Roemeense premier: dertigduizend Moldaviërs krijgen staatsburgerschap in 2009

Met dank overgenomen van EUobserver (EUOBSERVER) i, gepubliceerd op donderdag 30 april 2009, 10:04.

EUOBSERVER/WARSAW – Some 30,000 Moldovans could get Romanian citizenship this year, Romanian Prime Minister Emil Boc i told EUobserver on Wednesday, downplaying the effects of the fast-track citizenship scheme adopted by his government after brutal measures taken by the authorities in Chisinau following violent post-election demonstrations.

The measure had created a stir in Brussels and some European capitals, worried about the prospect of one million Moldovans – a fourth of the population of what is Europe's poorest country – to be able to travel visa-free within the EU.

However, Mr Boc estimated that the actual number of people receiving the Romanian citizenship in 2009 would be much smaller.

"We are not talking about such large numbers. Last year, for instance, there were around 10,000 people who got citizenship. Maybe now it will be double or triple, but no way are there going to be millions," he said.

Mr Boc rejected the idea that facilitating the acquiring of Romanian citizenship for Moldovan citizens was a foreign policy of his country: "It's an individual policy to give Romanian citizenship, but not to everyone. Eligible are just the people who had Romanian citizenship in the past and lost it for reasons they are not guilty of," he said.

He was referring to citizens who used to be Romanians before 1940, when Moldova was annexed by the Soviet Union. The right to Romanian citizenship now also extends to their great-grandchildren.

"It is not a collective right, it's an individual right and applies only to those people who held citizenship in the past or their grandchildren – up to the third generation," Mr Boc explained.

Concerns were also raised at Romania's intentions, after Moldovan Communist President Vladimir Voronin accused Bucharest of staging the demonstrations and of interfering in his country's internal affairs.

"We respect all the borders of every country. We don't talk of any changes or interference with the internal politics of Moldova. The future of Moldova is inside the European Union and we give all our support for this," Mr Boc stressed, adding that Romania was supporting the Eastern Partnership, the EU's newest policy towards its eastern neighbours, including Moldova.

Announced by the country's president, Traian Basescu, who is expected to stand for re-election later this autumn, the citizenship scheme was adopted by the government in an emergency ordinance on 15 April.

The parliament can still modify some amendments to the bill by 15 May when it will enter into force.

Social Democrat leader Mircea Geoana, himself a candidate in the upcoming presidential elections, has called for speedy debates and amendments on the new law, although his party holds half of the ministries within Mr Boc's government. He said the law should have the most "acceptable form from an internal and European point of view," citing concerns in Brussels over implications of the move.

"It's going to be debated, but I don't think there will be major changes to the bill in the parliament," the Romanian premier said, noting that the Social Democrats are members of the government as well. "The government has a common position and the ordinance will be approved by the parliament," he said.

On the diplomatic row between Chisinau and Bucharest, Mr Boc said that after expelling the Romanian ambassador, the Moldovan authorities also rebuked the new Romanian ambassador's proposal. "We will not respond in the same way and will support Moldova in its policy towards the European Union. I think that's the future," he said.

After the post-election demonstrations, Chisinau has imposed visas for Romanian citizens traveling to Moldova, requesting an official invitation approved by the Moldovan Ministry of the Interior, and Romania is now the only EU country whose citizens need a visa for Moldova. At the same time, Moldovan citizens, who before Romania's EU accession were traveling visa-free to the neighbouring country, have needed a visa since 2007.

Polish foreign minister Radek Sikorski said on Wednesday that his country went through the same experience with Belarus and Ukraine upon accession to the EU, when Warsaw had to impose visa requirements on these countries. Speaking at the European People's Party 'study days' ahead of the political congress in Warsaw, Mr Sikorski criticised the EU policy of "erecting a visa wall at our eastern border."

"People are frustrated that it's so hard to get into Europe now. The more flexible our visa policy, the less there will be the need for these kinds of measures [such as the citizenship scheme]. Poland was moved 300 kilometers to the west after World War II, so these are familiar problems," Mr Sikorski told EUobserver about the Romanian citizenship plan, adding that the issue was discussed at the EU foreign ministers meeting on Monday.

According to diplomatic sources, some European colleagues urged Romanian foreign minister Cristian Diaconescu to scrap the scheme, but he stood firm in its defending.

Voronin accuses EU of building new 'iron curtain'

President Vladimir Voronin on Thursday said the European Union was raising an "iron curtain" against his citizens by allowing them to freely travel in Europe only with Romanian passports.

"What the European Union is doing to Moldova is not good. To open Europe only for those Moldovan citizens who hold Romanian passports is humiliating for the Moldovan people. They should not insult us and make us travel to Europe via Romania," he told national television.

Meanwhile, a European Parliament delegation that visited Moldova from 27-29 April harshly criticised Moldovan authorities for the violence and human rights abuses against civilians and said that Europe was not as "naive" as Chisinau thought.

Russia, however, which so far has consistently backed Mr Voronin and given credit to the allegations that Romania was behind the protests on Wednesday said that the EU was not 'objective' enough, as it was led by 'solidarity' with its new member.

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