MAE proposes solutions for fighting corruption
In Moldova, there are good normative and legislative documents and bodies that fight corruption, but the results achieved are not the projected ones, the vice president of the European Action Movement (MAE) Nicolae Rosca said at a roundtable meeting on November 6. “Only when these bodies are headed by persons who have lived a modest life, this phenomenon will be rooted out,” Nicolae Rosca said, quoted by Info-Prim Neo.
The politician considers that if the persons who plunged the country into a disaster are not held accountable, the fight against corruption will not produce results. “Corruption is one of Moldova's major problems. Our state is the poorest and one of the most corrupt in the EU. Both the international organizations and the government say Moldova is a corrupt country.”
The MAE says the acts of corruption committed until present must be revealed. They include appropriation of funds, illegal privatization processes and other acts. “The law must be implemented correctly. The authorities do not appropriately tackle this problems and do not clarify large-scale corruption acts, but draw attention to minor cases,” Rosca said.
Moldova is an agrarian country, but its agricultural products are more expensive than in the EU. Nicolae Rosca stressed that while under the Communist rule, Moldova had become poorer and more corrupt, while the head of state became millionnaire.