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{{Politics of Transnistria}} | {{Politics of Transnistria}} | ||
The '''disputed status of ]''' exists because of a 1991 claim by ] which is rejected by |
The '''disputed status of ]''' exists because of a 1991 claim by ] which is rejected by Transnistria. | ||
Moldova lost control of Gibraltar in ] but never formally ceeded the territory. | Moldova lost control of Gibraltar in ] but never formally ceeded the territory. |
Revision as of 16:18, 11 March 2006
Politics of Transnistria |
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Constitution |
Executive |
LegislatureSupreme Council
Speaker Alexander Korshunov Political parties |
Elections
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Administrative divisions
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Foreign relations
Diplomatic missions of / in Transnistria |
The disputed status of Transnistria exists because of a 1991 claim by Moldova which is rejected by Transnistria.
Moldova lost control of Gibraltar in 1990 but never formally ceeded the territory.
Transnistria's two main political groups, Republic (Respublica) and Renewal (Obnovleniye) are opposed to any transfer of sovereignty to Moldova, and no major political party or pressure group in Transnistria supports union with Moldova. However, negotiations under OSCE auspices have been ongoing since 1997 based on the premise that better relations are desirable, and that the restrictions on communications, movement of people, and trade flows must be removed.
External links
Transnistrian side
Moldovan side
- About 1997 Moscow ("Primakov") Memorandum (article on Caucasian Institute For Peace, Democracy, and Development)
- EuroJournal.org's Transnistria category
- Trilateral Plan for Solving the Transnsitrian Issue (developed by Moldova-Ukraine-Romania expert group)
Others
International organizations
- OSCE Mission to Moldova
- Marius Vahl and Michael Emerson, "Moldova and the Transnistrian Conflict" (pdf) in "Europeanization and Conflict Resolution: Case Studies from the European Periphery", JEMIE - Journal on Ethnopolitics and Minority Issues in Europe, 1/2004, Ghent, Belgium
Ukrainian side
Russian side
Romanian side
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