CATAN AND OTHERS v. MOLDOVA AND RUSSIA JUDGMENT
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Despite an understanding that Russia should not be antagonised, the gravitational
pull of European integration is strong in Moldova. Recently, even its communist
leadership has stressed the need to do more to achieve that goal. The country has
rarely been on Western radar screens during the last decade, however, and it will need
more demonstrable EU and U.S. backing if it is to resist Russian political and material
support for the DMR and Transdniestrian obstruction of the negotiation process.
International actors must also help Moldova to secure its own borders against the
illicit economic activities which keep Transdniestria afloat and affect its European
neighbours as well.
The conflict can only be resolved if the international community uses its influence
on Russia bilaterally and within the OSCE. Only then, and with a substantially more
determined commitment to political, economic and administrative reform on its own
part, will Moldova be able to realise its European aspirations. A comprehensive
strategy towards Moldova, Ukraine and Russia within the EU’s Wider Europe Policy
would be a critical first step.”
72. In its report of 17 August 2006, “Moldova’s Uncertain Future”
(Europe Report no. 175), the ICG observed (extract from the Executive
Summary):
“With Romania’s expected entry into the European Union in 2007, the EU will
share a border with Moldova, a weak state divided by conflict and plagued by
corruption and organised crime. Moldova’s leadership has declared its desire to join
the EU, but its commitment to European values is suspect, and efforts to resolve its
dispute with the breakaway region of Transdniestria have failed to end a damaging
stalemate that has persisted for fifteen years. Young people have little confidence in
the country’s future and are leaving at an alarming rate. If Moldova is to become a
stable part of the EU’s neighbourhood, there will need to be much greater
international engagement, not only in conflict resolution but in spurring domestic
reforms to help make the country more attractive to its citizens.
Two recent initiatives by the EU and Ukraine gave rise to hopes that the balance of
forces in the separatist dispute had changed significantly. An EU Border Assistance
Mission (EUBAM) launched in late 2005 has helped curb smuggling along the
Transdniestrian segment of the Moldova-Ukraine frontier, a key source of revenue for
the authorities in Tiraspol, the Transdniestrian capital. At the same time, Kiev’s
implementation of a landmark customs regime to assist Moldova in regulating
Transdniestrian exports has reduced the ability of businesses in the breakaway region
to operate without Moldovan oversight, striking a major psychological blow.
But optimism that these measures would ultimately force Transdniestria to make
diplomatic concessions appears to have been false. Although EUBAM has had
significant success, particularly given its small size and budget, widespread smuggling
continues. Nor has the Ukrainian customs regime had a decisive effect on
Transdniestrian businesses, which remain capable of profitable legal trade as they
were in the past. Moreover, domestic political uncertainty has raised questions about
whether Kiev will continue to enforce the new regulations.
Russia has increased its support for Transdniestria, sending economic aid and taking
punitive measures against Moldova, including a crippling ban on wine exports, one of
its main revenue sources. Moscow refuses to withdraw troops based in Transdniestria
since Soviet times whose presence serves to preserve the status quo. With Russian