Gagauzia
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Gagauzia is an autonomous region of Moldova. It has a population of about 135,000 people, 83% of whom are of the Gagauz Turkic ethnic group.
Understand
History
In August 1989, Moldavian (Romanian) was adopted as the official language of the Republic of Moldova, replacing Russian. The Gagauz were also worried about the implications for them if Moldova reunited with Romania, as seemed likely at the time. In August 1990, Comrat declared itself an autonomous republic, but the Moldovan government annulled the declaration as unconstitutional.
Support for the Soviet Union remained high in Gagauzia, with a referendum in March 1991 returning an almost unanimous vote in favour of remaining part of the USSR. Gagauzia declared itself an independent republic on 19 August 1991. But when the Moldovan parliament voted on independence from the Soviet Union on 27 August 1991, six of the 12 Gagauz deputies in the Moldovan parliament voted in favour, while the other six abstained. The Moldovan government began to pay more attention to minority rights.
In 1994, the Parliament of Moldova awarded to "the people of Gagauzia" (through the adoption of the new Constitution of Moldova) the right of "external self-determination". On 23 December 1994, the Parliament of the Republic of Moldova accepted the "Law on the Special Legal Status of Gagauzia", resolving the dispute peacefully. Gagauzia is now a "national-territorial autonomous unit" with three official languages: Romanian, Gagauz, and Russian.
On 2 February 2014, Gagauzia held a referendum. An overwhelming majority of voters opted for closer ties with Russia over integration into the European Union. They also said they preferred the independence of Gagauzia if Moldova chooses to enter the EU.
People
Three cities and 23 communes were included in the Autonomous Gagauz Territory: all localities with more than 50% ethnic Gagauz in population, and those localities with between 40% and 50% Gagauz which expressed their desire by referendum to be included to determine Gagauzia's borders.Geography
Cities
- - The capital of Gagauzia
- - The second-largest city in Gagauzia
Get in
By car
Comrat is 100 km south of Chisinau.It is also possible to get day tours of Moldova from Chisinau that will include a visit to Gagauzia.
By bus
From Chisinau, take a bus to Valea Perjei (1 hr 18 min, every 30 minutes), and change to another bus to Comrat (50 min, every 2 hours).
Visa and borders
Gagauzia is a part of Moldova; no separate visa is requiredSee
- Gagauzia signs