From the MT:
“Pull
Russian Troops Out of Moldova, New President Says”
Russia should
withdraw its peacekeeping force from the self-proclaimed Transnistria republic,
Moldova’s pro-European president-elect said Monday. Maia Sandu, who defeated
Moldova's pro-Russian incumbent earlier in November on a platform of balancing
the ex-Soviet country’s ties between Moscow and the West, said the Russian
troops should be replaced by civilian observers from Europe. Russia deploys
around 1,500 troops in Transnistria, which has not been recognized
internationally since its brief civil war following the Soviet Union's collapse
in the early 1990s. “Russia says that the Operational Group of Russian Forces
(OGRF) guards ammunition depots here, but there are no bilateral agreements on
the OGRF and on the weapons depots,” Sandu told Russia’s RBC news website. “These
weapons depots are a big problem for us. It’s dangerous,” she said in the
sit-down interview with RBC. “These weapons need to be removed and the OGRF
needs to be withdrawn.”
Around 1,000
Russian troops are guarding more than 20,000 metric tons of ammunition at a
decommissioned depot in Transnistria, RBC estimates. This is in addition to a
small contingent of around 400 Russian peacekeepers deployed in a demilitarized
zone as part of a Moldovan-Transnistrian-Russian monitoring commission. “There’s
a 1992 agreement on peacekeepers. We believe that there’s no threat of renewed
military operations on our territory,” Sandu, whose inauguration is expected on
Dec. 24, told RBC. “We believe that this mission should be transformed into an
OSCE civilian observer mission,” she added, referring to the Organization for
Security and Co-operation in Europe. The Kremlin warned later Monday that
“changes in the status quo” in Transnistria could ”seriously destabilize”
regional security. “We hope that all of
this will be discussed and there won’t be any sudden moves,” Kremlin spokesman
Dmitry Peskov told reporters, according to the state-run TASS news agency.
The United
Nations passed a Moldova-backed resolution in 2018 calling for an immediate and
complete withdrawal of Russian peacekeepers from Transnistria. Transnistria has
sought to join Russia after breaking away from Moldova in 1990. Around
one-third of the region's population of 500,000 is ethnically Russian and
another one-third is Moldovan.
^ Russia should
remove its troops from Transnistria and an international peacekeeping force
should come in instead. Of course Russia won’t do this because Putin is scared
to loose any ground anywhere, but that is what should be done to help
Transnistria and Moldova. ^
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