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Adevărul de Cluj; Brasov.net (online); Brașovul tău; Bună ziua, Ardeal; Bună ziua Brașov; Cosro - Sibiu; Cotidianul obiectiv; Covasna Media; Crișana; Cuvântul ...
Below is a list of newspapers published in Moldova. As of 2016, there were roughly 153 newspapers in Moldova. [1] Adevărul (Romanian) Anticoruptie.md [2] Apropo Magazin (Romanian) Asta Da! (Romanian) Business Info (Romanian) Capitala (Romanian) Contrafort (Romanian) Cuvântul (Romanian) Cuvântul Liber (Romanian) Democraţia (Romanian ...
On 10 January 2018, after the Constitutional Court of Moldova suspended pro-Russia President Igor Dodon's powers on the issues, the pro-E.U. speaker of Moldova's parliament, Andrian Candu, signed a "media propaganda" law effectively banning the rebroadcasting in Moldova of Russian television programs on news, analysis, politics, and military ...
Other entities that declared unification with Romania were the Moldovan Writers' Union on 12 March, [93] [94] the radio station Vocea Basarabiei ("Voice of Bessarabia") [95] and the Liberal Party (PL) of Moldova on 13 March, [96] the National Federation of Farmers of the Republic of Moldova on 16 March, [97] the Hîncești District Council of ...
Between 1903 and 1913, Brasov had thirty convert baptisms, and forty-eight missionaries served in the city. On March 5, 1913, the conference was closed and missionaries were removed from the area. Some contact was made to members between World War I and prior to the star of World War II, but missionary work did not resume until 1990.
Alexandria, Egypt; Brest, France; Callao, Peru; Cartagena, Colombia; Fort Lauderdale, United States; Havana, Cuba; Istanbul, Turkey; İzmir, Turkey; Makassar ...
On 27 August 1991, Romania was the first state to recognise Moldova, which became a member of the UN on 2 March 1992. Romania was the first state to recognise the independent Republic of Moldova – only a few hours, in fact, after the Moldovan Declaration of Independence was issued by the Moldovan parliament.
Moldovan, U.S., and European officials have said that after Moldova was officially granted EU membership candidate status in 2022, Russia began conducting a hybrid war against Moldova with the goal of replacing the pro-Western Moldovan government with a pro-Russian one, [1] [2] this following on from the pro-Russian president Igor Dodon losing his re-election bid in late 2020, triggering ...