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Estate 2009 - Tiraspol (Transnistria) - By becco travels

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Uploaded by on Mar 6, 2010

Terza parte del Viaggio estivo 2009, tra Bucarest (Romania), Chisinau (Moldavia), Tiraspol (Transnistria), Kiev (Ucraina) e Mosca (Russia)! In questa sintesi montata ammirerete le bellezze della "capitale" TRANSNISTRIANA.

Ai confini orienti dellEuropa esiste uno Stato fantasma. Ha una sua bandiera, un suo presidente, un suo governo, un suo parlamento, una sua moneta, un suo esercito, una sua polizia. Ma nessun paese al mondo ne riconosce lesistenza.
Si chiama Transnistria: una sottile striscia di territorio moldavo che si estende tra la sponda est del fiume Dniester e il confine ucraino. E' l'unica repubblica sovietica ancora esistente al mondo: stelle rosse e statue bronzee di Lenin fanno ancora parte del panorama urbano della capitale Tiraspol. Enorme quella che troneggia davanti al pazzo del Soviet Supremo. Ma dietro la vernice rossa del veterocomunismo si nasconde il vero potere: la mafia russa, che ha trasformato questa repubblica in un paradiso del contrabbando di droga, petrolio, alcool, sigarette e soprattutto armi.
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Transnistria is a breakaway territory located mostly on a strip of land between the Dniester River and the eastern Moldovan border to Ukraine. Since its declaration of independence in 1990, and especially after the War of Transnistria in 1992, it is governed de facto as the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic (PMR, also known as "Pridnestrovie"), an unrecognized state which claims the territory to the east of the river Dniester, the city of Bender and its surrounding localities located on the west bank. The Republic of Moldova does not recognize the secession and considers territories controlled by the PMR to be part of Moldova's autonomous region of Stînga Nistrului ("Left Bank of the Dniester").
Transnistria's sovereignty is unrecognized by any United Nations member state and it has no diplomatic relations with them.
After the dissolution of the USSR, tensions between the Moldovan government and the breakaway unrecognized state's authorities in Tiraspol escalated into a military conflict that started in March 1992 and was concluded by a ceasefire in July 1992. As part of that agreement, a three-party (Russia, Moldova, Transnistria) Joint Control Commission supervises the security arrangements in the demilitarized zone, comprising 20 localities on both sides of the river. Although the ceasefire has held, the territory's political status remains unresolved: commonly considered de jure part of Moldova, Transnistria is a de facto independent state.
It is organized as a presidential republic, with its own government, parliament, military, police, postal system, and currency. Its authorities have adopted a constitution, flag, national anthem, and a coat of arms. However, following a 2005 agreement between Moldova and Ukraine, all Transnistrian companies seeking to export goods through the Ukrainian border must be registered with the Moldovan authorities.
This agreement was implemented after the European Union Border Assistance Mission to Moldova and Ukraine (EUBAM) started its activity in 2005.
Most Transnistrians are Moldovan citizens,[11] but there are also many Transnistrians with Russian and Ukrainian citizenship.
Transnistria is sometimes compared with other post-Soviet frozen conflict zones such as Nagorno-Karabakh, Abkhazia, and South Ossetia. The latter two have recognised Transnistria as an independent state and have established diplomatic relations in return for Transnistria's recognition of them

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Uploader Comments (speedypalermo)

  • grazie a Dio non avete passato quello che è successo a noi...

  • @centocelleboy a te cosa è successo?

  • noi per fortuna no... avevamo il visto russo (la loro madre patria) e appena hanno visto che il mio amico parlava russo...ci hanno lasciato passare sena grossi problemi e si sono stupiti che qualcuno andava a Tiraspol per turismo!:)

  • La zona non è delle più tranquille...ma non è neanche come dici tu!

    Certo...se tu vai a Tiraspol per affari o roba simile...e fai capire di aver i soldi sei più esposto a certi rischi...ma se vai come un umile turista che vuol girare la città e le zone limitrofe non mostrando macchinone fotografiche o cellulari di ultima generazione ... stai tranquillo che sei molto meno esposto a rischi!

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All Comments (48)

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  • @cepiefoc You are writing about something that happened during the sovietic union! It's true russians came to moldova and they order to their to speak russian and to change the latin alphaber in cirillic alphabet so they wrote romanian in cirrilic!!! But they spoke romanian!!!!!!! No one invented the moldavian!!!! I respect you but in this case you're wronging!!

  • @Simowaifai i live in transistria u moran i know more than u !transistria is actually moldova also i've been in moldova's teritorry so many times that u can't imagine people speak moldavian....which have a small difference from romanian language...the thing that changed in moldavian language is that russian letters were replaced with latin letters.......there is a small difference in this languages....romania is still playing dirty games in moldova they want this territory for themselves

  • @cepiefoc No! Moldavian language doesn't exist!!!!!! It's like austrian and swiss, they speak german as in germany!!!

  • @Simowaifai moldavian language exists but romanians force moldavia to have as an official language romanian.........only in chisinau and on tv they speak romanian in the villages and small cities they speak moldavian and in some places like the country transistria we speak only russian........don't tell me that i don't have right because i borned in transistria and i lived there for 7 years now i live in greece but every summer i go to transistra for holiday...romanian are similar to moldavian

  • @cepiefoc The moldavian language doesn't exist!!!!! The first language is romanian, the same language that they speak in romania! The second language not official is russian!! It's not true that only "a few" people speaks in romanian, because people that speaks only russian are russians and they are too lazy to learn the official language of the nation where they live!!! If you don't know anything of moldova it's better and more intelligent don' write fake news!

  • 1.14. - это он вначале блеял ?

  • @speedypalermo ci hanno portato nella sala perquisizioni in frontiera... brutta esperienza...

  • @BleezSDS

    anche io sono un "curioso", è da tanto tempo che ho il pallino della Transnistria. Cmq penso che in questo genere di posti la cosa migliore sia andare con un gruppo organizzato, oppure conoscere qualcuno del luogo che ti "faccia strada", non so se mi spiego. Ho sentito dire che là è proibito per i turisti fare fotografie a monumenti ecc, sarà vero? come avrà fatto l'autore del video a filmare/fotografare tutto?

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