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Moldovan election observer tells RT she was ‘openly threatened’ at polling station in EU nation | Moldovan election observer tells RT she was ‘openly threatened’ at polling station in EU nation |
(32 minutes later) | |
The actions of a committee at a presidential election voting place in Italy “speak of serious irregularities,” Larisa Brunescu has said | The actions of a committee at a presidential election voting place in Italy “speak of serious irregularities,” Larisa Brunescu has said |
A female observer at a Moldovan presidential election polling station in the central Italian city of Perugia has told RT that she faced threats and pressure from the local election committee, which tried to “throw her out.” | |
On Sunday, Moldovans at home and abroad voted for their new leader in an election that also included a referendum on whether to include the nation’s EU aspirations in its constitution. | |
The observer, identified as Larisa Brunescu, told RT by phone that the election officials who let her in tried to make her leave the polling station once she tried to film what was going inside. | |
“They told me I should not send any videos, [record] conversations, [send] figures, nothing,” the woman, who represented the Renaissance Party of former Prime Minister Vasile Tarlev, said. | |
According to Brunescu, at one point, she was told that the documents allowing her to be an observer were “not OK” and that she should leave. | |
The committee claimed her documents were not “filled out properly,” Brunescu said, which she denied. The election officials “were openly threatening” her, she added. | |
According to Brunescu, the committee also tried to prevent her from taking photos, and insisted that she could only report figures which they would provide to her. The officials looked at her “like dogs,” she added. | |
The actions of the committee members “speak of some serious irregularities,” Brunescu believes. She claimed that she counted fewer than 1,000 voters at the polling station, though the committee had “4,000 ballots.” | |
“They can rig the ballots,” she added, while acknowledging that she did not see the committee actually doing so. | |
Earlier on Sunday, Moldova’s opposition Victory alliance accused the authorities of allowing massive violations at the polling stations, claiming that hundreds of irregularities were reported during the first half of the day. The political bloc also stated that observers were outright banned from accessing some polling stations both at home and abroad “without any valid reasons.” Victory also accused the authorities of suppressing votes that it deemed undesirable. | |
Moldovan President Maia Sandu was seeking a second term, running against Alexandr Stoianoglo, a former prosecutor general, and Renato Usatii, a former mayor of Moldova’s second largest city, Balti, with seven other candidates also running. | |
Five out of ten candidates criticized the referendum, arguing that it was held only to ensure Sandu’s reelection. On Sunday evening, it was reported that most voters rejected the pro-EU constitutional changes. | |
Moldova has been actively pushing for EU and NATO membership since 2020, when Sandu, a critic of Russia and supporter of EU integration, came to power. The opposition has criticized the president for failing to resolve the economic and energy crisis in the country, which is among the poorest in Europe. |