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Human rights groups say Moldova massacred innocent villagers

In 1992, Pridnestrovie — just 10% the size of Moldova — was invaded by its much larger neighbor. Before the attackers were driven back, nearly a thousand Pridnestrovians lost their lives. According to eye-witnesses and a human rights organization working with the Soros Foundation, mass violence and massacres of civilians were among the tactics used by Moldova.
Red is our color
Flower on a memorial to the fallen. Red symbolizes the blood lost in defending Pridnestrovie.
Gyska is a village near Bender, its population being mostly Russians and Ukrainians. It is a fairly typical example of how Moldovan forces used mass violence to terrorize civilian villagers and "set an example" during its 1992 invasion of Pridnestrovie. The government-sanctioned terrors followed a period of deliberately using ethnic hatred for policy purposes. Moldova's governing party, the Popular Front, used "Suitcase - Trainstation - Russia" as its slogan. And visitors to Moldova at the time remember the popular jingle on the radio which encouraged people to "wash the streets of Chisinau with Russian blood"

Eye-witnesses interviewed by the NGO "Memorial" recounts the bloody terror of the Moldovan ethnic genocide units:

    " On July 22, 1992, Moldovan police and volunteers, supported by armored vehicles and artillery fire, kicked the self-defence unit out of the village. Media in Bender carried reports on massacre of prisoners-of-war and acts of mass violence against villagers, destruction of houses and slaughter of live-stock.

Other human rights groups, covering events in Dubossary, also testity to Moldova's policy of indiscriminate slaughter of the residents. Many victims were women. In Bender, the Moldovan government used its airforce to bomb civilian neighborhoods. The Memorial observers established the following:

    " Eye-witnesses testified that fighters from the Gyska self-defence unit had been cruelly murdered. In particular the Moldovans were said to have been finishing off the wounded. During the combat a dairy-farm and the school were destroyed by artillery fire. The building adjoining the local clinic took severe damage. At least three villagers were killed by stray bullets and fragments of shells. Two more villagers were beaten by volunteers, mopping up the village. On several occasions unprovoked fire was opened at the houses of villagers."

In all, nearly one thousand Pridnestrovians lost their lives in Moldova's failed invasion of the country. During the war, human rights groups such as Memorial sent observers in order to mediate between the parts and to establish responsibility for the killings. Memorial, www.memo.ru, is a Western-oriented civil rights group active in Ukraine, Belarus, Russia, Georgia, Latvia and Kazahstan. The organization made a name by being in constant opposition to the governments of these states and for advocating openly liberal views. It's an NGO which sponsored by various Western funds, the George Soros Foundation among them.

International Tribunal faults Moldova for 1992 massacres
Moldova's 1992 invasion of Pridnestrovie was not a war: Only one side attacked, and the other merely defended itself. The question is simple: Who invaded who? It is also easy to answer: Pridnestrovie never made any incursions on Moldova's territory; never slaughtering civilian villagers indiscriminately in the countryside as a policy of state-sponsored terror.

In the aftermath of the invasion, the findings of the 1993 International Tribunal clearly put the blame at Moldova. The country was found to have committed serious violations of the Geneva Conventions relating to Victims of War, such as rape and torture of civilians and intentional killings of civilians, including women and children.

The same concerns were voiced in a 2004 ruling by the European Court of Human Rights. In testimony to the court, one of the witnesses - Vasiliy Timoshenko - provided evidence of several human rights atrocities, including a case where an ambulance was being shot at by the Moldovan armed forces. In this attack, a pregnant woman and her unborn child died, along with a nurse travelling with them in the same ambulance. The witness also testified about an aerial attack a month later when the Moldovan forces indisciminately bombed civilian towns and villages, including the town of Parcani, inside Pridnestrovie's territory.

Even though the invasion failed and Pridnestrovie was able to defend its freedom, to this day Moldova still continues to hold an expansionist claim against Pridnestrovian territory. But Pridnestrovie, on the other hand, has no such claim against Moldova and respects the territorial integrity of Moldova's traditional borders. [more]

WHAT'S RELATED:
Dates and facts: History of Pridnestrovie
Mistreatment of ethnic minorities in Moldova, 1988-1992
Pridnestrovie: Founded on minority rights
Tolerance: Multiethnic republic
more...

<h1>Human rights groups say Moldova massacred innocent villagers | Pridnestrovie.net Transnistria Transdniester, PMR Pridnestrovia</h1> Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic, is the official name for the left bank of the Dniester River / Dniestr River, or Dnestr (Nistru). <a href="http://www.visitpmr.com/">Human rights groups say Moldova massacred innocent villagers | Pridnestrovie.net</a> Pridnestrovie or Pridnestrovye is sometimes referred to as Transnistria or Transdnistria, TMR, DMR, Dniester Moldovan Republic also Transdniester, Transdniestr Trans-Dniestria. <p> The breakaway regime in separatist Transnistria became independent from Moldova in 1990 and is today separate de facto state. Large cities and towns include Tiraspol Dubossary Rybnitsa Bender or Bendery as well as Grigoriopol, Kamenka and Slobozya. It is a democratic country with an elected president, Igor Smirnov. <p> <a href="http://pridnestrovie.net/">Pridnestrovie Transnistria</a> <a href="http://www.pridnestrovie.net/index.html">Transdnistria between Moldova (Moldovan Republic) and Ukraine</a> <a href="http://www.Pridnestrovie.net/index.php">Tiraspol Transdniestr (or Trans-Dnistria)</a> <a href="http://www.pridnestrovie.net/aboutus.html">About Pridnestrovie breakaway republic</a> <a href="links.html">Links to Transnistria's government</a> <a href="http://www.pridnestrovie.net/image">Photos and images from Transdniestria</a>