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Moldova’s PM-designate seeks confidence vote from lawmakers

CHISINAU, MOLDOVA (AP) – Moldova’s pro-Western Prime Minister-designate Dorin Recean proposed a new government to lawmakers yesterday for a confidence vote, as the small country signals a shift to security concerns amid Russia’s ongoing war in neighbouring Ukraine.

Recean, a 48-year-old economist who served for a year as President Maia Sandu’s defence and security adviser, was appointed by her last week after Natalia Gavrilita suddenly quit the premiership.

Moldova’s ruling Party of Action and Solidarity, or PAS, holds a majority in the country’s 101-seat legislature.

Recean, who also served as interior minister between 2012 and 2015, will propose a cabinet to lawmakers that will remain largely the same.

Key ministers such as foreign affairs, interior, and defence remain, while changes will be made to energy and infrastructure, justice and finance.

Sandu told a news conference last week that “firm steps are needed to strengthen the country’s economy and security”.

Moldovan Prime Minister-designate Dorin Recean. PHOTO: AP

Recean said after he was appointed last week that his main focus will be to introduce “order and discipline” in Moldova’s institutions, breathe new life into the struggling economy and ensure peace and stability.

“We are at the highest risk of challenges since World War II, he said. “We need to strengthen the security sector in such a way that everyone is safe.”

On Monday, Sandu held a news briefing in which she outlined an alleged plot by Moscow to overthrow her country’s government using what she described as external saboteurs, to put the nation “at the disposal of Russia”, and to derail its aspirations to one day join the European Union (EU).

Sandu said that the purported Russian plot envisioned attacks on government buildings, hostage-takings and other violent actions by groups of saboteurs.

Russia strongly denied those claims a day later as “absolutely unfounded and unsubstantiated”.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine last February, non-NATO member Moldova has faced a string of problems.

These include a severe energy crisis after Moscow dramatically reduced gas supplies; skyrocketting inflation; several missiles that have traversed its skies from Russia’s war next door, and a huge inflow of refugees fleeing the war.

Tensions also soared in Moldova, a former Soviet republic of about 2.6 million people, after a series of explosions occurred last April in Transnistria – a Russia-backed separatist region of Moldova where Russia bases about 1,500 troops.

Political Scientist at the Royal Holloway University of London Costin Ciobanu said that Moldova’s change of government shows “security concerns are high on the list” of the authorities and that Sandu going public with her Russian plot claims lends “credence to the idea that Moldova has to focus on its security”.

“The main narrative behind the change of government was that the state has to focus more on the security dimension than economic development and a cost-of-living crisis,” he told The Associated Press.

“Because many people were doubtful about the rationale behind the change.”

In the wake of the war, Moldova has looked to foster closer ties with its Western partners.

Last June, it was granted EU candidate status, the same day as Ukraine.

But full membership will be contingent on a series of reforms such as tackling corruption and strengthening the rule of law.

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