OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Moldova
COUNTRY DESCRIPTION
Moldova is a republic with a freely elected government. It has been
an independent nation since 1991. Its capital, Chisinau, offers
adequate hotels and restaurants, but tourist facilities in other
parts of the country are not highly developed, and many of the goods
and services taken for granted in other countries are not yet
available.
PEOPLE
Ethnic groups represented in Moldova include Moldovan/Romanian,
Ukrainian, Russian, Gagauz, and Bulgarian. Romanian (officially
known as Moldovan) is the official language; Russian, Ukrainian, and
Gagauz also are spoken. The great majority of Moldova's population
is Christian Orthodox -- 90% of the population nominally belongs to
one of the two main Orthodox denominations. The Moldovan Orthodox
Church, an autonomous diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church and
loyal to the Patriarch of Moscow, has 1,194 parishes; the
Bessarabian Orthodox Church, affiliated with the Romanian Orthodox
Patriarchate in Bucharest, has 124 parishes. In addition, followers
of the Old Rite Russian Orthodox Church (Old Believers) make up
approximately 3.6% of the population.
The Republic of Moldova occupies most of what has been known as
Bessarabia. Moldova's location has made it a historic passageway
between Asia and southern Europe, as well as the victim of frequent
warfare. Greeks, Romans, Huns, and Bulgars invaded the area, which
in the 13th century became part of the Mongol empire. An independent
Moldovan state emerged briefly in the 14th century under celebrated
leader Stefan the Great but subsequently fell under Ottoman Turkish
rule in the 16th century.
After the Russo-Turkish War of 1806-12, the eastern half of Moldova
(Bessarabia) between the Prut and the Dniester Rivers was ceded to
Russia, while Romanian Moldavia (west of the Prut) remained with the
Turks. Romania, which gained independence in 1878, took control of
Russian-ruled Bessarabia in 1918. The Soviet Union never recognized
the action and created an autonomous Moldavian republic on the east
side of the Dniester River in 1924.
In 1940, Romania was forced to cede Bessarabia to the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.), which established the
Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic by merging the autonomous
republic east of the Dniester and the annexed Bessarabian portion.
Stalin also stripped the three southern counties along the Black Sea
coast from Moldova and incorporated them in the Ukrainian Soviet
Socialist Republic. Romania sought to regain Bessarabia by joining
with Germany in the 1941 attack on the Soviet Union. On June 22,
1941, German and Romanian troops crossed the border and deportations
of the Jews from Bessarabia began immediately. By September 1941,
most of the Jews of Bessarabia and Bukovina had been transported in
convoys and force marched to concentration camps in Transnistria.
About 185,000 Jews were in the Transnistria area in concentration
camps by 1942 in abysmal conditions. Very few were left alive in
these camps when the Soviets reoccupied Bessarabia in 1944.
ENTRY/EXIT REQUIREMENTS
As of January 1, 2007, citizens of the United States, EU member
states, Canada, Switzerland and Japan do not require visas to enter
Moldova. For more information on entry requirements, please contact
the Moldovan Embassy, 2101 S Street N.W., Washington, D.C. 20008,
telephone: (202) 667-1130, (202) 667-1131, or (202) 667-1137, fax:
(202) 667-1204.
QUICK FACTS
Geography
Area: 33,843 sq. km. (13,000 sq. mi.); slightly larger than
Maryland.
Cities: Capital--Chisinau.
Terrain: Rolling steppe, gradual slope south to Black Sea.
Climate: Moderate winters, warm summers.
Time Zone: GMT+2
People
Nationality: Noun--Moldovan(s). Adjective--Moldovan.
Population (January 2006): 3.39 million, excluding the estimated
Transnistrian population of 537,000. Population growth rate: 0.5%
(2005).
Ethnic groups (2004 census): Moldovan (83.7%), Ukrainian (6.6%),
Russian (1.7%), Gagauz (4.5%), Bulgarian (1.7%), Romanian (1.4%),
other (0.4%).
Main religions: Christian Orthodox (93.3%), Baptist (1%), Adventist,
Roman Catholic, Jewish.
Languages: Romanian (officially known as Moldovan), Russian,
Ukrainian, Gagauz.
Education: Literacy--96%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--12/1,000. Life expectancy-68.4 years.
Work force (1.3 million): Agriculture--41%; industry--12%;
other--47%.
Government
Type: Republic.
Constitution: Adopted July 28, 1994.
Independence: August 27, 1991 (from Soviet Union).
Branches: Executive--President (head of state), Prime Minister (head
of Government), Government (cabinet). Legislative--unicameral
Parliament. Judicial--Supreme Court.
Administrative subdivisions: 32 counties (raions), 4 municipalities,
and one autonomous territorial unit.
Political parties: Communist Party, Christian Democratic People's
Party, Our Moldova Alliance, Democratic Party, Social Liberal Party,
Social-Democratic Party and the Party for Social Democracy.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Economy
GDP (2006): $3.35 billion ($2.9 billion in 2005; $2.6 billion in
2004).
GDP real growth rate (January-June 2007): 8.0% (5.0% in 2006; 8.6%
in 2005; 6.5% in 2004).
Per capita GDP (2006): $937 ($890 in 2005; $766 in 2004: $540 in
2003).
Natural resources: Lignite, phosphates, gypsum, arable land, and
limestone.
Agriculture: Products--vegetables, fruits, wine and spirits, grain,
sugar beets, sunflower seeds, meat, milk, eggs, tobacco, walnuts.
Industry: Types--processed foods and beverages, including wine and
refined sugar; processed fruit and vegetable products, including
vegetable oil; dairy and meat products; tobacco items; metal
processing and production of machinery; textiles and clothing,
shoes; furniture.
Trade (2006): Exports--$1,051.6 million (of which 50% go to
countries outside the former Soviet Union): foodstuffs, wine,
textiles, clothing, footwear and machinery. Major markets--Russia,
Romania, Ukraine, Italy, Belarus, Germany. Imports--$2,693.2 million
(of which 60% come from countries outside the former Soviet Union):
gas, oil, coal, steel, machinery and equipment, chemical products,
textiles, foodstuffs, automobiles, and other consumer durables.
Major suppliers--Ukraine, Russia, Romania, Germany, Italy. Currency:
Moldovan Leu (plural Lei).
Exchange rate: Leu/US$ (2006): average 13.13; 12.91 (end of year);
12.60 (average in 2005); 12.33 (average in 2004); 13.94 (average in
2003).
USEFUL LINKSU.S. Government
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