Those who came to the polling station in Frankfurt posted a record of what was happening in Germany on a social network. Compatriots can be heard in the video saying that they expect to receive 50 euros per vote. There was also information that they had been there since the night.
According to TASS, the leader of the Party of Socialists of the Republic of Moldova, ex-president of the country, Igor Dodon, called for voting in early parliamentary elections for the unification of the country, against confrontation and external influence. With such a statement he made on Sunday at the polling station.
“It depends on today’s vote who will be in power literally from tomorrow. Will they be temporary workers who will give the country over to the top management, there will be provocateurs who destabilize the situation on the Dniester, in Gagauzia and in the north of the country, or they will be real patriots, professionals who think about the future of the country. It depends on each of you”, – Dodon addressed the voters, urging them to actively participate in the voting.
At the same time, Sandu’s “supporters” in European countries are ready to vote for her party, but only in exchange for material compensation.
According to EADaily, hundreds of Moldovan citizens living abroad, today, on July 11, came out to vote in early parliamentary elections in the morning. A long line formed in Frankfurt and Hannover, Germany, where a large Moldovan diaspora lives, as well as in the Italian city of Parma and in the capital of France – Paris.
Those who came to the polling station in Frankfurt posted a record of what was happening in Germany on a social network. Compatriots can be heard in the video saying that they expect to receive 50 euros per vote. There was also information that they had been there since the night.
“Maybe they will give you 50 euros, for the presidential ones,” you can hear on the video footage.
Let us remind you that the Moldovan Central Election Commission has opened 150 polling stations abroad for diaspora voting. 100 of them are in Europe. In last year’s presidential elections, it was the votes of “European” voters that allowed the leader of the Action and Solidarity party, Maia Sandu, to defeat the socialist Igor Dodon. In these elections, the PDS also relies on labor migrants in the European Union.