Published on Pridnestrovie.net (http://pridnestrovie.net)

Two separate and very different countries

Although Stalin forced Moldova and Pridnestrovie into a shot-gun marriage which lasted half a century, the two countries are as different as night and day: In culture, historical background, governance, languages, the two countries have almost nothing in common. A brief look at history makes it clear that to force them into a joint union again is a recipe for failure.
Dniester River still [0]
A river runs through it: The traditional border between Pridnestrovie and Moldova.
Although separated by just a river, the Dniester River that marks the border between Pridnestrovie and Moldova has also marked the fault line between two very different cultural traditions for more than one thousand years.

Historically separate, Pridnestrovie has almost nothing in common with Moldova on the other side of the river.

Ask even the ethnic Moldavians who live in Pridnestrovie if they would want to unite with Moldova and the answer, in nine cases out of ten, is not just "No" but "Hell No!"... In fact, for anyone to still propose a union of these two very different entities is to either be deliberately misleading (which is the case of Chisinau) or else completely unaware of the reality in Pridnestrovie (which is the case in some Western capitals). Anyone who knows how different Pridnestrovie is from Moldova, and who is aware of the historical record, will also immediately know that to force the two to merge is a dud. Only Stalin, with the support of Hitler through the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, was able to do it — and even so, only at gunpoint.

Pridnestrovie has proven its viability as a state
In 1990, in the fall of the Soviet Union, the population residing on the east bank of the Dniester river declared independence as the "Pridnestrovskaia Moldavskaia Respublica" or Pridnestrovie for short, also abbreviated PMR. The country incorrectly [0] became known in the West by the name Transnistria, an artificial geographic term created by Romanian fascists collaborating with the Nazi extermination of Jews in World War II.

Whereas Moldova, [0] today back under Communist rule, has been characterized by some as a "failed state", [0] the same can not be said of Pridnestrovie: Ever since independence in 1990, Pridnestrovie has been busy building a full and viable nation state [1] which today has a higher standard of living than its neighbor, Moldova.

Pridnestrovskaia Moldavskaia Respublica, to use its full title, has its own border controls, its own currency – the PMR ruble [1] – its own state languages, a president and a parliament, a judicial system, an army, a police force, a security service, a constitution [1], a coat of arms, a national flag [1] and a national anthem. Now in its 16th year of separate existence, the PMR has proven its viability as a state; both to its citizens and to the world at large.

It is a success story in contemporary nation-building. Even though "nation-building" is a tricky task — and fails almost everywhere else where foreigners try their hand it at — in Pridnestrovie, the locals have succeeded to a remarkably degree. Forget Bosnia, Afghanistan, Somalia. Come to Tiraspol, in Pridnestrovie, and see a stable, democratic multi-party system of government which for the past decade and a half have worked under adverse conditions but provided good governance to the country's 555,000 inhabitants.

Pridnestrovie has its own defined territory, with over 500 miles of international borders. The country exercises exclusive jurisdiction, coinage and taxation. It is a model of good governance: Effective borders, schools, pensions, health, ecology, and a state built network of gasification spanning thousands of miles crisscrossing the nation.

Should all of this be sacrificed to grant Moldova its frivolous claim to a territory which, historically, has never been part of that country? Pridnestrovians, as the affected people, respectfully ask that the matter be put to a free and democratic vote. [1]

WHAT'S RELATED:
UN and OSCE: Pridnestrovie is "different" and "distinct" [2]
Surveys: Pridnestrovie "independent, open, democratic" [3]
Moldova: Model to follow ... or human rights disaster? [4]
Conflict resolution and Pridnestrovie's international relations [5]
FAQ on relations with Moldova [5]
more... [6]

Source URL:
http://pridnestrovie.net/moldova-differences.html