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EU plans special envoy to help end Moldova strife

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  • EU plans special envoy to help end Moldova strife

    EU plans special envoy to help end Moldova strife
    By Sebastian Alison

    BRUSSELS, Feb 8 (Reuters) - The European Union plans to appoint a
    special envoy to Moldova to help end a frozen conflict in the breakaway
    Dnestr region as EU interest in the tiny ex-Soviet state picks up,
    diplomats said on Tuesday.

    The move signals Brussels' desire to bring about an end to the disputed
    Russian military presence in Europe's poorest country before Moldova's
    neighbour Romania joins the EU in 2007.

    "There is no doubt that there is an increase in interest and attention
    in Moldova," Cristina Gallach, spokeswoman for EU foreign policy
    chief Javier Solana, told Reuters. "The role of the European Union
    can only be useful."

    The Dnestr region -- a mainly Russian-speaking sliver of land between
    the Dnestr river and Ukraine which calls itself the "Pridnestrovian
    Moldavian Republic" -- broke away from Moldova, which has a
    Romanian-speaking majority, in 1990 as the Soviet Union was collapsing.

    The two sides fought a war in 1992. Russian troops intervened to help
    end the fighting and have remained there since to uphold the truce,
    despite a pledge to withdraw them.

    EU diplomats say political agreement has been reached to appoint an EU
    Special Representative and a formal announcement is expected within
    a few days. The envoy could take up the post soon after Moldovan
    parliamentary elections on March 6.

    The EU has no formal role so far in the Dnestr conflict, which is
    under mediation by Russia, Ukraine, the Organisation for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe, the Moldovan government and the Dnestr
    leadership.

    The naming of an envoy comes as Moldova prepares to open a separate
    mission to the EU for the first time. The EU's executive Commission
    will also open a permanent mission in the Moldovan capital, Chisinau,
    later this year.

    INCREASED EU DIPLOMACY

    Following the bloc's eastward expansion last May, when 10 mainly
    ex-communist countries in central and eastern Europe joined, the EU
    has stepped up diplomatic activities in several former Soviet states
    which are now neighbours.

    Moscow views the policy with suspicion, seeing the region -- Ukraine,
    Belarus, Moldova and the Caucasus republics of Armenia, Azerbaijan
    and Georgia -- as its "near abroad." The EU says they are the "common
    neighbourhood" of Brussels and Moscow.

    Diplomatic tensions came to the fore last year when the EU mediated
    in a dispute over the Ukrainian presidential election which led the
    Supreme Court to overturn the victory of the Moscow-backed candidate,
    Viktor Yanukovich, for vote-rigging.

    Western-leaning Viktor Yushchenko won a re-run in December after
    lengthy mediation by Solana and the presidents of EU states Poland
    and Lithuania. Yushchenko has already said he intends to move Kiev
    towards EU membership.

    Diplomats said Yushchenko could be willing to close Ukraine's border
    with the breakaway Dnestr region to put pressure on the Russians to
    reach a settlement.

    An EU diplomat said closer ties with Chisinau were a priority because
    Moldova would have an EU frontier from 2007. By one estimate, 600,000
    Moldovans hold Romanian passports, which will give them EU citizenship
    when Bucharest joins, he said.

    Moldova's communist President Vladimir Voronin was elected in 2001
    vowing to take Chisinau closer to Russia. But he changed direction
    and is steering the country ever closer to the EU.

    02/08/05 10:48 ET
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