select Externe in the drop-down above the map of Moldova.

Edit 10:30 AM local time: good morning (from here)! Seems like the Da camp has the advantage with 50.03% (looks like they’re now on to the diaspora vote count). We’re getting there! 🤞

  • tardigrada@beehaw.org
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    2 months ago

    Still ‘too close to call’ with 98% of votes counted. And ‘foreign influence’ plays a major role in this democratic referendum, reports say.

    Official data put Yes on 50.08% and No on 49.92% on Monday morning, with over 98% of votes counted.

    [Maia Sandu, the incumbent pro-EU president who topped the presidential election first round but by 41% of the vote and will now face a second round] accused “criminal groups” of working together with “foreign forces” of using money, lies, and propaganda to sway the vote.

    Sandu also said her government had “clear evidence” that 300,000 votes were bought, which she called “a fraud of unprecedented scale”.

    • petrescatraian@libranet.deOP
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      2 months ago

      @tardigrada absolutely. Russia put a significant amount of money to make sure people vote the right option: to return to the Motherland.

      Gosh, if only they sent these money before to build roads, schools, hospitals and whatnot, instead of pocketing the oligarchs…

      • tardigrada@beehaw.org
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        2 months ago

        It seems so.

        From the article in my previous post above (here again):

        At a polling station for residents of the breakaway Moldovan region of Transnistria - which is economically, politically and militarily supported by Russia - the BBC stumbled upon evidence of vote-buying.

        A BBC producer heard a woman who had just dropped her ballot in the transparent box ask an election monitor where she would get paid.

        Outside, we asked directly whether she had been offered cash to vote and she admitted it without qualms. She was angry that a man who had sent her to the polling station was no longer answering her calls. “He tricked me!” she said.

        She would not reply when asked who she had voted for.

        UPDATE: Latest news say Moldova says ‘Yes’ to pro-EU constitutional changes by tiny margin and despite unprecedented Russian interference.

        • tanakian@lemmy.sdf.org
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          28 days ago

          so transnistria voted? despite declaring themselves an independent state? do they participate in moldovan elections?

          • petrescatraian@libranet.deOP
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            26 days ago

            @tanakian afaik they do. Transnistria is still a territory internationally recognized as part of Moldova so elections were held there as well. What was curious is that Maia Sandu and the pro-EU camp got more votes than Găgăuzia, which is just an autonomous territory.

            @tardigrada

            • tanakian@lemmy.sdf.org
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              21 days ago

              well i am not aware about the details of transnistria status, but i know that abkhazia and south ossetia are at first glance in the same situation: despite being internationally recognized parts of georgia, georgian law, law enforcement, military has no control there whatsoever, there is russian military, and both self proclaimed republics are getting money from russian government.

              i can guess (but it’s interesting to clarify) that situation in transnistria should be similar: that’s a break away region with russian military presence, and it seems unlikely that moldovan law would have any even negligable influence on the region.

              but maybe i am mistaken.

              • petrescatraian@libranet.deOP
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                20 days ago

                @tanakian both Moldova and Transnistria hold parts of their territory on each other’s side of the Dniester river. I think that’s where the elections were held by Moldova. Otherwise, I don’t know.