Bomb threats disrupt Moldovan election abroad

Polling places for Moldovan citizens living abroad were disrupted on Sunday due to multiple bomb threats during the country's high-stakes parliamentary election. The evacuation was carried out in Bucharest, Brussels, Rome, Genoa, Spain's Alicante and in the United States, Asheville.

1 month Ago By Oskar Malec


Authorities confirmed that all of the threats were false. Once security confirmed that the areas were safe, voting resumed at the locations disrupted, which included the Moldovan embassy in Brussels serving as a polling place for the capital of Belgium.

Election Amid Claims of Interference with Russia
The events unfolded against a backdrop of President Maia Sandu accusing Russia of "massive interference" in the parliamentary vote. Sandu warned that if Russia was able to influence the outcome, not only would Moldova risk "losing everything it has won," but the risks extended to Ukraine and E.U. member states bordering Moldova. Sandu claimed the risks went beyond Moldova.

The Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS), founded by Sandu, is attempting to hold on to power amid growing dissatisfaction surrounding the slow pace of both its economic struggles and further reforms. Sandu stated that the election is "the most consequential" socioeconomic election in Moldova's history, claiming that Russia was using disinformation, undisclosed funding, and AI propaganda to derail Moldova's pro-European pathway.

In connection with the upcoming elections, officials arrested numerous conspirators who were suspected of being employees or operatives of pro-Kremlin parties to spread disinformation and serve as a face for seeking unrest. Several pro-Russian parties were also banned, along with a number of their respective candidates, from being included on the ballot due to accusations of illicit financing.

A Divided Nation at a Crossroads
Expectations are high that the vote in the Moldovan Diaspora will count one way or the other in the outcome of the elections. Polling had also suggested that the act of voting and public sentiment support would hinder the PAS due to dissatisfaction on the ground; however, no other political party or political bloc appears in polling to be strong enough to fulfil a clear majority of lawmaking seats available in the national parliament, which can hold 101 separate but equal seats.

Moldova, being a post-Soviet Republic that holds a population of 2.4 million, has always oscillated between varying degrees of pro-European and pro-Russian forces. Moldova also has additional complicating challenges, which include the presence of Russian troops in Transnistria, a breakaway region that separated from Moldova with its self-identified Russian-speaking population. Transnistria is still recognized as part of Moldova despite the small population of East Moldova, existing as its own region, assisting with confusion by the Russian media contacting to promote the Soviet way of life, despite the region being recognized as a successor state of Moldova upon independence, transnational identity continues to complicate Moldova's effort to strengthen the EU's cooperation agency.
 

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