moldova

Omani Rial(OMR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Omani Rial = 46.5024 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Honduran Lempira(HNL)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Honduran Lempira = 0.7124 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Australian Dollar(AUD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Australian Dollar = 11.6513 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Chinese Yuan Renminbi(CNY)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Chinese Yuan Renminbi = 2.5206 Moldovan Leu



  • Chinese Yuan Renminbi

moldova

Hungarian Forint(HUF)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Hungarian Forint = 0.0552 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Philippine Peso(PHP)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Philippine Peso = 0.3531 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Kenyan Shilling(KES)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Kenyan Shilling = 0.1681 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Latvian Lat(LVL)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Latvian Lat = 29.4784 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Egyptian Pound(EGP)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Egyptian Pound = 1.1457 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Botswana Pula(BWP)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Botswana Pula = 1.4683 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Bulgarian Lev(BGN)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Bulgarian Lev = 9.8761 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Canadian Dollar(CAD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Canadian Dollar = 12.7207 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Euro(EUR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Euro = 19.5617 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Mexican Peso(MXN)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Mexican Peso = 0.7532 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Brazilian Real(BRL)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Brazilian Real = 3.1107 Moldovan Leu




moldova

United Arab Emirates Dirham(AED)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 United Arab Emirates Dirham = 4.8545 Moldovan Leu



  • United Arab Emirates Dirham

moldova

Sri Lanka Rupee(LKR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Sri Lanka Rupee = 0.0956 Moldovan Leu



  • Sri Lanka Rupee

moldova

Algerian Dinar(DZD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Algerian Dinar = 0.1389 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Indonesian Rupiah(IDR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Indonesian Rupiah = 0.0012 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Lithuanian Lita(LTL)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Lithuanian Lita = 6.0389 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Nigerian Naira(NGN)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Nigerian Naira = 0.0457 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Czech Republic Koruna(CZK)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Czech Republic Koruna = 0.7095 Moldovan Leu



  • Czech Republic Koruna

moldova

Bolivian Boliviano(BOB)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Bolivian Boliviano = 2.5859 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Japanese Yen(JPY)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Japanese Yen = 0.1672 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Limmud FSU in Moldova Attracts More than 300 Participants

The Speaker of the Moldovan Parliament Zinaida Greceanii : "Our task is to preserve and amplify this tradition"




moldova

Moldova timeline

A chronology of key dates




moldova

Country profile: Moldova

Key facts, figures and dates




moldova

AT#686 - Travel to Moldova

Hear about travel to Moldova as the Amateur Traveler talks to Christina Lutcan from findingelevation.com about her country of origin.




moldova

CBD News: France, Mali, the Netherlands, the Republic of Moldova and Sweden are the latest countries to ratify the Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization, bringing the t




moldova

Political Will Was Not Enough for Justice Reform in Moldova

27 November 2019

Cristina Gherasimov

Former Academy Associate, Russia and Eurasia Programme
The pro-reform Sandu government had the will to dismantle oligarchic power structures, but was taken down by limited political experience.

2019-11-26-Sandu.jpg

Maia Sandu in Germany in July. Photo: Getty Images.

The lack of political will to carry out rule of law reforms is frequently the reason why reforms are not fully implemented. The case of Moldova proves that in societies where strong vested interests still persist, political savviness is equally as important as political will.

Old and new political power brokers in Moldova struck a fragile pact in June to oust Vladimir Plahotniuc. Plahotniuc had built a network of corruption and patronage with the help of the Democratic Party, which he treated as a personal vehicle and which allowed him and a small economic elite circle to enrich themselves off of government institutions and state-owned enterprises, to the detriment of Moldovan citizens and the health of their political process.

Maia Sandu, co-leader of the pro-reform ACUM electoral bloc, then formed a technocratic government with a remit to implement Moldova’s lagging reform agenda. Though made up of ministers with the integrity and political will to implement difficult transformational reforms, its biggest weakness was its coalition partner – the pro-Russian Socialists’ Party and its informal leader, Igor Dodon, the president of Moldova.

Now the Socialists – threatened by how key reforms to the justice system would impact their interests – have joined forces with Plahotniuc’s former allies, the Democratic Party, to oust ACUM, exploiting the party’s lack of political savviness. 

Reform interrupted

It was always clear the coalition would be short-lived. President Dodon and the co-ruling Socialists joined to buy themselves time, with the hope that they could restrict the most far-reaching reforms and tie the hands of ACUM ministers. In less than five months, however, the Sandu government initiated key reforms in the judicial system, aimed at dismantling Plahotniuc’s networks of patronage but also impacting the Socialists, who to a large degree also profited from the previous status quo.

The red line came over a last-minute change in the selection process of the prosecutor general proposed by Sandu on 6 November, which the Socialists claimed was unconstitutional and gave them the justification to put forward a motion of no confidence in the Sandu government. This was conveniently supported by the Democratic Party, who appeared threatened by an independent prosecutor’s office and saw an opportunity to return to power.

Thus, the political will to reform proved insufficient in the absence of a clear strategy on how to address the concerns of the old regime that they would be prosecuted and their vested interests threatened. Here, ACUM’s lack of political experience let them down. With their hands tied from the beginning in a fragile coalition with the Socialists, ACUM were unable to prevent sabotage from within state institutions and their own coalition, and could not find consensus to proceed with more radical methods to tackle corruption.

Less than two days after the Sandu government was out, a new government was sworn in on 14 November. Prime Minister Ion Chicu was an adviser to President Dodon before taking office and former minister of finance under the Plahotniuc-backed government of Pavel Filip, as part of a cabinet of ministers consisting largely of other presidential advisers and former high-level bureaucrats and ministers from the Plahotniuc era. 

The new government

A top priority for the Chicu government is to convince the international community that it is independent from President Dodon, and that its ‘technocrats’ will keep the course of reforms of the Sandu government. This is critical to preserving the financial assistance of Western partners, which the Moldovan government heavily relies on, particularly with a presidential election campaign next year, when they will likely want to create fiscal space for various giveaways to voters.

But within its first week in office, Chicu appears incapable of walking this line. Reverting to the initially proposed pre-selection process of prosecutor general signals that the post could be filled by a loyal appointee of President Dodon. Moreover, Chicu’s first visit abroad was to Russia, allegedly a major financial contributor of the Socialists’ Party. With the Socialists now holding the presidency, government, Chisinau mayoralty, and the parliament speaker’s seat, the danger of an increased Russian influence on key political decisions is very real.

A government steered by President Dodon risks bringing Moldova back to where it was before June, with a political elite mimicking reforms while misusing power for private gains. The biggest danger is that instead of continuing the reform process to bring Moldova back on its European integration path, the new government may focus on strengthening the old patronage system, this time with President Dodon at the top of the pyramid.

Lessons

This new minority government, supported by the Democrats, is a more natural one for President Dodon and therefore has more chances to survive, at least until presidential elections in autumn of 2020. Both the Socialists and the Democrats will likely seek to use this time to rebuild their own methods of capturing state resources. But with the Socialists relying on the Democrats’ votes in parliament, this is a recipe for further political instability.

Similar to Moldova, several other states across the post-Soviet space such as Ukraine and Armenia have had new political forces come to power with the political will and mandate to carry out difficult reforms to strengthen rule of law and fight systemic corruption in their countries. What they all have in common is the lack of political experience of how to create change, while old elites, used to thinking on their feet to defend their vested interests, retain their connections and economic and political influence.

Moldova is a good example of why political will needs to be backed up by clear strategy on how to deal with threatened vested interests in order for new political forces to be able to maintain themselves in power and reforms to be sustainable. When the chance comes again for fresh leaders to come to power, it is importantthey are politically prepared to use it swiftly and wisely.




moldova

Moldova in 2020 and Beyond: Challenges Ahead

Invitation Only Research Event

5 March 2020 - 2:00pm to 3:30pm

Chatham House | 10 St James's Square | London | SW1Y 4LE

Event participants

Maia Sandu, President, Action and Solidarity Party; Prime Minister of Moldova (June-November 2019)
Chair: Cristina Gherasimov, Research Fellow, German Council on Foreign Relations; Academy Associate, Russia and Eurasia Programme, Chatham House
 

After a tumultuous 2019 when Moldova witnessed the end of the Plahotniuc era, the country seems bound for an equally difficult year ahead.
 
Increasing international isolation, a temporary working coalition between the Socialists and the Democrats, concentration of power and resources in the hands of President Igor Dodon, and presidential elections in autumn are among the ordeals to be discussed at this event. Ms Sandu will assess how Moldova can move beyond these challenges and return to a path for sustainable democratic reform. 

Department/project

Anna Morgan

Administrator, Ukraine Forum
+44 (0)20 7389 3274




moldova

Political Will Was Not Enough for Justice Reform in Moldova

27 November 2019

Cristina Gherasimov

Former Academy Associate, Russia and Eurasia Programme
The pro-reform Sandu government had the will to dismantle oligarchic power structures, but was taken down by limited political experience.

2019-11-26-Sandu.jpg

Maia Sandu in Germany in July. Photo: Getty Images.

The lack of political will to carry out rule of law reforms is frequently the reason why reforms are not fully implemented. The case of Moldova proves that in societies where strong vested interests still persist, political savviness is equally as important as political will.

Old and new political power brokers in Moldova struck a fragile pact in June to oust Vladimir Plahotniuc. Plahotniuc had built a network of corruption and patronage with the help of the Democratic Party, which he treated as a personal vehicle and which allowed him and a small economic elite circle to enrich themselves off of government institutions and state-owned enterprises, to the detriment of Moldovan citizens and the health of their political process.

Maia Sandu, co-leader of the pro-reform ACUM electoral bloc, then formed a technocratic government with a remit to implement Moldova’s lagging reform agenda. Though made up of ministers with the integrity and political will to implement difficult transformational reforms, its biggest weakness was its coalition partner – the pro-Russian Socialists’ Party and its informal leader, Igor Dodon, the president of Moldova.

Now the Socialists – threatened by how key reforms to the justice system would impact their interests – have joined forces with Plahotniuc’s former allies, the Democratic Party, to oust ACUM, exploiting the party’s lack of political savviness. 

Reform interrupted

It was always clear the coalition would be short-lived. President Dodon and the co-ruling Socialists joined to buy themselves time, with the hope that they could restrict the most far-reaching reforms and tie the hands of ACUM ministers. In less than five months, however, the Sandu government initiated key reforms in the judicial system, aimed at dismantling Plahotniuc’s networks of patronage but also impacting the Socialists, who to a large degree also profited from the previous status quo.

The red line came over a last-minute change in the selection process of the prosecutor general proposed by Sandu on 6 November, which the Socialists claimed was unconstitutional and gave them the justification to put forward a motion of no confidence in the Sandu government. This was conveniently supported by the Democratic Party, who appeared threatened by an independent prosecutor’s office and saw an opportunity to return to power.

Thus, the political will to reform proved insufficient in the absence of a clear strategy on how to address the concerns of the old regime that they would be prosecuted and their vested interests threatened. Here, ACUM’s lack of political experience let them down. With their hands tied from the beginning in a fragile coalition with the Socialists, ACUM were unable to prevent sabotage from within state institutions and their own coalition, and could not find consensus to proceed with more radical methods to tackle corruption.

Less than two days after the Sandu government was out, a new government was sworn in on 14 November. Prime Minister Ion Chicu was an adviser to President Dodon before taking office and former minister of finance under the Plahotniuc-backed government of Pavel Filip, as part of a cabinet of ministers consisting largely of other presidential advisers and former high-level bureaucrats and ministers from the Plahotniuc era. 

The new government

A top priority for the Chicu government is to convince the international community that it is independent from President Dodon, and that its ‘technocrats’ will keep the course of reforms of the Sandu government. This is critical to preserving the financial assistance of Western partners, which the Moldovan government heavily relies on, particularly with a presidential election campaign next year, when they will likely want to create fiscal space for various giveaways to voters.

But within its first week in office, Chicu appears incapable of walking this line. Reverting to the initially proposed pre-selection process of prosecutor general signals that the post could be filled by a loyal appointee of President Dodon. Moreover, Chicu’s first visit abroad was to Russia, allegedly a major financial contributor of the Socialists’ Party. With the Socialists now holding the presidency, government, Chisinau mayoralty, and the parliament speaker’s seat, the danger of an increased Russian influence on key political decisions is very real.

A government steered by President Dodon risks bringing Moldova back to where it was before June, with a political elite mimicking reforms while misusing power for private gains. The biggest danger is that instead of continuing the reform process to bring Moldova back on its European integration path, the new government may focus on strengthening the old patronage system, this time with President Dodon at the top of the pyramid.

Lessons

This new minority government, supported by the Democrats, is a more natural one for President Dodon and therefore has more chances to survive, at least until presidential elections in autumn of 2020. Both the Socialists and the Democrats will likely seek to use this time to rebuild their own methods of capturing state resources. But with the Socialists relying on the Democrats’ votes in parliament, this is a recipe for further political instability.

Similar to Moldova, several other states across the post-Soviet space such as Ukraine and Armenia have had new political forces come to power with the political will and mandate to carry out difficult reforms to strengthen rule of law and fight systemic corruption in their countries. What they all have in common is the lack of political experience of how to create change, while old elites, used to thinking on their feet to defend their vested interests, retain their connections and economic and political influence.

Moldova is a good example of why political will needs to be backed up by clear strategy on how to deal with threatened vested interests in order for new political forces to be able to maintain themselves in power and reforms to be sustainable. When the chance comes again for fresh leaders to come to power, it is importantthey are politically prepared to use it swiftly and wisely.




moldova

Moldova in 2020 and Beyond: Challenges Ahead

Invitation Only Research Event

5 March 2020 - 2:00pm to 3:30pm

Chatham House | 10 St James's Square | London | SW1Y 4LE

Event participants

Maia Sandu, President, Action and Solidarity Party; Prime Minister of Moldova (June-November 2019)
Chair: Cristina Gherasimov, Research Fellow, German Council on Foreign Relations; Academy Associate, Russia and Eurasia Programme, Chatham House
 

After a tumultuous 2019 when Moldova witnessed the end of the Plahotniuc era, the country seems bound for an equally difficult year ahead.
 
Increasing international isolation, a temporary working coalition between the Socialists and the Democrats, concentration of power and resources in the hands of President Igor Dodon, and presidential elections in autumn are among the ordeals to be discussed at this event. Ms Sandu will assess how Moldova can move beyond these challenges and return to a path for sustainable democratic reform. 

Department/project

Anna Morgan

Administrator, Ukraine Forum
+44 (0)20 7389 3274




moldova

Wounded feet, healed heart - Moldova

Their desire to help leads a Love Moldova outreach team to a woman whose loss of her toes leads to the salvation of her soul.




moldova

Seychellois Rupee(SCR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Seychellois Rupee = 1.0386 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar = 2.6387 Moldovan Leu



  • Trinidad and Tobago Dollar

moldova

Swedish Krona(SEK)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Swedish Krona = 1.8247 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Slovak Koruna(SKK)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Slovak Koruna = 0.803 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Serbian Dinar(RSD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Serbian Dinar = 0.1644 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Polish Zloty(PLN)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Polish Zloty = 4.2407 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Qatari Rial(QAR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Qatari Rial = 4.8973 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Indian Rupee(INR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.2362 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Pakistani Rupee(PKR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Pakistani Rupee = 0.1117 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Sierra Leonean Leone(SLL)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Sierra Leonean Leone = 0.0018 Moldovan Leu



  • Sierra Leonean Leone

moldova

New Taiwan Dollar(TWD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 New Taiwan Dollar = 0.5972 Moldovan Leu



  • New Taiwan Dollar

moldova

Thai Baht(THB)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Thai Baht = 0.5569 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Turkish Lira(TRY)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Turkish Lira = 2.5153 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Singapore Dollar(SGD)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Singapore Dollar = 12.6221 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Mauritian Rupee(MUR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Mauritian Rupee = 0.449 Moldovan Leu




moldova

Nepalese Rupee(NPR)/Moldovan Leu(MDL)

1 Nepalese Rupee = 0.1474 Moldovan Leu