CHISINAU, Moldova – Moldovan leaders have denounced as a threat Russian President Vladimir ⁠Putin’s offer of simplified Russian citizenship for the country’s pro-Russian Transnistria separatist enclave and contemplated measures to counteract it.

    Transnistria broke from Moldova in 1990 when it was still a Soviet republic and, despite a brief conflict two years later, has ​since existed largely in peace alongside the country. A Russian military ‌contingent ‌of some 1,500 troops, which Russia sometimes describes as ​peacekeepers, separates the two sides and the enclave receives substantial Russian assistance.

    Moldova’s government, which seeks to join the European Union by 2030, sees the ⁠enclave and the military presence as a means of Moscow exerting influence over its ⁠affairs. Last month, the contingent’s commanders were barred from entering Moldova.

    Share.

    Comments are closed.