http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2008/02/705bbd63-06b0-4333-b34f-79c0e7b
2d056.html
 
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Romania/Moldova: Bucharest Has 'Moral Duty' To Help Moldova's EU Ties
 
Seeking to counter accusations that its policies are aimed at undermining
Moldovan statehood, Foreign Minister Adrian Cioroianu says Bucharest is
fostering ties between its poorer neighbor and Brussels and has made
Moldova's accession to the European Union a foreign-policy priority.
 
Cioroianu tells RFE/RL's Romania-Moldova Service in an exclusive interview
that his country considers it a "moral duty" to encourage those relations. 

Relations between EU member Romania and Moldova, consistently rated Europe's
poorest country, have grown strained in recent years as their countries
continued down markedly different paths. 

Officials have sparred repeatedly in past months over issues ranging from
visa regulations to the name of a national language. 

Cioroianu, 41, says the difficulties are due to both the countries' close
cultural ties as well as their divergent personal histories. 

While Romania is one of the most recent additions to the European Union, the
ex-Soviet republic of Moldova has languished between East and West. 

Cioroianu says Bucharest hopes to help Moldova escape the doldrums by
fostering closer ties with the European Union. 

"As a neighbor -- as a friendly state that knows what it means to overcome
the difficulties of transition but also knows the advantages of a tighter
relationship with the EU -- Romania considers it its moral duty to maintain
at the top of its agenda this problem of the Republic of Moldova as
expressed by its citizens," Cioroianu says. "We hope to see the wish of
closer relations between Chisinau and Brussels expressed more distinctly at
the level of Moldovan central authorities." 

Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin has expressed his desire to see his
country pursue a course of Western integration, but has expressed reluctance
to use ties with Romania as the stepping stone. 

Chisinau last year accused Bucharest of undermining Moldova's statehood by
offering Romanian passports to Moldovan citizens eager to seek better
economic opportunities. 

The rhetoric grew increasingly harsh, with Voronin -- angered over reports
that more than half a million Moldovans had applied for Romanian citizenship
-- threatening to bring the issue before European officials. 

But Cioroianu, who has served as foreign minister since April, says Brussels
has had no complaints about Bucharest's stance on Chisinau. 

"From Brussels' point of view, Romania's policy toward Moldova has been
correct," he says. "Of course, we've been asked about the number of cases of
restored Romanian citizenship approved for Moldovans, or about the pace of
issuing travel visas to Moldovans, because there had been some messages from
Chisinau that unfortunately presented the situation in a highly exaggerated
way." 

Cioroianu notes that "for the last 17 years, Romania has issued only 100,000
passports for Moldovans who had been Romanian citizens before World War II
or for their descendents." 

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates that a quarter of Moldova's
economically active population already works outside the country. And for
many Moldovans, a Romanian passport is a logical method for legally gaining
access to Western labor markets. 

Many in Moldova, however, have complained of long lines and corruption in
Romania's visa system. 

Cioroianu defends the procedure but acknowledges that Bucharest is seeking
to work out the kinks in the system. 

"Obviously, the interest for visas is great. We have managed to acquire a
new consular office in Chisinau and we are able now to issue 1,000 visas per
day," he says. "The long queues have disappeared; there are no longer
[corrupt] 'interventions' for visas." 

But he emphasizes that those reforms are a result of internal deliberations.
"I want to be very clear: Romania has not been reprimanded for this
situation," Cioroianu says. "It's true we have been asked sometimes if some
signals sent from Chisinau were real or not and more often than not they
were exaggerated, but I do not want to comment on this anymore." 

Cioroianu notes that the European Parliament has already taken steps on
Chisinau's behalf, and will soon allow Moldovans holding Schengen visas to
transit Romania visa-free, despite Romania currently falling outside the
Schengen zone. 

Romania, Bulgaria, and Cyprus are the only new EU members that are not yet
signatories to the Schengen agreements. Bucharest and Sofia have announced
that they intend to accede to the Schengen agreements in 2011. 

(Interview conducted by RFE/RL Romania-Moldova Service's Chisinau bureau
chief Vasile Botnaru)
 
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty C 2008 RFE/RL, Inc.
 
----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness." (Carlo Goldoni)
"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace." (Jimi Hendrix)
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