The Moldovan authorities have not honored their obligations to the victims of the Stalinist deportations and their heirs, finds the Liberal Democratic Party (PLDM). In a statement it says no mechanism of returning the properties to the oppressed people has been enacted, Info-Prim Neo reports. On July 6, it's 60 years since the second wave of deportations of Moldovans. The PLDM asks the Chisinau authorities to publicly denounce the deportations mastered by the Soviets in Basarabia. It calls on central and local public authorities to display responsibility in solving the problems of the former deportees, especially in terms of returning their estates, confiscated by the state. “The Moldovan legislation set this task on the shoulders on the local administrations. But the latter ones have no means to compensate the people's losses, neither does the state budget provide anything in this regard,” said Mihai Godea, the first deputy president of the PLDM, at a news conference on July 2. Godea says the PLDM will demand to provide a special article in the state budget in September when the 2010 budget is considered. The PLDM also calls on the Moldovan churches and religious organizations to pray next Sunday for the deportation victims. Vladimir Hotineanu, a candidate on the PLDM's list, born in 1950 in Kazakhstan as his parents were deported there, reproaches the authorities that there is no monument commemorating the deportees from Moldova. “There is only a stone in front of the railway station. Russia and Ukraine condemned the holocaust against their peoples, but we have not done it yet,” Hotineanu said. “Another key dimension of the deportation is the culture of the memory,” said another PLDM candidate, Ghenadie Ciobanu. He says the PLDM will stage meetings in Moldovan localities this month. On July 4, in Orhei, they will erect a monument commemorating the deportees, and on July 6, the Ethnography and History Museum from Soroca will stage an exhibition on this theme.