As in previous elections, voting will not take place in Moldova's breakaway region of Transdniester, which de facto has not been under the control of the Moldovan authorities since 1992. The vote is a midterm electoral test for the ruling Communists, who won the general election in 2005. The big prize in the poll is the capital, Chisinau, where the Communist candidate is seen as a favorite to win the post of mayor for the first time, although not from the first round. A runoff will take place on June 17 in constituencies where no candidate has obtained an absolute majority on Sunday.
RFE/RL correspondent Eugen Tomiuc interviewed Ambassador Dieter Boden, the head of the monitoring mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
RFE/RL: It looks like there is a high level of interest on the side of the OSCE and its Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) toward Moldova's local elections. To what extent is the OSCE/ODIHR involved in the monitoring process?
Dieter Boden: This is a major effort that is being undertaken by ODIHR and OSCE. We are fielding at this moment 185 observers over the whole country for the election day. We have a core-team mission of another 15 that has been working here for five weeks here in Chisinau, so altogether there will be a staff of almost 200. In it you also have representatives of embassies and international organizations that have asked to put at our disposal a couple of observers, mostly here, from embassies and organizations in Chisinau, but also from [Romania's capital] Bucharest, for example. So I would say it's a major effort.
RFE/RL: What is the main role of the OSCE monitoring mission in the election?
Boden: It is many-fold. Of course, we tried as much as possible to follow up on the pre-election campaign, so for that purpose we have fielded 12 people as of the beginning of May in six different regions of Moldova, plus 14 here in Chisinau, because for us the election operation is not a one-day operation. It is a process that goes from the election campaign over election day, and also the counting and publication of results, the tabulation, and so on. So we try to follow up on all of this in order to have real, substantive, and solid assessment afterward.
RFE/RL: Have you noticed any irregularities or registered any complaints about how the campaign has been conducted?
Boden: We have registered a couple of things, and we have tried to put them into two interim reports that ODIHR has issued, the last of which came out a couple of days ago.
An OSCE monitor checks a Moldovan newspaper on June 1 (OSCE)