The crisis prompted a question: will the breakaway region, occupied by Russia since 1992, survive without Russian gas?
After depriving Moldavia of gas, Russia has also placed the pro-Russian pro-independence region of Transnistria in an energy ...
The Russian authorities and the leadership of Moldova’s breakaway region of Transnistria are reportedly exploring a plan to ...
In the capital of Transnistria, a Kremlin-backed microstate sandwiched between Moldova and Ukraine, the festive New Year’s ...
Russia plans to resume natural gas flows to Moldova’s pro-Russian breakaway region of Transnistria amid an energy crisis, according to Vadim Krasnoselsky, leader of the self-proclaimed republic.
The head of Moldova’s breakaway region Transnistria has urged residents to burn firewood for heating and warned that ...
Moldova's Supreme Security Council, led by President Maia Sandu, met at the presidential palace in Chisinau to address the ...
Authorities in Moldova's Russian-controlled region of Transnistria announced on Jan. 11 that energy-saving measures have ...
A woman walking on the train lines on Friday in Bender, Transnistria.Credit...Andreea Campeanu for The New York Times Supported by By Andrew Higgins Reporting from Varnita and Chisinau ...
On the first day of the new year, gas supplies from Russia to Moldova's pro-Russian separatist territory were halted. For ...
While Moldova gave up its contractual share of the Russian gas, the remaining 2.06 billion cubic meters of gas was required to meet Transnistria’s internal needs and allow it to produce ...
A humanitarian catastrophe is looming for the 367,000 inhabitants of Transnistria, a region of Moldova living under ...