Protesters
have called on the government to investigate more than a billion dollars
missing from banks. The scam has driven down the national currency, stoked
inflation and hurt standards of living.
Deutsche Welle, 6 Sep 2015
Protesters
yelled "we want the one billion back!" on Sunday, urging the central
bank governor, the general prosecutor and others to resign.
In a fraud
that has exposed endemic corruption and demonstrated the power of oligarch
groups in the country, $1 billion (900,000 euros) has disappeared from the banking
system - roughly one eighth of Moldova's gross domestic output.
The
state-owned Savings Bank, the Social Bank and Unibank, where the money
disappeared from before November 2014 parliamentary elections, were put under
the National Bank of Moldova's administration in December, and the losses were
covered by state cash reserves.
The banks
will be liquidated by October.
Outrage
over corruption
Protesters rallied in central Chisinau |
That's led
to a crisis in confidence among many Moldovans left to foot the bill in the
ex-Soviet country of 3.5 million people.
"Dictatorship
does not sleep. It is quaking with fear, doing everything it can to stop people
from all regions coming here to the capital, Chisinau," said one organizer,
Valentin Dolganiuc. "But we, tens of thousands of ordinary people, have
come here to triumph and we shall."
Protesters
directed much of their criticism at the country's super-wealthy oligarchs who
control key sectors of the economy, threatened to stage a non-stop
demonstration in central Chisinau until their demands were met.
The scandal
has also tarnished the image of the pro-Europe ruling class for ordinary
Moldovans, many of whom struggle by on a family income of about $300 (270
euros) a month, though many protesters carried pro-EU flags indicating they
were not against European integration.
Police put
the strength of Sunday's rallies at between 35,000 and 40,000 - bigger even
than mass anti-communist protests of April 2009. Organizers claimed that three
times as many turned out, many arriving from surrounding provinces.
The rallies
will be a setback for Prime Minister Valeriu Strelet, whose appointment in July
to succeed a disgraced predecessor opened the door to renewed dealings with
international lenders including the IMF.
In an
interview with Reuters in August, Strelet said Moldova would step up efforts to
try to trace the missing $1 billion and bring the money back to Moldova from
bank accounts abroad.
But an
unpublished parliamentary report said some of the money was transferred to
Russian banks. The banks are owned by Moldovan and Russian investors.
jar/se (Reuters, AP)
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