School Row Ignites Moldova Tensions

Published: 5 September 2004 y., Sunday
The dispute between Moldova and its breakaway Transdniester region appears to be entering a new, more critical, phase. As the boat chugs up the Dniester River, water birds dabble in the current. The powerful river cuts between rolling green hills and towering trees, which shelter this picturesque but remote landscape. The riverbank villages of Molovata, in the separatist enclave of Transdniester, a mainly Russian-speaking region in the east of Moldova, appear as isolated from modern urban civilisation as they must have been a century ago. For all its beauty, the land here yields little food. There is just enough to keep the local peasant farmers in their tiny cottages from the door of starvation. Most people in Transdniester - as in Moldova proper - share a similar fate. Average monthly incomes in this, Europe’s poorest state Transdniester, are worth less than 30 US dollars and new jobs are few. Early this month, the pro-Russian authorities in Transdniester cut supplies of electricity and water to Moldovan towns and villages on the left bank of the Dniester. The Molovata recreation camp, though it lies inside Transdniester, lost its power through the same action. The incident followed an earlier decision of the authorities in Tiraspol, capital of the breakaway republic, to close six schools that were teaching in Moldovan, saying they had not registered with the Transdniester education ministry. Moldovan is almost identical to Romanian. The only historic difference was that during several decades of Soviet rule in Moldova, people were forced to use the Russian Cyrillic alphabet, as opposed to the Latin script. Now, Moldova has restored Latin letters, but Cyrillic remains in use as the official script for Moldovan in the largely Russian-speaking Transdniester region, except in a few rebel schools, mainly sited in ethnic Moldovan areas, where parents expect their children to go on to study in Moldova, or Romania. The attacks on the schools sparked outrage in Moldova, infuriating even the communist-led government, which is usually careful not to upset Moscow.
Šaltinis: moldovapost.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Lithuania's new Honorary Consul in Los Angeles starts her duties

On 9 August, Daiva Valerija Čekanauskas-Navarrette started her duties as the new Lithuania’s Honorary Consul in the United States. more »

Lithuania's Ambassador presented his credentials to the President of the U.S.A.

On 10 August in Washington, Lithuania’s Ambassador Žygimantas Pavilionis presented his credentials to President of the United States of America Barack Obama. more »

Lithuania's Foreign Minister expressed his condolences regarding the victims of forest fires in Russia

Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs sent letters of condolences to his Russian counterpart S. Lavrov and Minister of Transport, co-chairman of the Intergovernmental Lithuanian-Russian Commission for Trade, Economic, Scientific, Technical, Humanitarian and Cultural Cooperation I. Levitin, expressing his condolences regarding the victims of violent forest fires in Russia. more »

The President congratulated Macedonia’s President on the national holiday

President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė sent congratulations on behalf of herself and the people of Lithuania to the President of Macedonia, Gjorge Ivanov, on Macedonia's national holiday, the Day of the Republic. more »

The President congratulated Swiss President on the national holiday

President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė sent congratulations on behalf of herself and the people of Lithuania to the President of the Swiss Confederation, Doris Leuthard, on the Swiss National Day. more »

Lithuania's Foreign Minister invites world Lithuanians to engage in the creation of “Global Lithuania”

On 29 July in Vilnius, at a convention of country chairmen of the Lithuanian World Community and the Lithuanian Youth Union, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Audronius Ažubalis invited world Lithuanians to engage actively in the discussion on the strategy of “Global Lithuania”. more »

Lithuania's Foreign Minister congratulated Iceland on the start of EU membership negotiations

On 27 July, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Audronius Ažubalis sent a letter to Iceland’s Minister for Foreign Affairs and External Trade Össur Skarphéðinsson congratulating Iceland on the start of EU membership negotiations. more »

Lithuania's Foreign Minister sends condolences to families of the victims, who died at a music festival

On 26 July, Lithuania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Audronius Ažubalis sent a letter to Germany’s Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle expressing his condolences to the families and relatives of the victims , who died during a techno music festival in Duisburg. more »

The President received letters of credence from ambassadors of Vietnam and India

President of the Republic of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaitė received letters of credence from Mr. Nguyen Hoang as the Ambassador of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and Mr. Deepak Vohra as the Ambassador of the Republic of India. more »

The President: The role of women leaders is important for democratic development

President Dalia Grybauskaitė received Eastern European political business and public women leaders. more »