Al Jazeera News :
Moldova heads to the polls on Sunday for the second round of a tightly contested presidential election pitting a pro-European challenger against the country’s Moscow-backed incumbent.
The tiny ex-Soviet nation votes under the watchful eye of Russia, which wants polarised Moldova to remain in its sphere of influence as several Kremlin-aligned governments are rocked by political unrest.
In the first-round vote earlier this month, pro-European Maia Sandu – a 48-year-old centre-right politician – won a surprise victory.
Sandu, who worked for the World Bank and briefly served as prime minister, won more than 36 percent of the vote against pro-Russian incumbent Igor Dodon’s 33 percent.
Caught off guard by the electoral setback, Dodon urged his supporters at a rally on Friday to turn out for the vote and take to the streets after Sunday’s ballot to “protect our victory”.
The Kremlin-backed candidate, reportedly aided by Russian advisers, has stepped up rhetoric against Sandu saying his opponents have crossed red lines.
“If we show weakness, we will lose our country,” Dodon said at Friday’s rally. Sandu, who heads the Party of Action and Solidarity has promised to wage a fight against endemic corruption in the country of some 3.5 million wedged between Ukraine and EU member Romania.
Moldova has been rocked by multiple political crises and a $1bn bank fraud scheme equivalent to nearly 15 percent of the country’s annual output.
“Moldova can be a good country, a state without corruption. A state where thieves are punished. And decent people have good jobs, wages and pensions. A country where children grow up with their parents,” Sandu said in a recent post on Instagram.
The appeal has resonance in one of Europe’s poorest countries where as many as 40 percent of Moldova’s citizens are estimated to have travelled abroad to work.
Moldova heads to the polls on Sunday for the second round of a tightly contested presidential election pitting a pro-European challenger against the country’s Moscow-backed incumbent.
The tiny ex-Soviet nation votes under the watchful eye of Russia, which wants polarised Moldova to remain in its sphere of influence as several Kremlin-aligned governments are rocked by political unrest.
In the first-round vote earlier this month, pro-European Maia Sandu – a 48-year-old centre-right politician – won a surprise victory.
Sandu, who worked for the World Bank and briefly served as prime minister, won more than 36 percent of the vote against pro-Russian incumbent Igor Dodon’s 33 percent.
Caught off guard by the electoral setback, Dodon urged his supporters at a rally on Friday to turn out for the vote and take to the streets after Sunday’s ballot to “protect our victory”.
The Kremlin-backed candidate, reportedly aided by Russian advisers, has stepped up rhetoric against Sandu saying his opponents have crossed red lines.
“If we show weakness, we will lose our country,” Dodon said at Friday’s rally. Sandu, who heads the Party of Action and Solidarity has promised to wage a fight against endemic corruption in the country of some 3.5 million wedged between Ukraine and EU member Romania.
Moldova has been rocked by multiple political crises and a $1bn bank fraud scheme equivalent to nearly 15 percent of the country’s annual output.
“Moldova can be a good country, a state without corruption. A state where thieves are punished. And decent people have good jobs, wages and pensions. A country where children grow up with their parents,” Sandu said in a recent post on Instagram.
The appeal has resonance in one of Europe’s poorest countries where as many as 40 percent of Moldova’s citizens are estimated to have travelled abroad to work.