Wednesday, July 14, 2010

 
<http://www.romanianewswatch.com/2010/07/entering-eu-through-back-door.html>
Entering the EU Through the Back Door


Romanian Passports For Moldovans
Entering the EU Through the Back Door

By  <mailto:[email protected]> Benjamin Bidder in Chisinau, Moldova

Romania's president wants to increase his country's population and is using
an odd means to do so. The country is generously bestowing hundreds of
thousands of Romanian passports on impoverished Moldovans. They are
gratefully accepting the offer from the EU member state and are streaming
into Western Europe to work as cheap laborers.

The latest would-be European Union citizens get up early in the morning.
Before dawn hundreds of Moldovans, most of them young, are gathered in front
of the Romanian consulate in Chisinau, capital of the Republic of Moldova,
which is often labeled the "poorest country in Europe."It is love that has
brought Denis Rotari, a trained tiler in a light blue T-shirt, with a dragon
tattoo on his elbow, here. "I need money for the wedding," the 21-year-old
explains. Like everyone else in this queue, he is applying for a Romanian
passport. The
<http://www.blogger.com/international/world/0,1518,619542,00.html> passport
means potential employment as a day laborer somewhere between Rome and
Lisbon.

Almost 1 million Moldovans have already turned their backs on their
homeland, where the per capita economic output has only just matched that of
Sudan's. They hire themselves out as immigrant labor, mostly illegally.
Around 120,000 of the 3.6 million inhabitants have passports that originate
from the neighboring nation, and the Romanian government says that another
800,000 are waiting to have their applications for passports granted. In
order to cope with the rush, Romania's foreign minister opened two new
consulates in the provincial cities of Balti in the north and Cahul in the
south on Friday -- at the EU's expense.

Creeping Expansion from the East

The calculation behind the move: Romania's patriotically minded President
Traian Basescu wants to increase the number of his subjects and agreed to
increase the number of naturalizations that take place each month to 10,000
this year.

In this manner, the EU, which is already suffering from
<http://www.blogger.com/international/europe/0,1518,676784,00.html>
enlargement fatigue, is stealthily being expanded from the east -- without a
referendum or any agreements from Brussels, Berlin or Paris. The Moldovans
are voting with their feet and marching into the EU's economic paradise --
through the back door.

Since the Alliance for European Integration -- a coalition formed by four
political parties -- pushed the pro-Russian Communist Party
<http://www.blogger.com/international/world/0,1518,619113,00.html> out of
power in Chisinau in 2009, Romania has accelerated its naturalization
offensive in its small neighboring country. Bucharest has sponsored
officials from Moldova's Foreign Ministry on courses on Euro-Atlantic
integration and it pays for the translations of EU laws. Even though Romania
itself has been hard hit by the financial crisis, the nation has granted
generous loans to its neighbor in the past year. The barbed wire along the
border has been taken down and, since autumn, Moldovans living within a
30-kilometer radius of the border have been able to visit Romania without a
visa.

'A Future Together'

Romanians and Moldovans may live in two separate countries but, as Basescu
says, "We are one people and this people has a right to unity and a future
together." He dreams of "Romania Mare" -- which, translated into English,
means the ressurection of "Greater Romania" with the borderes that existed
in 1940, which also included Moldova. At the time, the smaller country,
formerly known as Bessarabia, was ceded to the Soviet Union as part of a
German-Russian Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. After the fall of the Soviet Union,
Romania became the first country to recognize Moldova's independence in 1991
-- even though Romania remains reluctant to accept "the border that Hitler
and Stalin drew" along the Prut River even today.

Moldova's new government is not averse to these Romanian advances, either.
Of the 53 members of the governing coalition, nine have a second passport
that is Romanian and 11 others have applied for one. And with Mihai Ghimpu
as acting president of Moldova presently, there is a "Unionist" -- as the
advocates of reuniting Romania and Moldova are known -- as head of state.

Chisinau Mayor Dorin Chirtoaca, who is also Ghimpu's nephew, has also stated
that, "Romania and Moldova are closely linked, like Germany and Bavaria." He
says the idea that the two states were independent of each other was "an
illusion of the Soviet powers."

Moldovans Want Europe, not Romania

However, the majority of Moldovans aren't attracted by the prospect of
reunification with Romania, which, after Bulgaria, is the second-poorest EU
member state. According to polls, two-thirds want to be part of the EU, but
only 2 percent self-identify as Romanian.As the tiler Denis Rotari, who is
waiting in front of the Romanian consulate, puts it: "I want to go further
West with this passport. I don't care about Romania." His cousin works in an
abattoir in Madrid. And when Romania joins the Schengen zone, an area
without border controls incorporating 25 European countries, in March 2011,
hundreds of thousands of Moldovans with Romanian passports will finally get
free entry to the EU.

In the meantime, Brussels has also become aware of the stream of Moldovan
migration. Right-wing populist politicians are exploiting the situation.
Andreas Mölzer, a member of the European Parliament from the right-wing
populist Austrian Freedom Party (FPÖ) has already asked the European
Commission, the EU's executive, to state what it could do to stop the
Romanian drive.

Politicians in Germany have also been considering the development. "Germany
has no cause for concern yet," explained Manfred Grund, a member of
parliament with Angela Merkel's conservative Christian Democratic Party and
also an authority on Moldova. "Most are moving to Italy and Spain."

(C) Romania News Watch

----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness."
"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace."
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