Moldova elects pro-European judge Timofti as president, ending 3 years of political deadlock

Chisinau, Moldova – Moldova’s Parliament elected a judge with a European outlook as president Friday, ending nearly three years of political deadlock in the former Soviet republic.

Lawmakers approved the election of 65-year-old Nicolae Timofti, who is chairman of the Superior Council of Magistrates. The opposition Communists, who disapprove of the government’s pro-European policies, boycotted the vote. Thousands of their supporters later protested the election in the capital’s streets.

Mouldova has been without a president since 2009, because the country’s largest party, who has 58 seats in the 101-seat legislature, could not muster a simple majority to choose one.

On Friday, Timofti was elected with 62 votes, four of those from independent lawmakers.

“The European orientation of Moldova must be a priority,” Timofti told lawmakers ahead of the vote. “This has been the policy of Moldova in recent years and this is the policy that must continue.”

Moldova, one of Europe’s poorest nations, is struggling to find a solution to the separatist region of Trans-Dniester, which broke away in 1990 over fears that Moldova planned to reunite with Romania. Trans-Dniester’s leaders are pro-Russian but the area is not recognized internationally.

The Council of Europe, the pan-European body for human rights, welcomed Timofti’s victory and urged all political parties to work together.

“I am convinced…all the political parties will show responsibility by accepting the democratic legitimacy of the country’s institutions and hence the legitimacy of a president elected in accordance with its constitutional requirements,” Jean-Claude Mignon, president of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, said in a statement.

Romania’s President Traian Basescu called Timofti to congratulate him, Basescu’s office said. Some four-fifths of Moldovans are of Romanian descent and the country was part of Romania until 1940.

Members of the Russian parliament’s elected lower house, the State Duma, also welcomed the election.

“Moldova today has finally officially ended a long-term government crisis,” the ITAR-Tass news agency quoted State Duma member Leonid Slutsky as saying.

By Corneliu Rusnac, The Associated Press | The Canadian Press
AP Writer Alison Mutler in Bucharest, Romania, contributed.
Source – Yahoo! News