President Voronin talks dirty about opposition and IMF
https://www.ipn.md/en/president-voronin-talks-dirty-about-opposition-and-imf-7965_976274.html
“They should unzip Chirtoaca's slit and put a rat in there. He's a bachelor anyway," said acting Moldovan president Vladimir Voronin, when asked about the dogs and rats problem in Chisinau. The Communists' leader held a news conference on Wednesday, June 24, calling it: “The early elections and the Moldovan statehood,” Info-Prim Neo reports.
Commenting the refusal of the opposition parties to participate in electing the president, Vladimir Voronin has said there had been at least 9 parliamentarians willing to vote: “Urechean agreed, but used to hide in attics. The other day he was as another man, switched off his phones. It was a kind of “Armenian bath” at them: who picks up the soap first."
The president regretted freezing the relations with the International Monetary Fund: “They went away as a woman from her husband who did something bad.” He says the IMF representatives did the same in 2001, when the PCRM came to power, “but they returned four years later, amazed at our successes.” “We managed it, because you were not here,” the head of the state said about the FMI.
Voronin has said the snap elections are “a referendum on the issue of our independence.” He worded a series of rhetorical questions: “Who has cleaved society? Who has misinformed the public opinion from Moldova about the fairness of the recent elections? Who, using the lie and slander in the address of our democracy, took the youth to the square, and then abandoned them? Who has unleashed a campaign of political necrophilia, filling with corpses all the media and blaming the authorities of our country? And again, without any proofs! The only answer to these questions is: This was the Liberal opposition!”
When asked by Info-Prim Neo why it takes so long to perform the investigations on the people's revolt of April 7, Vladimir Voronin has said the question should be forwarded to the general prosecutor. The president appointed a commission to investigate the April 7 events, headed by first deputy speaker Vladimir Turcan. “It's been a long time since I have not asked them what their commission is doing. I forgot to ask Turcan,” the head of the state said. He rejected the idea of holding a big trial on those events, but said “we must know for ourselves who was, how was it, and why those things have happened?”
Tackling the issue of visas for Romanians, Voronin has said they will be abolished only after the EU authorities accept to let the Moldovans to enter the EU without visas, “so that they should not need Romanian passports.” The president has said he is not aware that the EU foreign ministers conditioned the start of the negotiations on the new accord with Moldova, if the latter renounces the visas for the Romanian citizens.