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

How is the people? And how do they live?

Pridnestrovie is enjoying its highest living standard since Communist times, with foreign investment on the rise and the economy growing. This has given way to technological developments and new construction. Most visitors come with a preconceived notion gleaned from ill-intentioned hearsay rather than facts, and are usually amazed at how civilized, advanced, clean and quality-oriented Pridnestrovie really is.
Ice cream stand in Bender [0]
Summer in Pridnestrovie wouldn't be complete without the ice cream vendors under Unilever's red and white umbrellas
To take a Moldovan politicians' word for it, Pridnestrovie is a place where Communist traditions hold sway: The KGB still wanders the streets, people are afraid to talk to foreigners, you get punished for taking photographs, and the standard of living is somewhere between a Gulag and a Stalinist dictatorship. But they must be confusing us with some other country.

See through the absurd rhetoric and you'll discover that life in Pridnestrovie is fairly normal. Whatever Moldova's propaganda-mouthpieces would have us believe, Tiraspol far more resembles a quiet Eastern European town (and a pleasant, leafy one at that) than North Korea. The young people chat on their mobile phones and sit in Internet cafes; the elderly gossip on benches while chomping on sunflower seeds; buses and trains frequently head into nearby Ukraine and Moldova.

Although sometimes sneered at by the outside world for being too small, too new, too red, too yellow, too thin or too independent, Pridnestrovie just keeps going and going. Year after year, "the little country that could" keeps celebrating its independence day with a plethora of happy street parties, concerts and even a military parade conducted with panache and good humour.

Young performers strut their stuff... [0]
Doing the song and dance: Civic life in Pridnestrovie
Life is clean and civic-minded in Pridnestrovie. One Western human rights group summarized the atmosphere as follows:

The irony of Moldovans calling Pridnestrovie communist is not lost on the citizens of Pridnestrovie. Moldova reverted to Communism in 2001 and the Communist Party, led by a former Soviet-era bureaucrat who is now President, is firmly in control of a governing majority.

Britney, Justin and a "visibly higher" standard of living
Not so in Pridnestrovie. Here, in the last democratic elections held in December of 2005, the president's party lost and a pro-Europe opposition movement now holds a majority in parliament. After independence in 1990, Communism was replaced with a controlled move to market reforms, a move which has picked up pace lately and whose positive effects can be seen and felt all over Pridnestrovie. Reporter Shaun Walker, writing for the British government-funded Russia Profile, visited Pridnestrovie in late 2005 and wrote in Flying the Red-and-Green Flag that the pro-Moldovan hate rhetoric is "absurd" and that "life is fairly normal":

The article also confirmed that the monthly salaries in Pridnestrovie are higher than in Moldova and that the average standard of living "seems to be visibly higher" than in Moldova.

Adidas + fast-food restaurant
A British newspaper, The Guardian, visited Pridnestrovie last year to report on the country's recent progress. What they found was a very European country not unlike many others:

And not just European, but proudly independent too. As the newspaper reported, Pridnestrovie today has "its own flag, [0] crest, anthem, president, parliament, uniformed border guards, security service, police, courts, schools, university, constitution..."

Pridnestrovie has a positive image of the United States, Europe and Western culture. As another reporter observed, visiting during independence day in 2003, the celebrations ended with the band playing a swinging version of Glen Miller’s “In the Mood”.

Road repairs [0]
The government of Pridnestrovie is in charge of infrastructure and road repairs.
Compared to Moldova, this is "like the Riviera"
The British Helsinki Human Rights Group has sent delegations to Pridnestrovie on a regular basis since 1991. In the words of the group's 2005 election observers, [0] Pridnestrovie —

Even former residents of Tiraspol who emigrated a couple of years ago and now decided to return have expressed surprise and amazement at how fast the city has changed: The pace of new construction and the economic development is bringing a better standard of living to the country.

It's not Paris or London, of course, but it is a place which 555,000 people call home. And thanks to reform, modernization, self-rule and effective government, it is a lot better than it was just a few years ago.

Playground [0]
A playground in Pridnestrovie: Life is relaxing and easygoing.
Crime? Fuggedaboutit:

Of course, those who live here could've told you that. In Pridnestrovie people don't walk around with guns in the street and it is perfectly safe for anyone to walk in the streets alone at night. The people in Pridnestrovie are a peaceful, happy, positive bunch with an optimistic outlook on the future of their country. Doubt it? Come and visit and see for yourself... [0]

WHAT'S RELATED:
A visit to Pridnestrovie: What life is really like here [1]
Ten things you didn't know about Europe's newest country [1]
Myths and misconceptions about life in Pridnestrovie [2]
Frequently Asked Questions [2]
more... [3]

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