Talk:Transnistria: Difference between revisions
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I feel insulted by the way you don't need to comment my edits before reverting them. You remove even the templates that announce discussions. This is like saying that my opinion is completely negligible to you.[[User:Dl.goe|Dl.goe]] 17:40, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
I feel insulted by the way you don't need to comment my edits before reverting them. You remove even the templates that announce discussions. This is like saying that my opinion is completely negligible to you.[[User:Dl.goe|Dl.goe]] 17:40, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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Don't worry I'm here also and this article seems like full of russian propaganda.--[[User:Diana Teodorescu|Diana Teodorescu]] 17:41, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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: ''Happy to see the article is equally repudiated by all extremes!'' [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3ATransnistria&diff=94282531&oldid=94281200] [[User:Jamason|jamason]] 18:17, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
: ''Happy to see the article is equally repudiated by all extremes!'' [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3ATransnistria&diff=94282531&oldid=94281200] [[User:Jamason|jamason]] 18:17, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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Your version is worse, look at what you did, http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 this is vandalism, I have no opinion on this, but I will stop vandalism and I have to revert this, I am sorry, but you are damaging the article and you have not agreement from the rest. [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 18:14, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
Your version is worse, look at what you did, http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 this is vandalism, I have no opinion on this, but I will stop vandalism and I have to revert this, I am sorry, but you are damaging the article and you have not agreement from the rest. [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 18:14, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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I'm sorry. From your perspectives it may be seen as vandalism but from my point of view is not. How can be vandalism be vandalism this "The breakaway region, the self-declared republic of Transnistria"? And as I seen in the history of the page I have agreement with my changes. Following the discussions above I see that allegations of POV are still made by various users regarding certain passages of the text. These fierce disputes are often based on minor problems, yet they tend to escalate into broad conflicts were users spend the majority of their time insulting their opponents. As this article is as yet far from complete, my personal view is that we should focus on adding relevant and correct information to the article, rather than get distracted by minor disagreements. It would perhaps be better if changes to existing text due to accusations of biased would be made less often, so as to permit us to discuss these problems and remove POV. Wikipedia explains that articles should be written in such a way that no one can disagree with it. --[[User:Diana Teodorescu|Diana Teodorescu]] 18:19, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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: Was that all you did, no it was not, look at the mess you made http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 and sorry if I offend, but this http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 is vandalism, you can not go around and do this and not discuss it first with anyone, you have never worked on this page before, I admit, I do not do a lot here but I have been here longer than you and everyone is always fighting.. [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 18:22, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
: Was that all you did, no it was not, look at the mess you made http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 and sorry if I offend, but this http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 is vandalism, you can not go around and do this and not discuss it first with anyone, you have never worked on this page before, I admit, I do not do a lot here but I have been here longer than you and everyone is always fighting.. [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 18:22, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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::I agree that discussions have to be kept here. But I am not sure that the article has to please everyone. I think what's more important is that the article reflects the truth which is the purpose of any encyclopedia. About the change proposed, you see, even "The Republic of Transnistria..." is a little problematic since it’s not just a “republic”. After my changes it looks better now. I've edited the article somewhat. It's a little hard for those who claim that the article is not neutral to make a harder case since it's hard for them to come up with actual evidence to support that. Untill now this article is full of crap. Russian propaganda crap, like what a beautiful country and what a normal country Transnistria it is. Sometimes facts are painful for some and satisfactory for others. It may look like my version its written from a Romanian point of view, I give you that. But then again it only looks so. Does that really mean it is? Likewise, it is very hard to talk about the Stalinist or Communist points of view and take them seriously when you never lived in this country or system. Is it so?--[[User:Diana Teodorescu|Diana Teodorescu]] 18:32, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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Pernambuco, you deleted important paragraphs without a valid explanation. Diana is not a vandal, she mainly restored deleted information. Same with me and Dl.goe. You are the one who creates a mess here.--[[User:MariusM|MariusM]] 18:37, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
Pernambuco, you deleted important paragraphs without a valid explanation. Diana is not a vandal, she mainly restored deleted information. Same with me and Dl.goe. You are the one who creates a mess here.--[[User:MariusM|MariusM]] 18:37, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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: "Diana is not a vandal". Sorry, buddy: Diana is Bonaparte. You can hardly get more vandalistic than that. - [[User:William Mauco|Mauco]] 01:29, 30 December 2006 (UTC) |
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: Will you look at the link, just http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 and then see what went wrong, and do not accuse me of making a mess, like I said, I have made one single edit to the page, and that was on 23 of december, and all the rest of the time, I have only saved it from extremists who went and changed it without making a discussion first, if you want to defend these changes, then discuss them first, otherwise I will keep doing my job. I almost never edit here and I never take sides, but i have to defend Wikipedia, that comes first, so please review these two versions and tell me which one is best. You and Diana and DI.goe will not even allow Trasnistria to have each own links, what is that all about, I thought that this was already voted on? Where are the links now? [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 18:45, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
: Will you look at the link, just http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 and then see what went wrong, and do not accuse me of making a mess, like I said, I have made one single edit to the page, and that was on 23 of december, and all the rest of the time, I have only saved it from extremists who went and changed it without making a discussion first, if you want to defend these changes, then discuss them first, otherwise I will keep doing my job. I almost never edit here and I never take sides, but i have to defend Wikipedia, that comes first, so please review these two versions and tell me which one is best. You and Diana and DI.goe will not even allow Trasnistria to have each own links, what is that all about, I thought that this was already voted on? Where are the links now? [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 18:45, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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:I also changed the name with the romanian one, after all Transnistria has a Romanian majority as the most populous single ethnic group.--[[User:Diana Teodorescu|Diana Teodorescu]] 18:42, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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That is crazy, this is English wikipedia, you should use english names, see this article here [[Nistru]], it reverts to [[Dniester]] so you can not just change the names like that, you should ask for permission first. I do not want to take sides but I have to stop this extremism, please ask one of the administrators what they think of this, and who is making a complete mess ...... [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 18:45, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
That is crazy, this is English wikipedia, you should use english names, see this article here [[Nistru]], it reverts to [[Dniester]] so you can not just change the names like that, you should ask for permission first. I do not want to take sides but I have to stop this extremism, please ask one of the administrators what they think of this, and who is making a complete mess ...... [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 18:45, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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::I'm sorry. You take it too personaly, maybe you have to know that Wikipedia makes no assertions as to whether that should or should not be the case; it just states the claims of each side, in this case the Romanian name of Nistru River. I know you have strong opinions on this, but we report the claims of both sides on Wikipedia as opposed to declaring that one side or the other is right; this is the basis of the neutral point of view policy. --[[User:Diana Teodorescu|Diana Teodorescu]] 18:51, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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:::Nobody should take this personally. Is not really important if we call Dniester or Nistru, we have more important content issues in this article.--[[User:MariusM|MariusM]] 19:16, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
:::Nobody should take this personally. Is not really important if we call Dniester or Nistru, we have more important content issues in this article.--[[User:MariusM|MariusM]] 19:16, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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::::: in my opinion it is important, this is English wikipedia, use English names, or I will edit in Brazilian (Portuguese) wikipedia and you can edit in Romanian or Russian, or what it is, but in English, use the names that are used in English... [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 19:32, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
::::: in my opinion it is important, this is English wikipedia, use English names, or I will edit in Brazilian (Portuguese) wikipedia and you can edit in Romanian or Russian, or what it is, but in English, use the names that are used in English... [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 19:32, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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::::::I'm sorry, but we have the right to use Romanian name, after all Romanians are the largest single ethnic group in Transnistria.--[[User:Diana Teodorescu|Diana Teodorescu]] 19:43, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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::::::: I admit that I am new, but so are you, and we are not the experts, it is best to wait until some of the more experienced users appear again, and let us hear their opinion, but my impression from what I read in the news is that Transnistria is Russian speaking, that most of the people in that region of Moldova speak russian and not romanian or moldavian. But it does not matter, this is English wikipedia so please use the English names [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 19:53, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
::::::: I admit that I am new, but so are you, and we are not the experts, it is best to wait until some of the more experienced users appear again, and let us hear their opinion, but my impression from what I read in the news is that Transnistria is Russian speaking, that most of the people in that region of Moldova speak russian and not romanian or moldavian. But it does not matter, this is English wikipedia so please use the English names [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] 19:53, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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It doesn't really matter, though, does it? As Pernambuco already stated, this is an English-language article and "Dniester" is English standard. [[User:Jamason|jamason]] 19:59, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
It doesn't really matter, though, does it? As Pernambuco already stated, this is an English-language article and "Dniester" is English standard. [[User:Jamason|jamason]] 19:59, 29 December 2006 (UTC) |
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: I am not understanding, who is the vandal, I need to know if it is me who is being called a vandal? because I never deleted a single paragraph from the article, I just took your border section and moved it into the right place. The other edits that you complain about was done by other people, for instance, this new user Diana who registered yesterday, she has removed half of the article without any discussion, and I agree with you, like you say, this is vandalism, we have to revert it to save the article. - <small>—The preceding [[Wikipedia:Sign your posts on talk pages|unsigned]] comment was added by [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] ([[User talk:Pernambuco|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Pernambuco|contribs]]) 20:04, 29 December 2006 (UTC).</small><!-- HagermanBot Auto-Unsigned --> |
: I am not understanding, who is the vandal, I need to know if it is me who is being called a vandal? because I never deleted a single paragraph from the article, I just took your border section and moved it into the right place. The other edits that you complain about was done by other people, for instance, this new user Diana who registered yesterday, she has removed half of the article without any discussion, and I agree with you, like you say, this is vandalism, we have to revert it to save the article. - <small>—The preceding [[Wikipedia:Sign your posts on talk pages|unsigned]] comment was added by [[User:Pernambuco|Pernambuco]] ([[User talk:Pernambuco|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Pernambuco|contribs]]) 20:04, 29 December 2006 (UTC).</small><!-- HagermanBot Auto-Unsigned --> |
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Pernambuco, MariusM will not answer you. He accused you of being a vandal and then defended Bonaparte, the worst vandal of all. - [[User:William Mauco|Mauco]] 01:29, 30 December 2006 (UTC) |
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== Human Rights== |
== Human Rights== |
Revision as of 01:29, 30 December 2006
This is the talk page for discussing improvements to the Transnistria article. This is not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject. |
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Internal Politics
To counterbalance the BHHRG reference, I'll be adding a counter of the alternate (and referenced) view that democracy is "faked" in the PMR. — Pēters J. Vecrumba 04:46, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- Will you? Please explain and discuss. - Mauco 05:03, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- We've discussed at length that the BHHRG is not a reputable source, yet it's cited in the politics section to lend credence to there being a real parliament and real political "opposition". This section needs to be far more balanced than it is currently. Rather than simply insist the BHHRG reference come out, I'm thinking more a (brief since it's the summary article) point/counterpoint summary of the "opposing" viewpoints. — Pēters J. Vecrumba 17:13, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- OK, I see. You side with the argument that the 2005/2006 changes amount to a "Potemkin democracy". Similar charge is often levelled against Russia. There are some who say the same about the USA since the major parties are in agreement on major policy issues. Under this view, when applied to Transnistria, the only real opposition would be Safonov (who was the sole candidate out of four in advocating unification with Moldova). He got around 3% of the vote.
- We used to have an older source, from a 2005 EU document, which referred to PMR as moving towards more openness and pluralism. This was evident to the EU report (authored by a Moldovan, by the way) already back then, before the creation of the new parties and the rifts between parliament and Smirnov. - Mauco 17:50, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- OK, I see. You side with the argument that the 2005/2006 changes amount to a "Potemkin democracy". Similar charge is often levelled against Russia. There are some who say the same about the USA since the major parties are in agreement on major policy issues. Under this view, when applied to Transnistria, the only real opposition would be Safonov (who was the sole candidate out of four in advocating unification with Moldova). He got around 3% of the vote.
Intro Poll
As we are discussing how to best preent the introduction to the article, numerous perspectives have been presented and various users have displayed contrasting preferences. In order to determine whether a consensus exists or to limit the viable number of choices in order to seek a final compromise, I propose this poll where all editors can give his view. The choices are the versions labeled 1-5 by William and the introduction. In order to give a more general idea of what versions could be reconciled, please vote Prefered for the version you like best and Acceptable for the ones you can accept with minor modifications. TSO1D 00:01, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Are you sure that this is a good idea? I'll join you in a vote, of course, but I still have ugly memories of all the sockpuppetry and vote-shopping that took place when we tried this approach for the external links. Voting is evil. ;-) - Mauco 00:12, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Well, I don't mean for this to be a vote, just a quick poll to see where everyone stands. Participation is of course voluntary and the results will not be conclusive. In fact I doubt there will be a solid consensus either way, but I just want to know what all users think. It is difficult to follow the multiple threads that run all over the page and I hoped that having a brief indication from all active editors here might give a better overview of the situation. Even WP:POLL states that this method is sometimes useful for a quick summary. I hope no one will take this too seriously (especially to the point of using socks). TSO1D 00:18, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- As you can see below, other users don't have the clear head that you do on this. They already misinterpreted this as having to choose one, rather than commenting on the various. If this is a content dispute, then let us follow WP:DR and you will see that a vote or a poll is just about the worst way to handle things. Our overriding principle HAS TO BE factual accuracy. When it comes to factual accuracy, I am afraid to note that we have users (on both sides) who often fall short of this goal. I really don't think you are handling this the right way, TSO1D. - Mauco 12:55, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Well, I see that many users haven't read (or chose not to follow) the guidelines I proposed, however what I wrote was more of a suggestion than a rigid set of parameters. As for the unkind responses that are exchanged between some of the users, that has been the case for a long time on this page and I don't think the voting exacerbated the problem, just opened a new arena for the frustration to be vented. However, I fully agree with you, factual accuracy should be the key principle. Of course we cannot vote on facts, and that really wasn't my intention. If the majority would favor a version that is factually incorrect I would still oppose it. However, I believe the facts are pretty much agreed upon by everyone, it is just their presentation that is an issue of contention. I just wanted to see where everyone stood, and in spite of the numerous problems that are inherent to such a poll, I believe the mechanism was effective in giving a glance of all the users' views. I actually don't fully agree with any of the versions presented, and I believe furhter changes will be needed to be introduced before a final version can be found. However, in spite of all the negative comments on the page, many constructive ideas have been put forward that we can use to create a better introduction. TSO1D 22:19, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- As you can see below, other users don't have the clear head that you do on this. They already misinterpreted this as having to choose one, rather than commenting on the various. If this is a content dispute, then let us follow WP:DR and you will see that a vote or a poll is just about the worst way to handle things. Our overriding principle HAS TO BE factual accuracy. When it comes to factual accuracy, I am afraid to note that we have users (on both sides) who often fall short of this goal. I really don't think you are handling this the right way, TSO1D. - Mauco 12:55, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
Current Version
Transnistria (officially Pridnestrovie) is a region of the Republic of Moldova in southeastern Europe which declared its independence on September 2, 1990. Its de facto independence has not been recognized and its sovereignty remains an issue of contention.
- Acceptable it is concise, but maybe a little biased. TSO1D 12:41, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Acceptable, but the name Pridnestrovie is official only for PMR. Insted of "officially Pridnestrovie" we should write "named also Pridnestrovie"--MariusM 13:59, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Ok, now I understand some other of your edits. What you say is that we need a disambig page, with PMR on one side, and the geographical region on the other. I fully agree. Dpotop 15:12, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- The only acceptable yet. It may be improved to
Transnistria is internationally considered a region of the Republic of Moldova, in southeastern Europe, which declared its independence on September 2, 1990 (proclaiming itself Pridnestrovie). Its de facto independence has not been recognized and its sovereignty remains an issue of contention.
We should first say how they are internationally considered and second how they call themselves (the first is the opinion of a bigger entity). It is not Wikipedia's role to say what Transnistria is. All we have to do is to inform the reader.Dl.goe 15:15, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Acceptable nice and short EvilAlex 17:43, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Acceptable -- technically, what happened on September 2, 1990 was that the Trans-Dniester Moldovan SSR (PMSSR) declared itself a separate republic as a subject of the USSR--a declaration which on December 22, 1990 was declared invalid and illegal de jure by the Soviet Union. So, I would propose the following as a completely factually accurate description (no interpretation of events, no imbuing of events with personal POVs of their significance):
- Transnistria (also named Pridnestrovie) is a region of the Republic of Moldova in southeastern Europe which declared its sovereignty as a separate republic within the USSR on September 2, 1990. Its de facto independence subsequent to the fall of the Soviet Union has not been recognized, and its sovereignty and the continued presence of Russian military forces there remain issues of contention. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:15, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- I've contributed 8 and 9 below, not wanting to be the one pushing this into the "double digits." :-) —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:43, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Transnistria (also named Pridnestrovie) is a region of the Republic of Moldova in southeastern Europe which declared its sovereignty as a separate republic within the USSR on September 2, 1990. Its de facto independence subsequent to the fall of the Soviet Union has not been recognized, and its sovereignty and the continued presence of Russian military forces there remain issues of contention. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:15, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable Transnistria is a free and independent country and all the edits in the world cannot change some peoples dream that some day it may become a region of Moldova, but until that day comes we must call it what it is. Mark us street 22:24, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- It is not free and independent as long as Russian troops remain, having started with transplanting into Moldova the OMONs who failed in retaining the Baltics for the Soviet Union, having propped up a leadership which has not changed since the inception (and which rushed to the defense on the side of the Soviet Union subsequent to the putsch and has been associated with the most "Soviet" members of the Russian Duma). Once the PMR is truly free, then it can choose what it wants to be. That is not today. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:15, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mark Street, there is a difference between the de facto reality and the de jure assumption. De facto, Transnistria is an unrecognized country. No doubt about it. No ifs, or buts. De jure, it may or may not be a region of Moldova. But please notice the clever phrasing of the entry above: "is internationally considered a region of" is not the same as saying "is a region of". It is a technicality, but if we are splitting hairs here, then technically, the above entry is correct. Most countries still cling to the legal fiction (de jure) that Transnistria is part of Moldova. The fiction is of course not supported by reality, but the proposal above uses the word "considered" and that is factually correct at this point in time. - Mauco 22:35, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- i disagree with many of your statements in particular I disagree that: "De facto, Transnistria is an unrecognized country." It is utterly wrong, Transnistria currently under De facto military occupation of Russian federation. And that is why majority of government officials are not native born Transnistrians. EvilAlex 22:53, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- The Russian troops you refer to are borderguards that are there in small numbers as part of a multinational peace-keeping mission, Thankfully, PMR is not under the military occupation of anyone. Mark us street 23:48, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- The so called peace-keepers composed of of Operational Ground Forces of 14th Russian army, a military force that have been trained for offense action and not for peace-keeping mission. No one seems to agree that that thy are peace-keepers except Russia. EvilAlex 00:03, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- The Russian troops you refer to are borderguards that are there in small numbers as part of a multinational peace-keeping mission, Thankfully, PMR is not under the military occupation of anyone. Mark us street 23:48, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- i disagree with many of your statements in particular I disagree that: "De facto, Transnistria is an unrecognized country." It is utterly wrong, Transnistria currently under De facto military occupation of Russian federation. And that is why majority of government officials are not native born Transnistrians. EvilAlex 22:53, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- But they not undertaking the 'offensive action' you state they are trained for, their role is that of maintaining the peace. The lack of casualties must surely stand as testament to that.Pompey64 23:13, 11 December 2006 (UTC)pompey64 23:10, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
- Re "their role is that of maintaining the peace". Against whom? In 1992 Moldavian government fought a war with Russian 14th army. Moldavian government didn’t fight against its own people. Why do you think the villages near Dubossary rebelled for? It there haven’t been a 14th Russian army then there would not be a war. And no the "peace" to maintain. EvilAlex 01:10, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
- "Lack of casualties" is an assumption on your part that hostilities would break out. I offer you the alternate assumption that freedom would break out. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 03:23, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
- Are the reductions in numbers not worthy of note?Pompey64 17:44, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- Are they keeping the peace? Yes. Then they are peacekeepers, ipso facto. It is a very effective peacekeeping operation when you compare to Kosovo, for instance, or Abkhazia. Lots of lives lost there, no lives lost in Transnistria. I am sure that lots of conflict areas around the world would actually love to have this kind of "military occupation" especially when you consider what went before it: The 1992 attacks by Moldova. - Mauco 17:12, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- To you, Mauco as well: "Peace" and "lack of casualties" is purely an assumption on your part that hostilities would break out. I also offer you the alternate assumption that freedom would break out. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 03:25, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
- They are not keeping peace they have divided the nation and they keep as apart. They are Nation dividers ipso facto !!!. EvilAlex 19:27, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mauco-the Russians are propping up the Transnistrian regime, having engaged in military action against the Moldovans on the side of the Transnistrians at every opportunity [even according to Charles King in THE MOLDOVANS, a source you respect] and remaining there long after they agreed to leave. The Moldovans did not start the violence in Transnistria, the Transnistrians raiding Russian weapons stores did.
- Mark-if the Russians are so minor a presence, being mere border guards (and what are they guarding against, exactly?), why can't they just leave? The Transnistrian military is already run by a defected Russian army officer, much of their military are already defected Russian soldiers, they already have the best in Soviet/Russian arms. The Russian presence is there at this point only to deliver the message of who is in charge--not to Moldova, but to the Transnistrians. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 15:27, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- "...the Moldovan defeat in Bender marked the climax of the conflict. From the outset, the Moldovans were both outmanned and outgunned. The hastily organized national army consisted mainly of former police officers or interior ministry forces equipped with mortars, armored personnel carriers, and antitank weaponry. The DMR forces, by contrast, had at their disposal T-64 and T-72 tanks, Grad and Alazan rocket systems, trained specialists from the Fourteenth army, and Cossack volunteers." Charles King, The Moldovans, just about the only source we've agreed on here so far. The number of Russian troops is down but still numbers in the thousands. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 03:08, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
- Acceptable--Euthymios 17:09, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- AcceptableJonathanpops 21:42, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
Version 1
Transnistria (officially Pridnestrovie) is a de facto unrecognized country and de jure region of the Republic of Moldova in southeastern Europe which declared its independence on September 2 1990. To date its de facto independence has not been recognized and its sovereignty remains an issue of contention.
- Any version with the word "country" is unacceptable.--MariusM 23:05, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Agree with MaruisM, unacceptable —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:20, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Acceptable If de jure comes first and ATU is mentioned. TSO1D 12:41, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Agree with TSO1D. This is OK but infeiror to #4. --Robdurbar 17:05, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable Transnistria is a free and independent country and is not a region of Moldova. Mark us street 22:26, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- De facto, it certainly isn't. But, de jure, maybe it is a region of Moldova. However, this depends. International law has a long and well documented set of definitions of what constitutes a country. Take a look at the Montevideo Convention, for instance, but it should be noted that this is far from the only source which supports the conclusion that under international law, Transnistria is already a country. We can of course modify the statement by calling it an unrecognized country, which is what Wikipedia does on all the lists, but it is still a country nevertheless. Like it or not. - Mauco 22:30, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Montevideo convention was signed only by few countries from America. None European country ever signed Montevideo convention and Moldova also didn't sign it.--MariusM 23:05, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- It is totally unacceptable for me to accept the words 'unrecognised country' It is like calling someone an 'unrecognised person' Transnistria is a free and sovereign independent country and I can accept no less. I understand Moldova's aspirations and I am willing to accomodate them but not to this point. Mark us street 22:59, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Montevideo convention was signed only by few countries from America. None European country ever signed Montevideo convention and Moldova also didn't sign it.--MariusM 23:05, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- De facto, it certainly isn't. But, de jure, maybe it is a region of Moldova. However, this depends. International law has a long and well documented set of definitions of what constitutes a country. Take a look at the Montevideo Convention, for instance, but it should be noted that this is far from the only source which supports the conclusion that under international law, Transnistria is already a country. We can of course modify the statement by calling it an unrecognized country, which is what Wikipedia does on all the lists, but it is still a country nevertheless. Like it or not. - Mauco 22:30, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- In Wikipedia we don't need your acceptance.--MariusM 23:05, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mark, I will not be as rude as MariusM, but he is right. Your opinion is, of course, valued, but neither you nor me nor MariusM can impose ourselves. Yes, it is indeed a travesty that they are unrecognized, and this makes them second class citizens compared to the rest of us. Your own publication wrote about that problem already: "Imagine living in a country which is not on the map: You can't travel, because officially, you are stateless. Your country is not recognized and your vote, if you want to cast it, is called illegal by some of your closest neighbors. That's life for the inhabitants of Pridnestrovie (also known as Transnistria), a self-proclaimed country between Moldova and Ukraine - but whose 16 year old claim to independence is recognized by neither of the two, and whose borders are subject to what in the eyes of the Transnistrians amount to an economic blockade aimed at forcing them to their knees and to shatter their dreams of statehood."
- I agree that it is sad that there is not yet a permanent status settlement with Moldova, one way or the other.
- However, having said that, we must also realize that Wikipedia already uses the term "unrecognized country" to define Transnistria and a number of other states. If you don't like the term, then go to the various lists (in particular the 3 main ones) and argue your case for why the phrasing should be different. Until it changes, however, we can unilaterally adopt one phrasing here and ignore what a bunch of editors from the rest of Wikipedia has already worked hard to determine that these things should be called. I am sorry that you do not like "unrecognized country" but it is the current term in use. - Mauco 23:09, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Politely, He is not right and either are you, we are not an unrecognised country, we are a new country whose diplomatic status is emerging, calling us 'unrecognised' is a slur on our hard fought freedom. Mark us street 23:20, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mark, please don't take my comment the wrong way, but why do keep saying "we" in reference to Transnistira? I though you were Irish and were just working as a reporter there. I don't mean this in a bad way, I am simply curious. TSO1D 23:53, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- I reside in Transnistria, I have lived in many countries, I am not here to discuss me or my life. Mark us street 00:06, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mark, this is not the forum for these kind of discussions, so sorry, but I have heard from a source in Transnistria that you only reside there part of the time and that they haven't seen you there in over two weeks now. If you will be there for this weekend's election then please see if you can post some photographs under GFDL because I asked Kramar about the same and we still don't have any really good pictures. - Mauco 17:09, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- I reside in Transnistria, I have lived in many countries, I am not here to discuss me or my life. Mark us street 00:06, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mark, please don't take my comment the wrong way, but why do keep saying "we" in reference to Transnistira? I though you were Irish and were just working as a reporter there. I don't mean this in a bad way, I am simply curious. TSO1D 23:53, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Politely, He is not right and either are you, we are not an unrecognised country, we are a new country whose diplomatic status is emerging, calling us 'unrecognised' is a slur on our hard fought freedom. Mark us street 23:20, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mark, I will not be as rude as MariusM, but he is right. Your opinion is, of course, valued, but neither you nor me nor MariusM can impose ourselves. Yes, it is indeed a travesty that they are unrecognized, and this makes them second class citizens compared to the rest of us. Your own publication wrote about that problem already: "Imagine living in a country which is not on the map: You can't travel, because officially, you are stateless. Your country is not recognized and your vote, if you want to cast it, is called illegal by some of your closest neighbors. That's life for the inhabitants of Pridnestrovie (also known as Transnistria), a self-proclaimed country between Moldova and Ukraine - but whose 16 year old claim to independence is recognized by neither of the two, and whose borders are subject to what in the eyes of the Transnistrians amount to an economic blockade aimed at forcing them to their knees and to shatter their dreams of statehood."
- I'm there as often as I need to be but I can be moved about as things happen , goes with the job Mark us street 17:34, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, I know other journalists too. They do travel. At least we can consider you a much more authentic source for Transnistria's point of view than EvilAlex who is a Moldovan, and who lives in England, and whose views on this issue are in complete contrast to will of the vast majority of the voters who actually reside in Transnistria. - Mauco 17:46, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable Transnistria is not a country. Transnistria is a region in Moldova under Russian military occupation. EvilAlex 20:12, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable--Euthymios 17:09, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Version 2
Transnistria (officially Pridnestrovie) is an unrecognized country in Southeastern Europe which declared its independence from Moldova on September 2, 1990. Its de facto independence has not been recognized and the sovereignty of Transnistria is an issue of contention.
- unacceptable.--MariusM 13:59, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Agree with MaruisM, unacceptable —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:22, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable PMR never declared its independence from Moldova. PMR existed first. Mark us street 22:27, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Moldova existed as Moldovan SSR, a republic with right of secession according both Soviet and Moldovan SSR constitution. Transnistria didn't have any right of secession.--MariusM 23:09, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Sources, please. MariusM, you are wrong. Please show us the appropiate sections in the two documents which you cite. You will discover (no doubt to your surprise) that the "secession" of Moldova was illegal, according to Soviet law. So was the secession of Transnistria. They were BOTH wrong. You are wholly incorrect if you think that somehow Moldova's secession was legal, and Transnistria's wasn't. It may help that you read the actual legislation which was current at the time before you hold yourself out as a legal expert on Soviet law. - Mauco 23:14, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- I myself am no expert, however as the article the Soviet Union here states: "Even though Soviet Constitutions established the right for a republic to secede, it remained theoretical and very unlikely, given Soviet centralism, until the 1991 collapse of the Union." In fact, Article 72 stipulated: "Each Union Republic shall retain the right freely to secede from the USSR". The central authorities of course did not like the turn of events in 1990/1991 and tried to stem the independence of the Baltic states and later other republics, however in the end the constitutional principle was upheld and even Russia, Ukraine and other core states "seceded". So in a way, yes, Moldova's secession was legal under the framework of the USSR, whereas Transnistria's wasn't. TSO1D 23:26, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- As you say you are no expert, and even if that argument held a drop of water 'in a way' sadly we are unable to facilitate 'in a way' arguements on this issue but I do really thank you for trying to assist. Mark us street 23:41, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- I myself am no expert, however as the article the Soviet Union here states: "Even though Soviet Constitutions established the right for a republic to secede, it remained theoretical and very unlikely, given Soviet centralism, until the 1991 collapse of the Union." In fact, Article 72 stipulated: "Each Union Republic shall retain the right freely to secede from the USSR". The central authorities of course did not like the turn of events in 1990/1991 and tried to stem the independence of the Baltic states and later other republics, however in the end the constitutional principle was upheld and even Russia, Ukraine and other core states "seceded". So in a way, yes, Moldova's secession was legal under the framework of the USSR, whereas Transnistria's wasn't. TSO1D 23:26, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Sources, please. MariusM, you are wrong. Please show us the appropiate sections in the two documents which you cite. You will discover (no doubt to your surprise) that the "secession" of Moldova was illegal, according to Soviet law. So was the secession of Transnistria. They were BOTH wrong. You are wholly incorrect if you think that somehow Moldova's secession was legal, and Transnistria's wasn't. It may help that you read the actual legislation which was current at the time before you hold yourself out as a legal expert on Soviet law. - Mauco 23:14, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- We cover this below. The specific USSR legal framework governing the actual secession process is the USSR Law on Secession and according to that law, Moldova (which had the right to secession) DID NOT follow any of the specifics, such as a prior referendum. So its secession was illegal. Transnistria (which did not have the right to secession) DID follow some of the specifics, like the referendum referendum. This is why Transnistria (on Pridnestrovie.net, for instance) claims that their secession was legal. This is, however, quite debatable. I am sure that most serious academics will conclude that they were BOTH illegal, albeit for different reasons. - Mauco 17:06, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable Transnistria is not a country. Transnistria is a region in Moldova under Russian military occupation. EvilAlex 20:13, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable--Euthymios 17:09, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Version 3
Transnistria' (officially Pridnestrovie), located in southeastern Europe, declared its independence on September 2 1990. To date its de facto independence has not been recognized and its sovereignty remains an issue of contention.
- Weak Acceptable Needs revision Mark us street 22:18, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- I agree with Mark, the version should mention that Transnistria is formally part of Moldova. TSO1D 22:29, 7 December 2006 (UTC)....Or formally free and independent, let's be precise and work together. Mark us street 22:51, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable.--MariusM 23:10, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Why? Is there anything wrong or factually incorrect in this version? Or do you just want to oppose everything that Mark Street favors? That is called obstructiomism. Let us instead try to be constructive, and work together, please. - Mauco 23:15, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable too short and confusing EvilAlex 20:15, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable, no mention of Moldova. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:24, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable--Euthymios 17:10, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Version 4
Transnistria (officially Pridnestrovie) is a region in Southeastern Europe that is internationally recognized as an autonomous territorial unit of the Republic of Moldova, however de facto functions as an unrecognized country having declared its independence from Moldova on September 2, 1990. Its independence has not been recognized and the sovereignty of Transnistria is an issue of contention.
- Conditional Support of this version - but re WP:LEAD a page such as this really ought to have a two or three paragraph intro. So I would support this as the first paragraph. --Robdurbar 09:49, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Conditional Support of this version, with the provision that it states not everyone refuses to recognize Tansnistria's claim, if this is the case. Jonathanpops 11:30, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Can you be more specific, please? I do not understand what you would like to add to the current version. Dpotop 12:39, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Prefered Version As I said before, I still like this version best. TSO1D 12:41, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- This is not acceptable for me, Transnistria is an independent country, it is NOT a territorial unit of Moldova, Also we never declared our independence from Moldova, we existed as a country before Moldova. existed Mark us street 12:30, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mark, do as everybody does, and write Support or Oppose. Pleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeease Dpotop 12:40, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- No, Dpotop. This is not a vote. See what TSO1D says above. He merely put it in here in order to facilitate discussion, and it can in no way be a beauty contest where personal preferences (yours, Mark's, or anyone's else) override factual accuracy. Facts are facts. - Mauco 12:57, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Weak Support - Not being completely factual, it seems to be NPOV w.r.t. the users editing here. It contains the actual factual information: declared independence, but not recognized by others. It also contains the POV that Mark and Mauco are pushing ("unrecognized country"). Dpotop 12:39, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Please get your facts straight, Dpotop. I am not pushing a POV. I am asking that our phrasing on THIS page adheres to the SAME phrasing that Wikipedia is using on OTHER PAGES AND LISTS where Transnistria appears. I think it was User:Pernambuco who originally advocated that we needed consistency (see archives) on all lists, and this is merely what I am agreeing with. If you don't like the wording "unrecognized country" - which is factually correct, and all the rest of Wikipedia uses it - then change those lists first, there, instead of fighting to censor the phrase from this page, here. - Mauco 13:01, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- As long as this is the page of Transnistria, the rest of Wikipedia uses/will use the same words we agree on here. We shouldn't invoke secondary pages when we are writing the main one on the subject.Dl.goe 13:55, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- What you are asking was not agreed by other editors. Wikipedia has lower standards that Britanica or other encyclopedias, we should improve those standards.--MariusM 13:59, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- As long as this is the page of Transnistria, the rest of Wikipedia uses/will use the same words we agree on here. We shouldn't invoke secondary pages when we are writing the main one on the subject.Dl.goe 13:55, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- I beg to differ. Wikipedia is much, much better than Britanica when it comes to Transnistria, and several other subjects too. Start by comparing basic facts (such as population figures) and then tell us who is right and who is wrong. You can't rely on Britanica for research on Transnistria, sorry. Too many errors there. - Mauco 16:18, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- We have an other area of disagreement. Wikipedia have the advantage of being able to include quickly recent info, but Britanica is less exposed to POV pushers. However, if we are looking for Wikipedia standards, we should look at South Ossetia and Abkhazia articles.--MariusM 16:25, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- I beg to differ. Wikipedia is much, much better than Britanica when it comes to Transnistria, and several other subjects too. Start by comparing basic facts (such as population figures) and then tell us who is right and who is wrong. You can't rely on Britanica for research on Transnistria, sorry. Too many errors there. - Mauco 16:18, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable. Too long.--MariusM 13:59, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- According to MariusM. Not according to WP:LEAD. May I remind everyone that our personal opinions don't matter much if WP policies and guidelines specify something else. - Mauco 16:18, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- May I remind you that you are not in the position of teaching others about WP policies and guidelines?--MariusM 16:25, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- According to MariusM. Not according to WP:LEAD. May I remind everyone that our personal opinions don't matter much if WP policies and guidelines specify something else. - Mauco 16:18, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Ouch. That was rude. Be civil, please. All of us can read, buddy. I suggest that you read WP:LEAD before you claim that this version is too long. That is all. - Mauco 16:28, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- This page has 34 000 characters. As a rough guide, we should be having one paragraph per 10 000 characters. So to be honest this is a good 'first paragraph' of an intro. But more context is still needed it in one or two following paragraphs. I don't think those are key at the moment, by the way... they could be added once the first bit becomes stable. But to say this is too long is to say that pretty much every single introduction on Wikipedia is too long. --Robdurbar 17:01, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable
- Where does autonomous territorial unit ideea come from?
- "It is recognised as... however de facto funcions... " is highly biased.Dl.goe 19:26, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Autonomous territorial unit is the offical status of the region in Moldovan legislation (there is a source in the political status section). TSO1D 20:54, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable . Mark us street 22:15, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mark, your vote is like the kiss of death. Now that you've declared what is unacceptable to you, you will get half a dozen Romanians come out of the woodwork - people who normally never join in the discussions like the regulars here - just to oppose you. Your enemies here will make sure of that, through the same kind of collusion that we've seen in the past on issues. Emails and private messages are being sent behind the scenes as I write this. This is why a vote or a poll won't work. A case like this should be decided on the facts, and on the facts alone. It should not be determined on who can muster the highest amount of friends to come to his rescue on a given POV. - Mauco 22:19, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- You can never oppose the truth. I will accept the truth and not one word less. I am not trying to trample on Romanian dreams, I want a precise, scientific and sharply accurate non-POV intro. Let's call it what is and not what people dream it should or could be. I believe we can reach that point. .Mark us street 22:35, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- I know, Mark, but Moldova is a larger country than Transnistria. It should be no surprise to you that there are plenty of people here who want to keep the illusion alive, even if it is totally disconnected from reality. The number of Moldovan voices will always outnumber the number of Transnistrian voices, so you can't ask for a vote or a popularity contest on which intro is best. It should be decided ONLY objectively and ONLY based on facts. No POV influence, for or against. - Mauco 23:20, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable Dont like it. EvilAlex 20:14, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable, not a country. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:26, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Acceptable--Euthymios 17:11, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Acceptable Like it. Perhaps change Moldova to MSSR per Vecrumba, since, technically, the Republic of Moldova didn't exist at that time? --Illythr 05:44, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
Version 5
Transnistria (officially Pridnestrovie) is an unrecognized country which declared its independence from Moldova on September 2, 1990. Its independence has not been recognized and most countries consider it an autonomous territorial unit of the Republic of Moldova. The sovereignty of Transnistria is an issue of contention.
- Unacceptable.--MariusM 13:59, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable Historically wrong, Transnistria was a country BEFORE Moldova. Mark us street 22:12, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- That depends on how you define a country. International law usually classifies a country as a state which has control over a defined territory, has a permanent population, a government and the ability to enter into relations with other states. It is telling that diplomatic recognition is usually NOT mentioned anywhere among the listed requirements. In the few cases when it is mentioned, it is mentioned merely to underscore that it is not a requirement. I quote from U.S. practice, Swiss practice, and indeed the practice of most of the Western hemisphere. If anyone else here has a different definition on what a country is, please make sure to back it up with the appropriate references to international law. - Mauco 22:23, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable Transnistria is not a country. Transnistria is a region in Moldova under Russian military occupation. EvilAlex 20:15, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable, not a country. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:26, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable--Euthymios 17:11, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Version 6
Transnistria (officially Pridnestrovie) is a country in South-East Europe that established its independence on September 2nd 1990. It is governed by a democratically elected parliment and is seeking increased international diplomatic recognition. Despite Transnistria's independence the Republic of Moldova also claims sovereignty of the territory.
- mildly acceptable I think this one has merit Mark us street 17:36, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- acceptable BECAUSE: based on the facts alone, namely the reality on the ground, and not some legal fiction, the above is correct. Moldova tried in 1992 to make reality correspond to the legal fiction that they maintain, and they failed. - Mauco 21:42, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable. Is not a country and is dependent of Russia. Without support from Russia, Transnistria would not have been born as a political entity.--MariusM 23:15, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- This is not conclusively proven by anyone. And even if it was, lots of countries in the world have received support from other states before, during and after the state creation process. This is a political issue, and in and of itself it does in no way disqualify any country from being a country under international law. - Mauco 23:18, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Well it is a country and the rest of us have long left that argument behind. Regardless, PMR recieves massive support from a number of countries in the west, including the UK, USA, Holland, Norway, Germany, and Ireland. to name a few, if Russia pulled out of humanitarian aid programmes these countries would and could fill the void. Mark us street 23:36, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- This is not conclusively proven by anyone. And even if it was, lots of countries in the world have received support from other states before, during and after the state creation process. This is a political issue, and in and of itself it does in no way disqualify any country from being a country under international law. - Mauco 23:18, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable Transnistria is not a country. Transnistria is a region in Moldova under Russian military occupation. EvilAlex 20:15, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not until hell freezes over, agree with EvilAlex.--Euthymios 17:12, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Version 7
Transnistria (officially Pridnestrovie) is a region of the Republic of Moldova in southeastern Europe which since September 2, 1990 have been on de facto control of Russian Federation. Moldova and international community have strongly criticized Russian government action and called for unconditional withdrawal of arsenal and personal of 14th Russian army stationed on Moldavian territory.
- acceptable The only version that reflect the present day reality EvilAlex 18:44, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not even remotely acceptable. Both this one, number 7, and number 6 are equally rediculous, but for opposite reasons.Jonathanpops 19:21, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- acceptable
As President Bush said recently in Washington, during a visit by Romanian President Basescu, the U.S. seeks resolution of the Transnistria conflict that fully and unequivocally respects Moldova’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. Transnistria is a part of Moldova, no questions asked. Fomenting separatism, whether in Transnistria or elsewhere, is simply unacceptable. As part of the solution, let me also reaffirm our view that Russia needs to fulfill its commitments made in Istanbul in 1999 and remove its forces and munitions from Moldovan territory.[1]
according to David J. Kramer, Deputy Assistant Secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs (US official)Dl.goe 19:28, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- This is merely a political opinion of a foreign official from a country which has no ties to Transnistria, no borders with Transnistria or Moldova, no historical connections, and no large amount of citizens living in Transnistria. It is not gospel, and it can certainly not be used to determine how we edit Wikipedia. I wonder why you either bother to list it here. It would be much more appropriate to list the statement of the Russian Foreign Ministry which repeatedly has stated that any status settlement solution must take into account the democratic will of the people who live there: The affected population. - Mauco 21:31, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- The declarations of the Russian foreign ministry will always support a position which justifies the presence of their troops in Transnistria and the privatization (i.e., eventual legalization of the privatization) of Moldovan assets into Russian hands. Declarations about the PMR by the Russian foreign ministry are as POV-slanted as those by the PMR itself. Russia is a direct party to the conflict--while the U.S. is not. You seem to be saying the U.S. is more POV than Russia itself, moreover, that only those with direct and-by-definition-highly-POV involvement (and only on the side of Transnistria) are reputable sources. U.S. government = discredited and inadmissible source as per Mauco? It's entirely appropriate to report what the U.S. government says (this is after all the English Wikipedia, and the U.S. is the largest English-speaking country) without the need to draw further conclusions. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 18:55, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unacceptable Pure extremism. Mark us street 22:08, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
- not accepted not because I dispute its contents, as does Mark, but because there does need to be mention that September 2 was the declaration of the PMSSR. Were this actual agreement with Mark, the Earth would have stopped spinning and we'd have all fallen off. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:31, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Acceptable--Euthymios 17:13, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Acceptable.--MariusM 20:40, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
Version 8
Transnistria (also named Pridnestrovie) is a region of the Republic of Moldova in southeastern Europe which declared its sovereignty as a separate republic within the USSR on September 2, 1990. Its de facto independence subsequent to the fall of the Soviet Union has not been recognized, and its sovereignty and the continued presence of Russian military forces there remain issues of contention.
- Acceptable —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:40, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Acceptable--Euthymios 17:13, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not Acceptable Transnistria is NOT a region of Moldova, Moldova has a stale claim but the de-facto reality is Transnistria is not a region but an independent country. Mark us street 20:01, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
Version 9 (= version 8, but does not mention Russian troops)
Transnistria (also named Pridnestrovie) is a region of the Republic of Moldova in southeastern Europe which declared its sovereignty as a separate republic within the USSR on September 2, 1990. Its de facto independence subsequent to the fall of the Soviet Union has not been recognized, and its sovereignty remains an issue of contention.
- Provisionally acceptable, Mauco and Mark will maintain that a small insignificant helpful Russian "peace-keeping" force has no bearing on the situation there. Acceptable as long as presence of Russian troops remains appropriately mentioned elswhere. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:40, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Provisionally acceptable, agree with Peters.--Euthymios 17:14, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not acceptable Transnistria is not a region of Moldova no more than California is a region of Mexico. Mark us street 19:57, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mark, it's not recognized and it's within the boundaries of Moldova. To leave Moldova out removes all historical context for why the PMR even exists. You might as well just say it's a region on the planet Earth. Accordingly, double digits, this (Version 10) is also factual and makes no reference to the current Republic of Moldova...
- P.S. Absolutely no possibility of calling the PMR an independent country until the Russian Federation Russians leave (and sufficient time has passed to ascertain the result). Sorry, that's just the way it is. Print what you like on your web site. —Pēters J. Vecrumba 22:56, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
Version 10
Transnistria (also named Pridnestrovie) is a region of the former Moldovan S.S.R. in southeastern Europe which declared its sovereignty as a separate republic within the USSR on September 2, 1990. Its de facto independence subsequent to the fall of the Soviet Union has not been recognized, and its sovereignty remains an issue of contention.
- Provisionally acceptable (as before, with reference to Russian troops). —Pēters J. Vecrumba 22:48, 11 December 2006 (UTC) [and my least favorite, as it makes no mention that the PMR is internationally considered part of Moldova].
- Comment: I think that the lead should not mention the legislative technicalities of the declaration. They should be in the history section. Instead, perhaps, a differentiation should be made between Pridnestrovie (the territory that is internationally recognized as a region of Moldova) and PMR (the internationally unrecognized state that currently controls Pridnestrovie) to avoid confusion about what's recognized and what's not, as well as to prevent those truly moronic suggestions like "unrecognized region". --Illythr 19:52, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
- "10" is a bit much, no need if Mark is departing... "9" I think states it about as well as possible. It *is* significant that the PMR declared itself a sovereign Soviet republic, not "independent"--and that de facto independence only came as the result of the collapse of the Soviet Union (which the PMR was eager to forestall!). — Pēters J. Vecrumba 04:56, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not saying that it's insignficant, just that it's too technical for the intro. I would rather prefer #4 instead, as I don't understand how mentioning that the territory now functions as an unrecognized state can be POV. --Illythr 05:38, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
- There is no POV in explaining the reality. Unless certain editors live in a fantasy world and won't accept what is really going on. - Mauco 21:03, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
Version "4 + 10"
Transnistria (Pridnestrovie) is a region of the former Moldovan S.S.R. in southeastern Europe that is internationally recognized as an autonomous territorial unit of the Republic of Moldova.
Transnistria declared itself a separate republic within the USSR on September 2, 1990. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, (most of) that territory has de facto functioned independently under the control of the Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic (PMR). The PMR has not been recognized as an independent state, and sovereignty over Transnistria remains an issue of contention.
- Provisionally acceptable - As per Mauco's observation that brevity need not be the overriding factor, I incorporated Illythr's most recent comment (MariusM has also commented in this regard) that we must take more care in clarifying the territory versus the controlling party--and what territory that encompasses, which has not been static over time. I took out the "also called...", alternately, "officially..." references just leaving "(Pridnestrovie)"--the rest of the intro serves to summarize what things are called. ("Provisionally" = article must mention continued presence of Russian troops in proper context at the top of the article body itself.) — Pēters J. Vecrumba 15:30, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
It's not bad, though "Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, (most of) that territory has de facto functioned independently under the control of the Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic" doesn't make much sense, if you don't know the story already. I mean as a first time reader you'd have to ask why "Since the collapse of the Soviet Union", as there's no qualifying reason to go with it. Jonathanpops 15:40, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
- Maybe it's just a word order/clarification issue, and that a longer sentence was better after all (to not interrupt the train of thought from the start as part of the USSR to the collapse of the USSR...)—
- "Transnistria declared itself a separate republic within the USSR on September 2, 1990, and with the subsequent collapse of the Soviet Union, (most of) that territory has de facto functioned independently under control of the Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic (PMR). The PMR has not been recognized as an independent state, and sovereignty over Transnistria remains an issue of contention."
Version 11
Transnistria (Pridnestrovie) is a territory within the internationally recognized borders of Moldova in southeastern Europe which declared its independence on September 2, 1990. Its de facto independence has not been recognized and its sovereignty remains an issue of contention.
Of all the proposals, this is the one which is closest to the current version while avoiding flame-war words like "region of Moldova" and "unrecognized country". - Mauco 12:39, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
Archiving
This Talk is currently 289 kilobytes long. Who'll volunteer to do an archive? We normally do so around the 150K-200K mark. I have normally done it in the past but I got accused of censorship the last time I tried, so I will let someone else have the honors this time. Too frequent archiving is a bad idea, but too long talk pages are also not good. Hopefully with Mark Street gone we will now have a better signal-to-noise ratio. This request is directed at all of us, though. - Mauco 14:19, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- Ok, I archived everything but the intro debate, as that appears to be an ongoing discussion. TSO1D 14:50, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
Intro
Looking at the results of the informal poll I set up, it appears that some versions are better starting points than other due to greater support or acceptability by users. Of course, a greater number of votes is not necessarily a better version, but could just represent a bigger number of people supporting one side. Ideally, we will be able to combine the positive aspects of all the proposed versions into one. So far some of the observations I have:
- The current version (at the time of the vote) was the most "acceptable".
- The other versions with a decent level of support from most sides where: 1, 4, and the last one (4 + 10).
- Brevity should not be considered an important factor as even the longest intro would still need to be greatly expanded.
Personally, I think the current version could be improved and that the (4 + 1) version might be one of the best starting points for further discussion. TSO1D 15:00, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
How about: "Transnistria (Pridnestrovie) is a region of the former Moldovan SSR in southeastern Europe that is internationally recognized as an autonomous territorial unit of the Republic of Moldova but functions as an unrecognized country. Transnistria declared itself a separate republic within the USSR on September 2, 1990, and since the collapse of the Soviet Union, that territory has retained de facto independence as the Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic (PMR). The PMR has not been recognized as an independent state, and sovereignty over Transnistria remains an issue of contention." TSO1D 15:10, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- Sounds quite good. The last sentence needs to say who hasn't recognized the PMR as an independent state, I don't meant list them all but just, for instance, "The PMR has not been recognized as an independent state by the wordlwide community by and large.." or something like that.Jonathanpops 16:53, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- TSO1D, they are not votes and they can never be. This is not a popularity contest. Whatever the "numbers", we have a duty to strive for the most accurate and neutral description. - Mauco 19:45, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- I fully agree with you, and I did say that we should incorporate the best elements from all proposals. Nevertheless, consensus is a major policy of Wikipedia, so we should strive to find the best version that is acceptable to the greatest number of people. However, I don't believe that these two considerations have to diverge. I sincerely believe that the last version I have put forward (the modified 4+10) presents a very accurate and neutral of the situation. What is your opinion of it? TSO1D 21:16, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, but ... "greatest number of people" is not necessarily the guarantee of an encyclopedia-worthy outcome when all of us are biased and we have little outside participation from non-Transnistria focused editors. We all suffer from the bias which (as Bogdan once pointed out) is inherent in anyone who knows enough about this subject to be able to edit it in a meaningful way. On this basis alone, the idea of a vote is inherently bad. I know that you always just intended it as a poll, but the more enthusiastic cheerleaders among us clearly did not see it as such (e.g. this where the editor thinks that we are "voting"). What strikes me most is the unwillingness of otherwise reasonable editors here to consider objective facts: How does the rest of Wikipedia refer to Transnistria. - Mauco 23:05, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- I don't really know what you mean. Didn't you say that it should be called an "unrecognized republic"? That is part of the text. TSO1D 00:32, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- I haven't really been voting or commenting much on these, as you can see. I am skeptical about an approach which resembles a popularity contest and don't take the most basic considerations into account, such as -
- To call it a 'region', 'area', 'territory', etc is fine, but it is iffy to call it 'region of the Republic of Moldova' or similar use of the possessive, as this implies that we are taking sides. Most of the documents I have seen from the negotiation process don't do this. They refer to the parties by name, but without implying who owns which part of who (since this is the whole point of the 5+2 talks to define, and this is an ongoing process; not yet concluded).
- Our intro should deal with the status (de jure/de facto) only in very brief summary form. Later, users will see a section which deals with that, and there even a full article (the 'Disputed status') where we can add any level of detail.
- Consistency is important. Someone else advocated this originally. If there is a phrasing which is used on the major lists for countries, states, dependant areas, unrecognized widgets, etc., then look there, see what they call these things, and copy the phrasing to here. (If they are wrong, we tell them and fix it, so we can still strive for consistency.) This project, Wikipedia, will eventually become useless if we are not in sync with the standard terminology.
- To call it a 'region', 'area', 'territory', etc is fine, but it is iffy to call it 'region of the Republic of Moldova' or similar use of the possessive, as this implies that we are taking sides. Most of the documents I have seen from the negotiation process don't do this. They refer to the parties by name, but without implying who owns which part of who (since this is the whole point of the 5+2 talks to define, and this is an ongoing process; not yet concluded).
- This is the checklist which should be used to evaluate ALL of the proposals above, instead of nursing our pet causes or personal baggage. We can't really vote on something like this. A poll is merely an indicator to smoke out individual opinions and maybe stimulate debate that will help us see the issues more clearly. - Mauco 02:40, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- If "region of Republic of Moldova" is POV, then certainly "unrecognized country" is POV even more so, and then we get into, as already mentioned, who does and doesn't recognize it and why, etc. etc.--again we wind up with something that's a popularity contest. That's why I had left "unrecognized country" out of 4+10. Wikipdia is not in a position to state the PMR (or any other territory) is a country albeit unrecognized. This is a problem in general with all unrecognized countries listed in Wikipedia, not just the PMR. Since Transnistria is already autonomous in any event, if we're not happy with region of the Republic of Moldova, we can certainly say region or territory within the internationally recognized boundaries of Moldova. I'm much happier with de facto functioning independently than taking the leap to unrecognized country--there's still too much foreign (Russian) influence to characterize this as spontaneous a development or a fully functional country as the PMR would paint itself. I do think we're very close to having a much more informative and accurate (and agreed to by all) introduction. — Pēters J. Vecrumba 03:31, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- I haven't really been voting or commenting much on these, as you can see. I am skeptical about an approach which resembles a popularity contest and don't take the most basic considerations into account, such as -
- I don't really know what you mean. Didn't you say that it should be called an "unrecognized republic"? That is part of the text. TSO1D 00:32, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, but ... "greatest number of people" is not necessarily the guarantee of an encyclopedia-worthy outcome when all of us are biased and we have little outside participation from non-Transnistria focused editors. We all suffer from the bias which (as Bogdan once pointed out) is inherent in anyone who knows enough about this subject to be able to edit it in a meaningful way. On this basis alone, the idea of a vote is inherently bad. I know that you always just intended it as a poll, but the more enthusiastic cheerleaders among us clearly did not see it as such (e.g. this where the editor thinks that we are "voting"). What strikes me most is the unwillingness of otherwise reasonable editors here to consider objective facts: How does the rest of Wikipedia refer to Transnistria. - Mauco 23:05, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- I wonder sometimes if some of the editors here think that the phrase "unrecognised country" has more importance than I think it does. I think just because the phrase has the word "country" in it some people are getting frustrated, but to me the "unregognized" kind of cancels out any perceived benefit pro seperatists may feel they gain with the use of the word "country". The phrase "unrecognised country" has, for instance, been used before in the UK to describe a village in the south of England that declared independence and made their own passports, which most people didn't take all that seriously. It has also been applied to a British offshore oilrig, and a group of less than 10 people in Ausrtralia. I think when most English speaking people see the phrase
"unrecognised country" they think it means a place that wants to be a country, but actually is not a country, and take it far less seriously than the wikipedia page unrecognised country. In fact if you search Google et al for "unrecognised country" you get the wikipedia article and nearly everygthing else on the front page is about Transnistria, because it's one of the few places whose followers keep trying to plug the phrase.
To put it in perspective, Republic of China (Taiwan) is probably the most famous "unrecognised country" for getting backing from the USA. It is an island that fuctions entirely seperatly from mainland China, yet their page, Republic of China, does not use the phrase "unrecognised country" at all. I'm not sure what good, if at all, any of this is to us editing this article, it's just something I was thinking about.Jonathanpops 12:17, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks, Jonathanpops. But Wikipedia is near the top of the list for pretty much everything, not just for the phrase that you mention. - Mauco 12:35, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- That's not really relevant in the least to what I was saying?Jonathanpops 14:46, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks, Jonathanpops. But Wikipedia is near the top of the list for pretty much everything, not just for the phrase that you mention. - Mauco 12:35, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Peters, I think that we are getting somewhere. The phrase "within the internationally recognized boundaries of Moldova" seems to be aggreable to all, rather than region of Moldova, and so does "de facto independent" rather than unrecognized country. - Mauco 12:35, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Then how about "Transnistria (officially Pridnestrovie) is a territory in Southeastern Europe within the internationally recognized boundaries of the Republic of Moldova. Although de jure it is regarded as an autonomous territorial unit of Moldova, a local Transnistrian government known as the PMR has exercised de facto control since Transnistria declared its independence from Moldova on September 2, 1990. Its independence has not been recognized and the sovereignty of Transnistria is an issue of contention." TSO1D 13:13, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Good. It is not my Preferred version but Acceptable. You can polish some of the phrasing, however. The first sentence will sound better by moving some words around and you don't lose any meaning. Try: "Transnistria (officially: Pridnestrovie) is a territory within the internationally recognized borders of the Republic of Moldova in southeastern Europe". We can also work on the other sentences, but they are minor issues (for instance: the "government known as PMR" part can probably be left out of the intro, since we deal with all of that elsewhere). - Mauco 13:23, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Then how about "Transnistria (officially Pridnestrovie) is a territory in Southeastern Europe within the internationally recognized boundaries of the Republic of Moldova. Although de jure it is regarded as an autonomous territorial unit of Moldova, a local Transnistrian government known as the PMR has exercised de facto control since Transnistria declared its independence from Moldova on September 2, 1990. Its independence has not been recognized and the sovereignty of Transnistria is an issue of contention." TSO1D 13:13, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Peters, I think that we are getting somewhere. The phrase "within the internationally recognized boundaries of Moldova" seems to be aggreable to all, rather than region of Moldova, and so does "de facto independent" rather than unrecognized country. - Mauco 12:35, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
4 + 10 + Mauco, TSO1D, Jonathanpops,...
Another try at it (I sectioned it off just to make future editing a bit easier)...
- Transnistria (also, Pridnestrovie or Pridnestrov'ia) is a territory within the internationally recognized boundaries of the Republic of Moldova in Southeastern Europe. Transnistria declared its independence from the Moldovan S.S.R. as a sovereign republic within the U.S.S.R. on September 2, 1990. Subsequent to the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic (PMR) has exercised de facto control over most of Transnistria. The independence of Transnistria under the PMR has not been recognized, and sovereignty over Transnistria continues to be an issue of contention.
- "officially" is not the best word, as it signifies according to some authority; also, in terms of academic writing, I've seen Pridnestrovie and Pridnestrov'ia fairly equally (if not actually more towards the latter); it's also the (transliteration of the) Russian appelation, so "officially" also makes it out to be a primarily Russian territory; I think we should simply show both versions so that people know how to do searches to find the widest range of materials (without having to dig through the separate names of Transnistria article which is more historically oriented)
- Transnistria did not declare independence; it declared sovereignty within the Soviet Union; to simply say independence implies it declared itself an independent country subject to no other authority, which is not the case; it's a vital clarification, which I've done my best to word as compactly as possible;
- so that we're a bit more rigorous on territory versus authority (and since it's not good form to introduce acronyms without first using the full version), I've spelled out the PMR in full followed by acronym, and
- in the last sentence, I've made it clear that it's the authority of the PMR as an independent state that has not been recognized; accordingly, it's not the sovereignty *of* Transnistria (it's certainly at least autonomous, which is also a form of sovereignty), it's really who (controlling authority) has sovereignty *over* the Transnistrian territory; finally,
- "continues to be" seemed to flow better in the overall context than "is", nothing else intended.
I was cutting and pasting in notepad, my apologies for not having all the appropriate Wiki-links embedded! (Obviously, I'll be glad to do it if it's deemed as having merit.) — Pēters J. Vecrumba 16:13, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- No, please don't introduce new names, at least not in the intro. TSO1D and I worked a lot on the naming issue earlier in the year, and I think we are both defending the status quo. There is a reason for the "officially" which is an indicator of how they refer to themselves in in their constitution. It does not imply official recognition. The intro used to start like this: "Transnistria, officially Pridnestrovskaia Moldavskaia Respublica, PMR (short form: Pridnestrovie) ..."
- If we use the "also" word instead, then we should not mention Pridnestrovie but rather Transdniestria or Trans-Dniester since they are the two most commonly used alternate names. - Mauco 16:48, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
I don't think we need extra names either, not in the intro anyway. I'm not sure about using Moldovan SSR, I know that is the factual history but it's a bit confusing. It might be better, just in the intro, to ignore the history all together and just talk about the here and now, then have the detailed history further down the page. Fow me looking up something like this in an encyclopedia I'd want to know what it is and where it is right away in the intro, then learn the other stuff if I feel like reading down the page. It (the intro) should be so uncontroversial that no one could even think of disagreeing with it or finding any part of it irksome, which I guess is what we are trying to do here.Jonathanpops 19:12, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- I agree with you here, Jonathanpops. Keep the intro short and sweet. Then deal with the finicky details later, in the text itself. Peters is technically correct, but too technical. Just say "which declared its independence on September 2, 1990" and this is 100% correct, too. It was an independence declaration from the MSSR, and initially with the aim of becoming a separate SSR, and all that can and should be explained ...just not in the first line which is just a summary. - Mauco 19:44, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Moreover, where did "Pridnestrov'ia" come from? To me, "Pridnestrov'ia" = the genitive declension of "Pridnestrov'e" (Приднестровья and Приднестровье respectively). I have never seen this used as an alternative spelling and I have a hard time seeing it become so (at least among those familiar with Russian grammar). jamason 20:38, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- I do have to rather insist that saying Transnistria declared "independence" is incorrect. To make it simpler, it could be independence as a republic of the Soviet Union and leave out the Moldovan SSR reference. However, it's crucial to the understanding of later events to note support for the Soviet regime from the outset. I'd be fine with this simplification:
- Transnistria (Pridnestrovie) is a territory within the internationally recognized boundaries of the Republic of Moldova in Southeastern Europe. Transnistria declared its independence as a separate republic of the U.S.S.R. on September 2, 1990....
- I've seen the Pridnestrov'ia spelling in various documents, and now that you mention it, you are completely correct that it should be pridnestrovye (Pridnestrov'e) not pridnestrovya to be in the proper nominative form. (So yes, that usage was incorrect!) On reconsideration best left out and just dealt with in alternate names. — Pēters J. Vecrumba 14:26, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- I do have to rather insist that saying Transnistria declared "independence" is incorrect. To make it simpler, it could be independence as a republic of the Soviet Union and leave out the Moldovan SSR reference. However, it's crucial to the understanding of later events to note support for the Soviet regime from the outset. I'd be fine with this simplification:
- In the spirit of compromise: I'd be fine with this, too, but please re-insert the word "officially" in the parenthesis to explain what "Pridnestrovie" is all about. This was part of the stable version for most of the year anyway. The reasoning goes a long, long way back. and is a compromise based on the constitution and the naming decree. TSO1D and I handled this already, from opposite sides. - Mauco 14:36, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- Then we just need to note what "officially" means--is it simply "(officially Pridenstrovie, in Russian)" or "(Pridnestrovie, official Russian form) or "(Pridnestrovie, official Russian term)? I don't inherently have an issue with the word "official" itself, only that we shouldn't use it without putting it in context.
- I would be fine with stating that's the official Russian form--or whatever else is the proper context--just a word or two. It's only the lack of context that is the issue. — Pēters J. Vecrumba 21:02, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- OK! How should we phrase it? We used to have - in the stable version, for the longest time - the following: "Transnistria (officially: Pridnestrovie) is a ..."
- Can we keep that?
- If not, do you want "Transnistria (or Pridnestrovie, per its constitution) is a ..." ...?
- If we say something like "Transnistria (Russian: Pridnestrovie)" then that doesn't really cover it. It is their English name, too, according to themselves. They want to be called Pridnestrovie in English. They made a naming decree about this, some year ago. - Mauco 05:31, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- OK! How should we phrase it? We used to have - in the stable version, for the longest time - the following: "Transnistria (officially: Pridnestrovie) is a ..."
- "(Pridnestrovie, per the PMR constitution)" works perfectly well. That already implies "officially" since we identify it's according to the PMR constitution, but I don't object to adding the word "officially" as it's now clear what is official according to whom. I'd ask for PMR over Transnistria so we maintain a distinction of territory and authority--that is, I would not agree to "(Pridnestrovie, per its constitution)". — Pēters J. Vecrumba 13:53, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- Oh so close! (re-indenting..., "[officially]" in brackets indicates word optional...)
- "officially" unbracketed below, since only Mauco and I have discussed so far; not my most preferred solution either, however, still makes the most essential points up front — Pēters J. Vecrumba 14:47, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
Transnistria (officially Pridnestrovie, per the PMR constitution) is a territory within the internationally recognized boundaries of the Republic of Moldova in Eastern Europe. Transnistria declared its independence as a separate republic of the U.S.S.R. on September 2, 1990. Subsequent to the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic (PMR) has exercised de facto control over most of Transnistria. The independence of Transnistria under the PMR has not been recognized, and the sovereignty of Transnistria remains an issue of contention.
- Agreed (do still need to have that appropriate mention of Russian troops sooner rather than later in the article body) — Pēters J. Vecrumba 13:53, 20 December 2006 (UTC) P.S. with or without officially, without does look a bit cleaner, constitution sounds official enough — Pēters J. Vecrumba 14:11, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- OK. Lets mention Russian troops. EvilAlex 22:02, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- Agreed (not the best version, but an acceptable compromise. And yes, of role of Russia has to be dealt with, too. It will always be a big part of Transnistria's recent history, for better or for worse. I agree with you on that, too, Peters.) - Mauco 13:59, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- Agreed I also like this version. TSO1D 15:58, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- Just note if you still want the word officially included as well. — Pēters J. Vecrumba 14:11, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, please. Perfection is the enemy of the good, let us just get it approved as it stands now and not tinker more with it. We are done (I hope). - Mauco 14:15, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- It may well be that everyone else's views fall along the spectrum whose opposite ends appear (for the moment) to be defined by Mauco and myself. I'll leave this for one more day before updating the intro. — Pēters J. Vecrumba 14:37, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- I made the update to the intro. Please note that the lack of a link for "Southeastern Europe" was intentional, as when I checked it, I saw that redirects to the Balkans/Balkan peninsula which is not appropriate. "Eastern Central Europe" might be more appropriate. We can discuss... — Pēters J. Vecrumba 05:08, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- Fine with me. The Moldova article uses "eastern Europe." It does not matter if we think that Transnistria is part of Moldova, or if we think that it is a would-be country. Whatever our position, its geography won't change. If Moldova says "eastern Europe", then so should we, here. - Mauco 10:55, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
One suggestion: I would like to have at least a fleeting mention of the formal political status. Could the third sentence be expanded to: "Although de jure Transnistria is regarded as an autonomous territorial unit of Moldova, subsequent to the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic (PMR) has exercised de facto control over most of territory." This would present a more direct contrast between the present theoretical versus actual situation and would cover more aspects of the article as WP:LEAD suggests. TSO1D 16:13, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- Disagreed I think that Current Version is better. EvilAlex 19:59, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- TSO1D, thanks for your suggestion. I have another suggestion: Why don't we just let this intro stay for at least a couple of weeks, and then we re-visit it and try to tweak it. Right now, I am just in awe that we managed to settle on a compromise which agreeable to more or less all. It is not perfect (I don't think so, neither do you, neither does Evil or Vecrumba), but it is a big advance that we at least managed to get a general consensus. - Mauco 20:13, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- How about to follow democratic principals and count the votes? If Mauco agreed on something then it shouldn't be good for Transnistrians. EvilAlex 20:45, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- TSO1D, thanks for your suggestion. I have another suggestion: Why don't we just let this intro stay for at least a couple of weeks, and then we re-visit it and try to tweak it. Right now, I am just in awe that we managed to settle on a compromise which agreeable to more or less all. It is not perfect (I don't think so, neither do you, neither does Evil or Vecrumba), but it is a big advance that we at least managed to get a general consensus. - Mauco 20:13, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- Agreed Just for the record I like this version, but I don't mind the current version either. Jonathanpops 21:16, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- Disagreed. Transdniestria (and not Transnistria) is a short variant or a synonym of PMR. And it is not a territory, but an independent state with all attributes of statehood, its own political, economic, financial, judicial systems. It has proved its statehood being independent from Moldova since 1990. Helen28 13:56, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
POV of word "region" in intro
The use of the word "region" to describe Transnistria is being pushed by Moldovan government officials. This is despite the fact that it has not been used before in official documents, like the 1992 cease fire mandate signed by Mircea Snegur (then-president of Moldova).
Source: http://www.olvia.idknet.com/ol154-12-06.htm
Quote: делегация Республики Молдова стремится заменить название "Приднестровье" на "Приднестровский регион Республики Молдова", и это вызывает определенное беспокойство у приднестровской стороны. "Извините, если мы берем за основу действующую инструкцию, то должны использовать ту терминологию, которая в ней употребляется", - сказал Александр Порожан.
Rough translation: The delegation of the Republic of Moldova aims to replace the name "Pridnestrovie" with the "pridnestrovian region of the Republic of Moldova", and this causes certain uneasiness on the Transnistrian side. "Excuse me, but if we use the mandate as our basis, then we must use the terminology, which is used in it", said Aleksandr Porozhan.
Previous documents did not use this terminology. Real life shows that Transnistria is no longer a part of Moldova and that Moldova's government has, in reality, lost all control over Transnistria. The push for "region" is an attempt by Moldova's government to put something into the paperwork between the sides which is not the actual case, based on the evidence on the ground, and which has never been used before. - Mauco 12:07, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
- Well, the names for the region and state are often used interchangeably. That is why the delegation states that it is referring specifically to the region (so that it won't seem that it implicitly recognizes the state). That is also why I urged to differentiate between them is these issues. --Illythr 13:20, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
- Illythr, the way that OSCE and most others have done it in the past is to call Moldova a republic, by spelling out the full name "Republic of Moldova", whereas Transnistria is never (ever) spelled out by its own constitutional name, "Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic". It is merely called Pridnestrovie. Not state, not republic, not region. Just the name. The OSCE has a bunch of the official documents on its site, and the Peacemaking project by the British Embassy has a lot of that, too.
- My point is this: To call it a "region" is just as much POV as if we call it a "country". Moldova wants to call it a region, PMR wants to be called a country, but the mediators have long ago found an middle-ground that sort of satisfies both sides. - Mauco 03:07, 16 December 2006 (UTC)
- Region is vague enough to be neutral. A region is not necesarily a division of a country. Region of Middle East, for example, includes many countries.--MariusM 20:37, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- Illythr, the way that OSCE and most others have done it in the past is to call Moldova a republic, by spelling out the full name "Republic of Moldova", whereas Transnistria is never (ever) spelled out by its own constitutional name, "Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic". It is merely called Pridnestrovie. Not state, not republic, not region. Just the name. The OSCE has a bunch of the official documents on its site, and the Peacemaking project by the British Embassy has a lot of that, too.
- Sure. But there is a difference between vague and neutral words like "Region" and "Area", and then "Region of Moldova" which implies a possessive relationship. This is why the government of Moldova is POV pushing it but the other sides in the conflict won't let them get away with this little stunt. One of the two sides in the conflict will not accept it, and besides, it is wholly wrong as it does not correctly identify the actual situation in the real world. - Mauco 20:52, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- Why not "territory"? --Illythr 20:57, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- As you can see, the issue is not so much the word itself (like MariusM says, 'region' can be a neutral word, too), but the context when it is used as a possessive. This was the gist of the unaccepted attempt by Moldova, which is described above and for which I provided a rough translation. Otherwise territory is certainly good, too. - Mauco 21:02, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yes Yes Yes, The Transnistria country is supposed to be part of Moldova and now she is ruled by Smirnov and I suggest we write that this country will be part of Moldova and we all believe that this will return though peace talks and good words. Esgert 19:49, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Ah yes, let us vote for peace in the entire world. Eliminate all crime and injustice. Kill all the evil people, too, while we're at it. :-) --Illythr 21:01, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Saying “region”, Moldova’s government changes the meaning of the word. They mean “the part of Moldova”, but if you open the dictionary you will see, that “region” is a district, a province or a state determined by the political bounderies.
So in our case, this word mustn’t be used because of it perverted meaning. Don’t offend the citizens of PMR.Helen28 14:28, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
Photo of Smirnov
I like show photo of Igor Smirnov so people can see his face. This is a good idea. Tell no lies about him of course. He is their leader and respect that , Bad people write things and this is important to check I have some iplaans for the page, I will help you all. I am fair you will see Mr E is for you all.
- We already have two photos (three if you count the election poster). They are on the Igor Smirnov page. The use of leader photos on other Wikipedia country pages is mixed. United States does it, so does Moldova, but many other countries don't. I would personally prefer an "action" photo (Smirnov doing something, or in a context setting) rather than a portrait, so we show a bit of Transnistria as well, since the article is about Transnistria and not Smirnov. Thanks for your offer to help. Please work through consensus. We will not tell any lies about Smirnov and I do not believe that we are currently doing so. - Mauco 20:03, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Good Good, And the chairman of Transnistria too, the new man, he is not like Smirnov, he is sensible and he is the real keader. Put him above Smirnov and tell why Esgert 20:17, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Are you referring to Yevgeny Shevchuk? He is not the "chairman of Transnistria" but the Speaker (chairman, if you will) of VS PMR; which is their parliament. - Mauco 14:31, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
Border Guards
The Transnistrian border guards are very strict and are are slow. This is deliberate tactic. Sometimes they take money or cigerettes. And Ukraine bordermen too. Moldovan will take a few coins but not like the others. This is something wrong. Smirnov's son is the top border customs man and he is over these men. Also deliberate long delays for cars, Esgert 20:25, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- That reminds me. This article is still undeveloped... --Illythr 21:08, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
I've introduced back Travel Warnings, according to the Discussion.
I've introduced back Propaganda and Disinformation chapter. Whether some sources on the subject are objective or not is really important. Especially if it is about Wikipedia.
On violent incidents, the word isolated is biased.Dl.goe 21:44, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Were they widespread and all over the
countryunrecognized stateregion? --Illythr 21:54, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Dl.goe, your wholesale revert is a bit rash, considering 1) there is certainly no conclusive outcome of the discussion which you cite, and 2) WP:BAN specifically states that "Users are generally expected to refrain from reinstating any edits made by banned users". I am certainly willing to work with you, and others, on developing phrasing which is acceptable to all. But it must be done here, and not on mainspace unless we all enjoy engaging in those tiresome revert wars back and forth. I know I don't. - Mauco 21:59, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- I moved the propaganda and misinformation subsection to Media in Transnistria for the time being. --Illythr 22:09, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Dl.goe, your wholesale revert is a bit rash, considering 1) there is certainly no conclusive outcome of the discussion which you cite, and 2) WP:BAN specifically states that "Users are generally expected to refrain from reinstating any edits made by banned users". I am certainly willing to work with you, and others, on developing phrasing which is acceptable to all. But it must be done here, and not on mainspace unless we all enjoy engaging in those tiresome revert wars back and forth. I know I don't. - Mauco 21:59, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- Of course, it fits there better. But now perma-banned user Greier was singling out Transnistria and painting it in the worst possible light, whereas in reality, public diplomacy is a part of what every country does. It is not unusual for them to use GONGOs to do so. Pretty much all nations are guilty of this (with the United States being the current world leader in this field). Whether we like it or not, is a reality of the international relations field. The other side will always call it propaganda and disinformation. That is another fact of life of international relations. - Mauco 22:22, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
- If there is no consensus, there is no consensus either for introducing or for removing the text. I would like to know the reason why Greier's text is not suitable. I added back Travel Warnings because the discussion on it was stopped. I don't understand what Mauco thinks on Travel Warnings:
- 1.The information is irrelevant.
- 2.The information is relevant but this article should not include a chapter that is not yet present in any other article.
- 3.The information should be included, but the phrasing should be developed.
- The article should not describe the violent incidents as isolated. This is like saying if the region is safe or not. Wikipedia should contain the facts and let the reader judge on them.Dl.goe 09:42, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
As Mauco made some misleading comments about Wikipedia policies regarding banned user, just a reminder: WP:BAN is telling about reverting any edit made in defiance of a ban. Banned user Greier didn't edit in defiance of a ban, his edit was previous of the ban and was discussed in talk page. It was a legitimate edit. Fact that Greier was banned afterwards (without any relation about the edit we discuss) does not mean that everything he wrote in Wikipedia in one year should be removed. Also, it doesn't mean that nobody else can share Greier's view about a certain edit. Regarding Greier's ban, I consider an abuse see full story--MariusM 00:52, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- There is really no point in discussing this. WP:BAN is clear on the matter, and Greier is permanently banned for good. On a contentious page like Transnistria, it is not kosher to introduce entire new sections without prior debate and trying to achieve consensus. So far, only Greier, yourself and EvilAlex have done that wholesale. It is even less cool to reinstate the edits of banned users. There is no need to debate this endlessly, since an admin has already told you this clearly on your own talk page, MariusM. - Mauco 01:05, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- I told to this admin that I don't agree with him. Wikipedia policy is written and very clear. Expression "defiance of a ban" is mentioned, and Greier's edit was not in "defiance". We don't need Mauco's interpretation of Wikipedia policies when we have clear policies.--MariusM 01:18, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- Ask some more admins, then. The policy is obviously not as clear as you say, if there can be this kind of doubt about it. - Mauco 01:26, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
The policy is quite clear. The fact that a user is banned does not have any inherent effect on the validity of their prior edits. (If they were banned for repeated plagiarism or use of faked sources that would be an issue, but that is not the case here.) The whole point of the rule about rolling back edits made in defiance of a ban is so that they have nothing to gain by defying the ban. - Jmabel | Talk 01:42, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks for clarifying this for all. Of course, a good part of why Greier is no longer with us is because he pulled non-consentual stunts like this on pages with a high level of dispute. Finally, the community's patience just ran out. - Mauco 03:26, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- Agreed. But his individual edits should stand or fall on their individual merits. I've crossed paths with him quite a few places, and by no means was his work uniformly bad, unlike his attitude toward contributors with whom he disagreed. - Jmabel | Talk 08:02, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
Transnistrian side or Separatist side?
We are labeling pro-PMR links in our External links section as "Transnistrian side". This is misleading, not all Transnistrians are supporting the separatist regime. We should use the label "separatist" instead of "transnistrian", in this and in other related articles when we are talking about forces which support Smirnov's regime. A big part of Transnistrian people want to get rid of Russian occupation and unite back with Moldova. Also, there were always some forces in Chişinău which support Smirnov's regime.--MariusM 10:34, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- Perhaps "Official Moldovan" and "Official Transnistrian", then? It's true that the links for both sides do not speak for all of the Transnistrian or Moldovan people. Although in this case I thought one would naturally assume governments, not people. --Illythr 10:49, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- From the 4 websites labelled as "Moldovan side" none is made by Moldovan government. Conflict.md is supported by OSCE (is publishing even pro-separatist information), Azi.md often is critic against Moldovan government. Maybe we should use the label "anti-separatist".--MariusM 10:58, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not made, supportive. The material presented on those sites in relation to Transnistria supports the official Modovan position. Hm, the presidential website apears to be down, btw. --Illythr 11:56, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- How about PMR side instead of Transnistrian side? TSO1D 12:33, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- PMR would confuse new readers Truli 13:02, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- But I think that by the time they would reach the external links section they would know the term. TSO1D 13:03, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- I disagree, keep things uniform, like if we include Moldovan links here it goes that Transnistrian links should also be on the Moldovan page too, and the Moldova page is really lackiing in Transnistrian info. It is like its been hidden by both sides, Truli 13:13, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- But I think that by the time they would reach the external links section they would know the term. TSO1D 13:03, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- PMR would confuse new readers Truli 13:02, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- How about PMR side instead of Transnistrian side? TSO1D 12:33, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not made, supportive. The material presented on those sites in relation to Transnistria supports the official Modovan position. Hm, the presidential website apears to be down, btw. --Illythr 11:56, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- From the 4 websites labelled as "Moldovan side" none is made by Moldovan government. Conflict.md is supported by OSCE (is publishing even pro-separatist information), Azi.md often is critic against Moldovan government. Maybe we should use the label "anti-separatist".--MariusM 10:58, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
The two sides are currently referred to as "Transnistria" and "Moldova". MariusM is of course correct in saying that not Transnistrians support independence. If we go by the referendum, only 97% do.
How many in Moldova support the official Moldovan irredentist position? I spoke to Popov who told me that there is a shift in opinion among intellectuals in Chisinau. They look to Europe and they see Transnistria as something which is holding them back from that. They would just as rather cut loose from Transnistria (the past) and focus on Europe (the future). His words. How many support the official line? Probably a majority. But not all.
That is how democracy works. We do not need all Transnistrians to agree with the official line, nor do we need all Moldovans to agree with the official line. If the positions are official and/or representative of the majority, it can accurately be labelled "Transnistrian side" and "Moldovan side" just as we do now. No change. - Mauco 14:30, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- I think an explanatory note that "pro-Transnistrian" means regarding the current PMR regime as legitimate, and "pro-Moldovan" means regarding the current PMR regime as not legitimate would be sufficient to make the appropriate distinction without confusing people. (It doesn't really boil down to just agreeing with the Moldovans or with Smirnov/Antyufeyev, which is what is implied if there is no further explanation.) — Pēters J. Vecrumba 14:36, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
There is no need to fix something which is clear to everyone already. MariusM's proposal proceedes from the implied assumption that the majority of Transnistrians are in disagreement with their government. This is an erroneus assumption and he has no credible sources to support it. Studies published in 2006 on this matter, by German and other Western analysts, while sowing questions about the level of democratic commitment, agree that if free elections were held today under OSCE auspices, the current leadership would easily win reelection. - Mauco 14:45, 19 December 2006 (UTC)
- No real need to change this Truli 13:11, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- Truli, it is good to see that you are part of Talk. We had to revert some of your recent edits since they were quite substantial and since they were not discussed with anyone in advance. That is what the talk page is for. To avoid getting reverted, it is always a good idea to get other editors on board. This is especially true for substantial changes in pages which are controversial, like this one. Please read the info box on the top of this Discussion page. - Mauco 14:02, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- No real need to change this Truli 13:11, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- The areas I deleted were inserted without approval as was much of this page by racists. These sections are better suited on the Moldovan page so I transfered them over, I am reverting political motivated vandalism. When I transfered the Travel Warning over to the Moldova page the same editors here that demand Transnistria have a big Travel Warning refused to allow the Travel warning on the Moldova page. However, in the ame breath they also claim Transdniestria is a region of Moldova,!! Why ? Because they are politically motivated against PMR but not Moldova. Wiki is not a forum for political speel. Nor is it a place where people from rival countries should bash each other and that is exactly what is happening here, For crying out loud, Trasnsnistria is not even refered to as a 'country' here, Something very weird about all this. Truli 15:08, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- The last point has been the subject of a long edit debate. It appears to have been solved now. - Mauco 15:35, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- Glad to hear it, it seems that unless you want to write something like "Transnistria Sells Its Women', you'll be reverted, sorry my mistake that awful slur on Transnistrian women is already in there, I should have guessed Truli 16:03, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- Today alone, both MariusM and myself had to revert you. But just read the three info-boxes on top of this page (the talk page), follow the instructions, and all will be well. If in doubt, do not edit, but ask for the opinion of others here first. - Mauco 19:39, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
If we keep the label "Transnistrian side", we should add a link like http://transnistria.ru.ru to show the opinion of antiseparatist transnistrians. They exist, and I don't agree they are only 3%. According Transnistrian census, there are almost 10% of Transnistrian population who don't have transnistrian citizenship, they don't vote and are not counted in ellections or referendums. Their real number is probabily higher than reported by Tiraspol regime. In my opinion, "separatist" and "antiseparatist" are clear labels, even for readers with little knowledge about the region.--MariusM 21:35, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
- That is EvilAlex' "hate-speech" webpage. It does not meet Wikipedia criteria for external links. And please, enough with the guessing and original research. - Mauco 15:03, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- Thank Mauco I new that you like me :) EvilAlex 15:40, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- Marius , I know what you say but we can only operate with real facts, I understand your frustration Truli 22:07, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
Equal Treatment for Transnistria
We all agree that the Transnistria page is a difficult one to edit because there are strong views on both sides. The current page is a work of twisted words and opinions and is not acceptable to any fairminded person. . I have a proposal to normalise things here. Forgive me but it is a Moldovan solution. Take a look at the Moldova main space and you will see an interesting list of headings for the topics in keeping with the way most otherr states are dealt with. Then, take a look at the headings for the Transnistrian page and you'll see a marked difference. I suggest that the editors work under an agreement of equality and respect. Under this agreement headings are by dual agreement using Moldova as a template. For example, the Intro appears on both pages and should stay, as should ; Names, Geography, History, Politics, International relations, Economics, Human rights, Demograpghics, Economy , Information technology, Culture, Gallery, External links. Headings that are parachuted onto the Transnistrian page that are under dispute be removed, This includes all the Smuggling, Crime, and Travel Warnings. That is assuming the Moldova page would prefer not to have such heading on that page. Under this each side is treated with equal rights. Attacks on the pages cease and a degree of harmony may prevail. Can I have your feedback please. Truli 15:07, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- My opinion is that this is an encyclopedia, not political soapbox and that Moldova is a country and Transnistria is not a country. The Transnistrian government, you and many other people may want Transnistria to be a country, but right now it is not a country. This page has to deal with facts, with the 'right now', and portraying Transnistria as a country on Wikipedia will not make it true. When Transnistria becomes a fully recognised country then I would fully expect it to have a page similar to Moldova's, but not before. Jonathanpops 15:34, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- Re:Attacks on the pages cease and a degree of harmony may prevail
are you some king of pacifist? There is a huge difference between Moldova and Transnistria in Moldova people are free they can choose their leaders in Transnistrian people are ruled by Russian supported dictator. First of all we should take in to account the present day reality and not your Utopian views. EvilAlex 15:38, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- Let me ask this again. Is equality on offer? Truli 16:22, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- equality always was a huge part of our fundamental position. EvilAlex 17:04, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- Evil, don't bait a troll. - Mauco 17:47, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
- This is the whole crux of the problematic position, it is also the source of the solution. I don't have the answers but I know that in all warlike themes the first step is to stop blaming the other side for everything and except 50% of the blame.the second step is equality of treatment. Truli 18:20, 21 December 2006 (UTC)
Truli, do I understand that you are saying that Wikipedia should make no distinction between how it handles generally recognized states and an almost universally unrecognized state? Frankly, that seems an odd suggestion. Given that we clearly wouldn't handle every self-declared unrecognized state that way, where exactly would you draw the line? - Jmabel | Talk 01:59, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
It's not about "equal" treatment, it's about stating facts and leaving the interpretation thereof to the reader. That is what encyclopedias do. For example, one does not give propaganda and verifiable facts "equal" treatment simply because they are "opposing" viewpoints. Truli, the conspiracy theorist in me wants to believe you are Mark Street returned. Please read through the talk archives to inform yourself that soapboxing will bear no fruit here. — Pēters J. Vecrumba 06:08, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, it's confirmed, I can smell Mark Street a mile away (as can numerous others...) Wikipedia:Requests for checkuser/Case/Mark us street — Pēters J. Vecrumba 18:12, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
Travel Warnings
I'm not sure if this section is necessary at all, however I see that it continues to stay up, so I'm suggesting at least modifying it. Instead of having the entire text of the warnings, we could simply state: "Certain countries, including the United States (ref) and Australia (ref) announced travel warnings for its citizens traveling to Transnistria. TSO1D 16:21, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- Sounds good. A while back, we also had the suggestion of a separate page (another article) on Tourism in Transnistria, similar to Tourism in France and Tourism in Spain. I thought it sounded like a bad joke at first, but if you look around the web, the place actually does get its share of tourists who are looking for the unusual. Besides, Lonely Planet even recommended Somaliland in its most recent list. They wrote about Transnistria, too. A page called Tourism in Transnistria should have a section on the shakedowns on the border and can use some of the actual travel warning quotes, too. It can also have links to some of the sites that we rejected when we last voted on links for the main page (like Tabibito's PMR site and Marisha.net) - Mauco 19:24, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- Some of Wiki readers will read this article preciselly because they want to go to Transnistria, and is good to warn them about all the issues. Actual section is O.K.--MariusM 19:27, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, I knew that once I agreed with TSO1D, it would be the kiss of death. - Mauco 19:35, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
- Some of Wiki readers will read this article preciselly because they want to go to Transnistria, and is good to warn them about all the issues. Actual section is O.K.--MariusM 19:27, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
I'm not sure about this at all. I did think it was a good idea to put the travel warning on there, but would someone travelling to Transnistria really use wikipedia as their only source of information? They'd have to be mad, I think. I personnaly would feel that I was in far more danger if I were travelling to Somaliland, for which there must be dozens and dozens of warning, but I don't see a Travel Warning section on their page.Jonathanpops 10:52, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
- I like TSO1D's proposal. They're notable enough to be mentioned, and expanded upon if we get a Tourism in T page, but I'm sure that they're importnat enough for a section --Robdurbar 11:46, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
- I agree with Robdurbar, and in answer to Jonathanpops: Lots of places are far more dangerous than Transnistria, and official travel warnings exist for all of them. However, they are not posted on the Wikipedia pages for each. So neither should they be posted on Transnistria. See Wikipedia policies on notability and Wikipedia guidelines on undue weight and remove those travel warnings. - Mauco 05:26, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
- That's what I meant Mauco, I agree. At first I thought it was ok to have the warnings, but after seeing that even Somaliland doesn't have a travel warning section I don't see why Transnistria should have one either. Jonathanpops 12:16, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
- No one seems to argue that Somaliland is young democracy. In contradiction in Transnistrian article we have Mauco who always try to push this views and article needs a balance from third respectable sours and Travel warnings do they job as fine. I do believe that every article should have individual approach. There is no common rule:
Roses are red,
Violets are blue,..
EvilAlex 13:15, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
- No one seems to argue that Somaliland is young democracy. In contradiction in Transnistrian article we have Mauco who always try to push this views and article needs a balance from third respectable sours and Travel warnings do they job as fine. I do believe that every article should have individual approach. There is no common rule:
- I do not agree that we should basically ignore existing Wikipedia standards, guidelines and policies and give every article an individual approach. Far more people die in Somaliland every year than in Transnistria, and they have an active, "hot" conflict in the Sool and East Sanag region, which is disputed with Puntland. This is the scene of much more violent armed confrontations unlike Transnistria where the conflict is "frozen" and contained with the peacekeepers. Not a single person died in the border conflict since 1992 as a result. Please point to any other Wikipedia page that includes these sort of third party travel warnings, or else consider this discussion closed. - Mauco 19:22, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mauco, we need to follow Wikipedia standards not your interpretations about Wikipedia standards. BTW, according Helsinki Comitee for Human Rights in Moldova, only in the village Chiţcani 20 people were killed by Transnistrian paramilitary troops after 1992. Adding the explosions in Tiraspol, I am not sure that nobody died because of conflict after 1992.--MariusM 22:45, 26 December 2006 (UTC)
- I don't understand what Mauco thinks on Travel Warnings:
- 1.The information is irrelevant.
- 2.The information is relevant but this article should not include a chapter that is not yet present in any other article.
- 3.The information should be included, but the phrasing should be developed.
- The article should not describe the violent incidents as isolated. This is like saying if the region is safe or not. Wikipedia should contain the facts and let the reader judge on them Dl.goe
- I am merely supporting TSO1D's suggestion, as you can see. Read his suggestion. He argues it better than I can, and Jonathanpops makes the same point well. - Mauco 17:28, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
- The text avoid confrontations with local authorities may imply that authorities are not always helpful. The other The security situation in that region is unpredictable as it is not under government control. is also very serious. As this information is given to tourists for their safety, they are as objective as these countries have. They are not directed by foreign policy, but for the safety of their own citizens. I think the content of these travel warnings is important.Dl.goe 17:43, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
- I agree. That is why we have the mention, in TSO1D's phrasing, and why we include links to all three warnings. That way, if someone is interesting in planning a trip to Transnistria, they can follow the link and see what the warnings cover. Wikipedia is not supposed to repeat everything that third parties put on the internet about every subject. We should mention give an overview, and we are doing more than that in this case: We are even providing the links. - Mauco 17:54, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
- The text avoid confrontations with local authorities may imply that authorities are not always helpful. The other The security situation in that region is unpredictable as it is not under government control. is also very serious. As this information is given to tourists for their safety, they are as objective as these countries have. They are not directed by foreign policy, but for the safety of their own citizens. I think the content of these travel warnings is important.Dl.goe 17:43, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
- I am merely supporting TSO1D's suggestion, as you can see. Read his suggestion. He argues it better than I can, and Jonathanpops makes the same point well. - Mauco 17:28, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
- Mauco, we need to follow Wikipedia standards not your interpretations about Wikipedia standards. BTW, according Helsinki Comitee for Human Rights in Moldova, only in the village Chiţcani 20 people were killed by Transnistrian paramilitary troops after 1992. Adding the explosions in Tiraspol, I am not sure that nobody died because of conflict after 1992.--MariusM 22:45, 26 December 2006 (UTC)
- I do not agree that we should basically ignore existing Wikipedia standards, guidelines and policies and give every article an individual approach. Far more people die in Somaliland every year than in Transnistria, and they have an active, "hot" conflict in the Sool and East Sanag region, which is disputed with Puntland. This is the scene of much more violent armed confrontations unlike Transnistria where the conflict is "frozen" and contained with the peacekeepers. Not a single person died in the border conflict since 1992 as a result. Please point to any other Wikipedia page that includes these sort of third party travel warnings, or else consider this discussion closed. - Mauco 19:22, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Wrong template
Template:Infobox Region is the proper template to be used and not Template: Infobox Country .--Mihai Bucur 13:15, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- Unrecognised it may be, but the PMR is a country, not a region. I would like to suggest again that a split of this article into region and state would help to clarify things. Sephia karta 17:24, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- Sephia karta, there is no need to respond to this user. "Mihai Bucur" was a sockpuppet of permanently banned Bonaparte and was almost immediately blocked for good. He spent an hour or two vandalizing a bunch of Wikipedia and now he is gone. - Mauco 17:55, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- Ah, thanks for the info. Sephia karta 18:54, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
Well, that does bring up the question, why are we using the country template if it's not recognized as a country? At a minimum, even if a clone, it seems to me there should be an "Unrecognized Country" template. — Pēters J. Vecrumba 18:17, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- As is visible in the way it is worded: "Unrecognised country" is a subspecification of "country". It is a country, which happens to be unrecognised. Now as I see it, non-recognition is a qualification which is unfit to be employed as the basis for a general classification because what it does, is that it represent an opinion (the opinion of most of the world's states that the country should not exist.) The country itself naturally does not share this opinion, nor do many of its inhabitants, nor may you or I, for that matter. If we are to remain NPOV we cannot use opinions as a basis for classification. Sephia karta 18:53, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- Sephia, we just had a huge debate about this and it resulted in an intro section which is not perfect, but an acceptable compromise. The sticking point was the use of the word "unrecognized country" versus the word "region" so let us try to not open this can of worms again, please, if we can avoid it. Some of us tried to apply consistency and wanted the same mention ("unrecognized country") that the rest of Wikipedia uses elsewhere, but in the end, we had to settle for a different compromise which no one is particularly happy with but which appears to be acceptable to almost all of us. - Mauco 19:06, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- I wasn't trying to have any change brought into the opening, I was merely arguing against a proposed change in the template employed for the PMR, though I realise that this is not the place where this is relevant anyway. Sephia karta 16:01, 26 December 2006 (UTC)
Crime
How much of the information in the crime section is actually proven? It seems to me that 90%, if not more, is hearsay. I am not asking for it to be removed, but it would be good to underscore that there has never been any evidence for these allegations. - Mauco 18:35, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- Well, I agree, the section doesn't include much specific information; it mostly consists of general statements that are directly attributed to various sources. Nevertheless, I think this is the best way to present the information, by just citing various experts in the area, from both sides. I don't believe we should add our own analysis to the text, though. If there is a contrasting view, than that should be added, but our opinions should not be mixed into it. TSO1D 19:25, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- OK! I was just asking ... - Mauco 19:30, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- Lol, sorry I didn't mean to sound harsh. I just wanted say that although I agree that the section could be improved, it's probably best if we present various statements as they are. If we try to add qualitative statements, we risk bringing our biases into the text. TSO1D 19:41, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- All too true. A common problem. - Mauco 20:02, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- Lol, sorry I didn't mean to sound harsh. I just wanted say that although I agree that the section could be improved, it's probably best if we present various statements as they are. If we try to add qualitative statements, we risk bringing our biases into the text. TSO1D 19:41, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
- OK! I was just asking ... - Mauco 19:30, 25 December 2006 (UTC)
Sockpupetry again
Our friend User:Mark us street didn't leave Wikipedia as he told, he just changed his username and edited under other names. At least 2 sockpuppets were confirmed [2]: User:Truli and User:Esgert. Probabily we will have plenty of sockpuppets of Mark us street in the future.--MariusM 22:41, 26 December 2006 (UTC)
- I hope not. One Bonaparte is already enough. - Mauco 23:12, 26 December 2006 (UTC)
Yakovlev's comments dissapeared
I don't see anymore Yakovlev's comments, about which I discussed long time ago in this talk page (now archived), nobody expressed any opposition to include them in the article, were included afterwards in the article and nobody reverted that. However, our friend Mauco took the opportunity that I was not active in Wikipedia few days and removed those comments without any disscussion here. A quick look at the article shows other changes, like a [citation needed] added near the mention about ban of political parties, while this is sourced few sentences bellow, removal of a paragraph about Moldovan schools etc.--MariusM 23:29, 26 December 2006 (UTC)
- Welcome back. Check the edit log - it has your answer, with a complete edit comment as to why. - Mauco 00:08, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
- I have to remind you that you don't have veto rights on this article. Yakovlev comments (good or bad, is not our job to be for or against Yakovlev) were part of the article for long time, nobody expressed oposition against this paragraph. You are defying all other editors removing this part.--MariusM 09:41, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- In 16 November 03:34 Mauco told: "Go ahead and mention Yakovlev if he is notable". Why did you changed your mind, Mauco? Full disscusion about Yakovlev in archive 9 [3]--MariusM 09:52, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- The Yakovlev comment referred to what he claimed was supposedly a deterioting economic situation. When we added the latest info (GDP per capita up 17% year-on-year) it was clear that Yakovlev was
wrongmisleadingly wrong. Just sour grapes from an old communist who doesn't even live there. Time proved him wrong, and Wikipedia is not written in stone. The idea, over time, is to try to make each article better. - Mauco 03:04, 29 December 2006 (UTC)- For GDP increase you have an unrealiable source: Tiraspol Times. Mark Street, editor of Tiraspol Times, who edited Wikipedia, is the same person who wrote that children are dying in Transnistria (because some bad Wikipedians). He is not even consistent with his propaganda, or he adjust it considering the audience. Anyhow, Yakovlev is telling about very specific things - his village of Mikhailovka, and nobody denied what he wrote. I suggested to Mark Street to make a reportage in Mikhailovka village, to check if Yakovlev is not lying. He didn't followed my advice.--MariusM 16:25, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Question for Pernambuco: Why you deleted the paragraph about Yakovlev which was agreed in November by all editors?--MariusM 16:25, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- The Yakovlev comment referred to what he claimed was supposedly a deterioting economic situation. When we added the latest info (GDP per capita up 17% year-on-year) it was clear that Yakovlev was
- You are talking about something that you do not know about, can you show me where I did this? My only work is to restore the page, I have only made one single edit that changed it, and it was on 23 december, and it was not a deletion, it was a move where I took a paragraph and moved it into a different place, I never delete anything like you do, so stop accusing everyone of everything, I will keep my eye on you from now on, you are not a really good Wikipedian when you act like this against others. Pernambuco 16:58, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- This revert by you included the deletion of Yakovlev opinions. I understand that you reverted blindly this paragraph, without being aware exactly what you are reverting. I understand the situation but in future please look with atention what you are reverting. It is not a situation of "me against others", I just re-added paragraphs which were part of the article for long time and silently removed without discussion in talk page. I think is a situation "Mauco against others", and you were caught in this dispute not being fully aware about the history of the page (you should check also the talks in archives). I don't mind if you keep an eye on me, I am proud of my editing record.--MariusM 17:33, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- You are talking about something that you do not know about, can you show me where I did this? My only work is to restore the page, I have only made one single edit that changed it, and it was on 23 december, and it was not a deletion, it was a move where I took a paragraph and moved it into a different place, I never delete anything like you do, so stop accusing everyone of everything, I will keep my eye on you from now on, you are not a really good Wikipedian when you act like this against others. Pernambuco 16:58, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
History and Conflict Resolution
Do you think it would be better to add a conflict resolution paragraph? The last part of the history section is far greater than all the rest, and I was wondering if maybe it would be better to split it up. In the history section we could keep an overview of the facts in chronological order, whereas the resolution section could discuss all ongoing and previous proposals for ending the crisis. TSO1D 02:19, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
- Actually, the real "problem" is that we have two histories which are out of sync. A lot of stuff was added to history section of the main Transnistria page a couple of months ago which never made it into the History of Transnistria article. This is the opposite of what we are trying to do with the various sections: All the details should go there, and then a summary of the most important facts should be extracted and go into the main article. Principle is: Details there, summary here. Right now, they are out of sync. They both have detals, but the details vary and don't even overlap 100%. If you feel ambitious, the best thing to do now is to move everything over to History first, merge it there, and then start from scratch with a brand new summary for the main Transnistria-article which you draw from the new, combined History article. - Mauco 03:03, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
Border issues
An other paragraph which was part of the article for long time - "Border issues" - was removed by Mauco during my short wikibreak. This is linked with the article List of unrecognized countries, where Mauco want to move Transnistria in the section with unrecognized countries with "full" control over their territorry, while I want to keep it in the section "partial" control over territorry, based exactly on information about border issues. Mauco censored the border issues section in this article, in order to remove the arguments against his position on the other article (I was reffering at Transnistria article in the disputes on the other article). I re-added back this section and I hope Mauco will refrain to start a new edit war about it.--MariusM 09:45, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
Border issues paragraph was added by me in 4 September [4]. During 3 1/2 months nobody objected in this talk page against this paragraph, but was silently removed by Mauco during my short Christmas wikibreak.--MariusM 10:15, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not removed be me. Please assume good faith. I made some other edits, just like a lot of other people did (and keep doing every day), but not this particular one. Anyway, the border detail section is now located where it belongs (in the detailed article on Disputed status of Transnistria) and a summary line is included here, and I fully agree with the editor who did this that it is the correct approach. Remember the golden rule: "Details there, summary here." - Mauco 13:23, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- Indeed, I saw that border issues section was removed by User:Pernambuco. Apologies for my mistake. Anyhow, Pernambuco should first explain in talk his edits, especially when he remove something that was stable in this unstable article for 3 1/2 months and nobody objected to it.--MariusM 18:09, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- The article can't do without Border issues. We should say what region we are talking about.Dl.goe 16:49, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- That is already there (it says Transnistria). Want more? The details can be seen with one mouseclick. That is right approach. It is done that way in the other parts, too (history, internal politics, human rights, referendum, the Ukraine border dispute, and so on). - Mauco 16:54, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- Border issues are an ongoing problem - are necesarry. Only section which is not necesarry according your golden rule "Details there, summarry here" is the referendum section.--MariusM 17:40, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- I agree that they are necessary, but do we need all details on this page. I think it makes more sense to just keep one sentence mentioning their existence here, with details available in the subpage. TSO1D 17:53, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, they are necesarry. They were in the article from 4 September, why suddenly they are not necesarry? What is your opinion about referendum section?--MariusM 17:59, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- I think it should be mentioned but not in great detail. One line summarizing the results and a link to the main article should suffice in my view. TSO1D 19:42, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, they are necesarry. They were in the article from 4 September, why suddenly they are not necesarry? What is your opinion about referendum section?--MariusM 17:59, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- I agree that they are necessary, but do we need all details on this page. I think it makes more sense to just keep one sentence mentioning their existence here, with details available in the subpage. TSO1D 17:53, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- Border issues are an ongoing problem - are necesarry. Only section which is not necesarry according your golden rule "Details there, summarry here" is the referendum section.--MariusM 17:40, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- I checked the archives, and it was added without any discussion, and then it was duplicated in another article, it is bad that someone says "he should explain" when my edit line did explain this, and I just moved it into the right article where it belongs. I did not remove any information but just ordered it, sorted it out the right way.This is on the rule that all of you have here, where you decide on the details in one place, and the summary in the main space, and so on. I am not taking sides, but I have to do a good job, and all this edit war stuff between the two camps, I have to say, honest, it is not helping the article Pernambuco 21:59, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- The rule is not upheld in practice. Take a look at the human rights section, or internal politics, for instance. - Mauco 03:01, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- You do not follow it either mr Mauco, but right now it is important all of you need to stop that edit war, and I will keep restoring the article if you all keep doing it. Pernambuco 15:34, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- The rule is not upheld in practice. Take a look at the human rights section, or internal politics, for instance. - Mauco 03:01, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Regarding border issues, is you, Pernambuco who started the edit war. Is amazing to see the person who stated the edit war asking others to stop it. Border issues section was part of the article for 3 and a half months, there were thousand edits in Transnistria article during that time, nobody was against border issues section (not even in the other thousands edits in talk page). COntrary, some other editors added more details at this section. Suddenly, Pernambuco deleted the section without any discussion in talk.--MariusM 16:14, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- I am not an edit warrior and I never take sides, I did one single move, it is here http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=prev&oldid=96140706, and I explained it on the 23 december, with my edit log comment. There was no information removed, it was moved into the right place, and every one else liked it, then you show up here, and complain, but it was one single move and it was not an edit war. I do not edit this article a lot, the rest that I have done since is just to revert the p.o.v. changes, so do not accuse me of edit warrior, I ask Pernambuco 16:51, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not every one else liked your move, as you can see in the last 2 days that you were reverted not only by me, but by Dlgoe and Diana Teodorescu as well. Don't take it personally, it happens in Wikipedia that other editors don't agree with some of your edits. People don't want to look in tens articles to find information about Transnistria, important information should be in the main article also.--MariusM 17:15, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- MariusM, why do you always team up with Bonaparte? Mauco 01:21, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
Pernambuco summarized border issues:
There are unsettled border issues with conflicting claims on both sides.
I find it unacceptable. When the reader clicks border issues he expects to find an explanation on what border issues means; not an article referring to Transnistria border issues. This way the information is hidden and no one will find it.
Also, summary does not mean one line link. Would you like an article:
Transnistria has Geography
Transnistria has Economy
Transnistria has HistoryDl.goe 18:10, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Isolated violent incidents
I do not understand this edit remark: "please provide reference if you want to enter the word isolated" with regards to "violent incidents." The incidents are listed in the article (with references). There are very few, and they are spread out over a long period of time. They also did not happen in the whole country, but just in a few, specific points. If there were more, and if they happened all the time, all over the place, they would not be isolated. But they are precisely isolated because they are NOT frequent. Maybe English is not your first language, but please understand the difference between isolated and non-isolated, frequent, common, routine, etc. - Mauco 17:16, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- The word isolated implies a judgment and is a point of view. Can one draw a line between isolated and non-isolated? Which is this line? The violent incidents are listed, and so is the size of the region. The reader should judge whether they are isolated or not. I think NPOV includes presenting the facts without judging them.Dl.goe 17:30, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- I agree, using the word isolated makes a judgment that shouldn't be added. I think the same for goes for the crime sections, where the word allegations has been added before smuggling and weapons trade. Yes, many of the claims are unsubstantiated allegations, others are claims supported by evidence, and all of this is explained within the paragraphs. I don't think it's necessary to add a descriptor in the title of the section. TSO1D 17:58, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
Until proven, they are nothing but allegations. The POV is to state "Weapons trade" - definitive - as a headline, if no such trade ever took place. And as for "isolated", the simple question is: Did these acts take place on a persistent basis, all over Transnistria? In regards to Kosovo, the term "isolated incidents" is the phrase used by most of the press, although in Kosovo, killings take place weekly, if not daily. - Mauco 02:58, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- The fact that the press uses the term doesn't mean that it doesn't include a judgment behind it. Personally I agree that the incidents of domestic terrorism in Transnistria are isolated, however I still think it's best to lay out the facts without any qualifications. As for allegations of... I don't really care too much but see what you mean; without the word it could be interpreted that a statement is made. TSO1D 03:03, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Oh, I know that the press is using POV-judgment when they refer to the Kosovo mess as "isolated incidents". I am not that naive, TSO1D, and maybe I was being provocative with that particular example. But I think (well, hope) that over time we will see that in the case of Transnistria, these incidents ARE indeed isolated. So far, it doesn't look like there is a concerted campaign of bombings or violence, and certainly no specific purpose or pattern to it either. "Isolated" is not so much a value judgment, in my eyes, as it is merely the most accurate description that we can come up with to quickly explain to the reader what is actually going on. And that, as you know, must be our overriding concern as editors. - Mauco 03:08, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- In the last months 2 explosions in Tiraspol (described as "terrorist" by authorities and used for arresting pro-Moldovan activists before the referendum) and also one explosion in Tighina (which is not listed in our article). Seems not isolated for me. Anyhow, is best only to list them and let the reader to decide.--MariusM 13:23, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- The activists were brought in for questioning, then released. Two explosions in one year is hardly a crime wave or a terrorist wave. Of course these acts were "isolated", and to pretend that they were not (as EvilAlex wants, and you seem to want too) is highly biased POV. The simple question is: Did these acts take place on a persistent basis, all over Transnistria? No, they did not. - Mauco 13:48, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- We should not pretend incidents are isolated or are not isolated. We should just list the incidents and let the readers to decide.--MariusM 16:26, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- The activists were brought in for questioning, then released. Two explosions in one year is hardly a crime wave or a terrorist wave. Of course these acts were "isolated", and to pretend that they were not (as EvilAlex wants, and you seem to want too) is highly biased POV. The simple question is: Did these acts take place on a persistent basis, all over Transnistria? No, they did not. - Mauco 13:48, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- In the last months 2 explosions in Tiraspol (described as "terrorist" by authorities and used for arresting pro-Moldovan activists before the referendum) and also one explosion in Tighina (which is not listed in our article). Seems not isolated for me. Anyhow, is best only to list them and let the reader to decide.--MariusM 13:23, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- I also think that "isolated" in the heading sounds a little POV, and agree with MariusM's last opinion that we should let the readers decide and just lay out the facts. Also, this is my point of view and should not be in the article, I think that the incedents aren't very isolated anyway. They maybe few if you look at statistics since 1990, but they are quite a lot for just one year for one very small region/country. Jonathanpops 17:08, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Oh, I know that the press is using POV-judgment when they refer to the Kosovo mess as "isolated incidents". I am not that naive, TSO1D, and maybe I was being provocative with that particular example. But I think (well, hope) that over time we will see that in the case of Transnistria, these incidents ARE indeed isolated. So far, it doesn't look like there is a concerted campaign of bombings or violence, and certainly no specific purpose or pattern to it either. "Isolated" is not so much a value judgment, in my eyes, as it is merely the most accurate description that we can come up with to quickly explain to the reader what is actually going on. And that, as you know, must be our overriding concern as editors. - Mauco 03:08, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Economy NPOV
Transnistria has an open economy based on free market principles. Following a large scale privatization process, most of the companies in Transnistria are now privately owned. The economy is export-oriented and based on a mix of heavy industry and manufacturing.[citation needed]
What is an export oriented economy? What other countries are export oriented? Who states that Transnistria is an open economy? Who states that Transnistria is a free market?Dl.goe
- My hint: Export oriented economy mean an important part of revenues are from smugling.--MariusM 18:11, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
- Please. I thought that we were past that. EUBAM has been on the border for a year now, and there are no serious signs of any significant smuggling activity. - Mauco 02:54, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- So, to get back on track - Export oriented means: Transnistria trades with nearly 100 countries. The second largest textile company in Europe is located in Transnistria. Sells to Quelle, Aldi, etc. One of the largest steel companies in Europe is there, and among the most modern in the world. Listed by Lloyds of London. These are heavy, serious businesses. They do not exist to cater to a market of 500,000 low income people. Open economy and free market principles: Click on the wikilinks, read what the descriptions say, and then use common sense to decide if that applies or not to accurately describe Transnistria in the econony section of this article. - Mauco 02:54, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- I've looked at Economy of the United States but I haven't seen any terms like export -oriented,free market or open market; maybe Transnistria has a better economy than USA...
- I cannot Click on the wikilinks, read what the descriptions say, and then use common sense to decide if that applies or not to accurately describe Transnistria in the econony section of this article.. Not because I do not have common sense, but because
- No criteria to decide which countries have open market, free market and export oriented economy are provided in this articles.
- I do not have information about the economy of Transnistria.
- it would surely be a judgement, and not an objective statement.
- Dl.goe 08:10, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- So, to get back on track - Export oriented means: Transnistria trades with nearly 100 countries. The second largest textile company in Europe is located in Transnistria. Sells to Quelle, Aldi, etc. One of the largest steel companies in Europe is there, and among the most modern in the world. Listed by Lloyds of London. These are heavy, serious businesses. They do not exist to cater to a market of 500,000 low income people. Open economy and free market principles: Click on the wikilinks, read what the descriptions say, and then use common sense to decide if that applies or not to accurately describe Transnistria in the econony section of this article. - Mauco 02:54, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
You are admitting that you have no information about the economy of Transnistria, so please do not remove the edits made by those of us who actually DO know about this subject matter. - Mauco 13:17, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- you can provide sources? Pernambuco 16:55, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Work
This article needs a lot of work, it's full of russian propaganda.--Diana Teodorescu 14:33, 29 December 2006 (UTC) (Stricken Bonaparte comment.)
Language section is missing, why?--Diana Teodorescu 14:41, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- you removed the information box? I am not sure that other people will agree with this, why did you not discuss this before you did it, now I am forced to restore the page again .........Pernambuco 16:52, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Let's wait to see other people's opinion. In the case that people agree to remove it, we will do in accordance with it. If not, infobox will stay. And I don't understand why you revert all the text since only infobox was the challenge to you.--Diana Teodorescu 18:11, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- It is not just the infobox, look at all the damage you did to the article, here http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 it is vandalism, that it what it is, and sorry if I offend you, but I call it a spade when it is a spade. You can at least discuss these things first Pernambuco 18:16, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Don't worry, Pernambuco. This is a permabanned user who is Bonaparte. He showed up on the 23rd as well. He will be back. Every time he comes here, MariusM gets happy and supports him. On Friday, he claimed to be a female. He is the master of disguise, but his editing gives him away. - Mauco 01:25, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
US Department of State position
This paragraph was reverted by both Mauco and Pernambuco: In Transnistria the right of citizens to change their government was severely restricted.[...]Transnistrian authorities harassed independent media and opposition lawmakers, restricted freedom of association and of religion, and discriminated against Romanian-speakers.[...]Transnistrian authorities regularly harassed and often detained persons suspected of being critical of the regime for periods of up to several months.U.S. Department of State referring to year 2005. May I asked those editors why they consider irrelevant the position of US Department of State?--MariusM 16:35, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- No that was not removed by me, if you accuse me of something that I did not do, then please show me the link. I have only made one single edit to this page in the many recent weeks, and it was on 23 of december, and since then, I have not done anything except restoring from when you and your friends went crazy on the page and undid a lot of the work of the other users, so please do not accuse me like that without showing me the proof, mr Marius. Pernambuco 17:12, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Here is an example from yesterday when you removed not only "border issues" sections, but also US Department of State position and the paragraph with Yakovlev position. Also, you removed Travel warnings.--MariusM 17:07, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not removed, this is a revert of some radical changes by you and your friends, if you look at the log you will see that all I did was to restore to an earlier version. I dont know who removed it from the earlier version, but I know it was not me, I know my work and I am very carefull when I make my edits because I know that some of you people here are hot heads that likes to fight with every body.. and I refuse to take sides, so do not accuse me of things that I have never done Pernambuco 17:12, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- OK. Just state your position: Is the opinion of U.S. Department of State relevant for this article?--MariusM 17:19, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- BTW, other editors that disagree with you are not my friends. I know them only from Wikipedia.--MariusM 17:21, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Thats something the others must figure out, I take no sides, and remember, each editor must defend his edits, so the person who added it must explain why it has to stay and the person who deleted it must explain why it has to be deleted, and someone who does not want to take sides can not be forced to take sides, but you have a side, and it is obvious, it is even obvious to someone who is a newcomer like me . Pernambuco 17:25, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Not removed, this is a revert of some radical changes by you and your friends, if you look at the log you will see that all I did was to restore to an earlier version. I dont know who removed it from the earlier version, but I know it was not me, I know my work and I am very carefull when I make my edits because I know that some of you people here are hot heads that likes to fight with every body.. and I refuse to take sides, so do not accuse me of things that I have never done Pernambuco 17:12, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Here is an example from yesterday when you removed not only "border issues" sections, but also US Department of State position and the paragraph with Yakovlev position. Also, you removed Travel warnings.--MariusM 17:07, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
O.K., I explain my position: US is an important country, it is not directly involved in Transnistrian conflict. US is monitoring Human rights issues in many countries, and I believe the reports of US Department of State have valuable and reliable information. Point of view of U.S. Department of State need to be mentioned in this article.--MariusM 17:44, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
I am glad to see that you are not against this paragraph (you are not for it as well), I hope you will not delete it in the future only because you don't like me. Those who want to delete the paragraph should give a valid explanation here (fact that never happened untill now).--MariusM 17:44, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- but you are so fast when you accuse others, did you see who added it? the person that did it, did not talk about it here, and did not explain it, so that counts as the same kind of behavior. I am not taking a side, but both of you are guilty of the same thing, you are guilty of what you accuse the other person of. Pernambuco 18:14, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Mauco reverts
Let me first explain my edit:
- 1. I added:
In Transnistria: the right of citizens to change their government was severely restricted.[...]Transnistrian authorities harassed independent media and opposition lawmakers, restricted freedom of association and of religion, and discriminated against Romanian-speakers.[...]Transnistrian authorities regularly harassed and often detained persons suspected of being critical of the regime for periods of up to several months.[...]In Transnistria, homosexuality was illegal, and gays and lesbians were subject to governmental and societal discrimination.U.S. Department of State referring to year 2005
to Human Rights chapter.
We say critics claim... we should provide a quote.
- 2. I added templates to all content under discussion
- 3. Suggested Transnistrian separatist side / Moldovan antiseparatist side for external links section. I find it a good compromise.
My edit summary was:I added templates before all content under discussion. Please don't rv this edit as it contains many changes that deserve to be treated separately.
You reverted: rv POV hijack.
I feel insulted by the way you don't need to comment my edits before reverting them. You remove even the templates that announce discussions. This is like saying that my opinion is completely negligible to you.Dl.goe 17:40, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Happy to see the article is equally repudiated by all extremes! [5] jamason 18:17, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
(Permabanned Bonaparte removed)
Your version is worse, look at what you did, http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 this is vandalism, I have no opinion on this, but I will stop vandalism and I have to revert this, I am sorry, but you are damaging the article and you have not agreement from the rest. Pernambuco 18:14, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
(Permabanned Bonaparte removed)
- Was that all you did, no it was not, look at the mess you made http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 and sorry if I offend, but this http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 is vandalism, you can not go around and do this and not discuss it first with anyone, you have never worked on this page before, I admit, I do not do a lot here but I have been here longer than you and everyone is always fighting.. Pernambuco 18:22, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
(Permabanned Bonaparte removed)
Pernambuco, you deleted important paragraphs without a valid explanation. Diana is not a vandal, she mainly restored deleted information. Same with me and Dl.goe. You are the one who creates a mess here.--MariusM 18:37, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- "Diana is not a vandal". Sorry, buddy: Diana is Bonaparte. You can hardly get more vandalistic than that. - Mauco 01:29, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
- Will you look at the link, just http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Transnistria&diff=97140358&oldid=97134870 and then see what went wrong, and do not accuse me of making a mess, like I said, I have made one single edit to the page, and that was on 23 of december, and all the rest of the time, I have only saved it from extremists who went and changed it without making a discussion first, if you want to defend these changes, then discuss them first, otherwise I will keep doing my job. I almost never edit here and I never take sides, but i have to defend Wikipedia, that comes first, so please review these two versions and tell me which one is best. You and Diana and DI.goe will not even allow Trasnistria to have each own links, what is that all about, I thought that this was already voted on? Where are the links now? Pernambuco 18:45, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
(Permabanned Bonaparte removed)
That is crazy, this is English wikipedia, you should use english names, see this article here Nistru, it reverts to Dniester so you can not just change the names like that, you should ask for permission first. I do not want to take sides but I have to stop this extremism, please ask one of the administrators what they think of this, and who is making a complete mess ...... Pernambuco 18:45, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
(Permabanned Bonaparte removed)
- Nobody should take this personally. Is not really important if we call Dniester or Nistru, we have more important content issues in this article.--MariusM 19:16, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- in my opinion it is important, this is English wikipedia, use English names, or I will edit in Brazilian (Portuguese) wikipedia and you can edit in Romanian or Russian, or what it is, but in English, use the names that are used in English... Pernambuco 19:32, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Nobody should take this personally. Is not really important if we call Dniester or Nistru, we have more important content issues in this article.--MariusM 19:16, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
(Permabanned Bonaparte removed)
- I admit that I am new, but so are you, and we are not the experts, it is best to wait until some of the more experienced users appear again, and let us hear their opinion, but my impression from what I read in the news is that Transnistria is Russian speaking, that most of the people in that region of Moldova speak russian and not romanian or moldavian. But it does not matter, this is English wikipedia so please use the English names Pernambuco 19:53, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
It doesn't really matter, though, does it? As Pernambuco already stated, this is an English-language article and "Dniester" is English standard. jamason 19:59, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Don't need to wait, take my advice as a long-time editor of this article: use Dniester if you like but let the other paragraphs stay. Removing them without disscussion is vandalism.--MariusM 19:57, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- I am not understanding, who is the vandal, I need to know if it is me who is being called a vandal? because I never deleted a single paragraph from the article, I just took your border section and moved it into the right place. The other edits that you complain about was done by other people, for instance, this new user Diana who registered yesterday, she has removed half of the article without any discussion, and I agree with you, like you say, this is vandalism, we have to revert it to save the article. - —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Pernambuco (talk • contribs) 20:04, 29 December 2006 (UTC).
Pernambuco, MariusM will not answer you. He accused you of being a vandal and then defended Bonaparte, the worst vandal of all. - Mauco 01:29, 30 December 2006 (UTC)
Human Rights
Transnistria is a dictatorship, especially compared to the rest of Moldova, ruled with very poor (if not the worst) human rights record. Just see the religious freedoms: In recent years, Transnistrian authorities have denied registration to Baptists, Methodists, and the Church of the Living God. Unregistered religious groups were not allowed to hold public assemblies, such as revival meetings. The law in Transnistria prohibits renting houses, premises of enterprises, or "cultural houses" for prayer meetings. Transnistrian authorities have told evangelical religious groups meeting in private homes that they did not have the correct permits to use their residences as churches. The Jehovah's Witnesses in Transnistria have reported several incidents of administrative fines and unjust arrests of their members. In July, the Transnistrian Supreme Court ruled to limit the activities of the Jehovah's Witnesses to the city of Tiraspol; however, the court rejected the Tiraspol public prosecutor's 2002 request to annul the group's registration and prohibit its activities altogether. Transnistrian authorities reportedly accused Jehovah's Witnesses of lacking patriotism and spreading Western influence and reportedly developed school teaching aids that contained negative and defamatory information regarding the Jehovah's Witnesses. It's taken from the US Department of State http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2004/41697.htm and The Transnistrian authorities reportedly continued to use torture and arbitrary arrest and detention. [...] Transnistrian authorities harassed independent media, restricted freedom of association and of religion, and discriminated against Romanian-speakers http://www.usembassy.md/en-05172004.htm Excerpt from the report “Supporting Human Rights and Democracy: The U.S. Record 2003-2004” issued on May 17, 2004 regarding Moldova --Diana Teodorescu 18:56, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Russian atrocities in transnistria
The fact that romanians are still in Transnistrian jails and the fact that they threatened to close down 6 romanian schools should be stressed further. Also the fact that incursions into villages controlled by the Moldovan government occur all the time and people are arrested, beaten and sometimes even killed in jail should also be mentioned. http://www.agero-stuttgart.de/REVISTA-AGERO/ISTORIE/totul%20despre%20transnistria.htm This page should focus on the attrocities in the region. I suggest we either add/improve everething not pertaining to the subject or enlarge the info. There is plenty of info on Nazi and Stalin's attrocities on Web, so we could use them as sources.Diana Teodorescu 19:24, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- There are several other articles for that, like Moldovan schools in Transnistria. This page should focus on the region in general. Viorel Dolha's (that's his work) is not exactly a paragon of neutrality on the issue, either. --Illythr 21:24, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Names of cities confirms Romanian Transnistria
Here is the list: Singuri, Voloşovca, Cioban, Beseni, Voloşschie, Caracinţi-Valahi, Cotiujani, Uşiţa, Voloşcovţâ, Bârliadca (near Bug); Glodoasa, Troianca, Mamaica, Adăbaşi, Alexandria, Perepeliţino, Şantuia, Malai (pe lângă Kirovograd); Buric, Fundescleevca, Vărsaţi, Curecni (între Cigirin şi Novomirgorod); Băbanca, Burta, Tecucica (near Novoarhanghelsk); Răzmeriţa, Şelari, Moldovca, Moldovscaia, Odaia, Moldovanca (near Olviopol); Arcaşi, Cantacuzinca, Moldovca Braşoveanovca, Pădureţ, Urâta, Şerbani, Arnautovca (lângă Voznerensk); Baraboi, Grădiniţa, Dobrojeni, Grosulovo, Moldovanca (near Odessa); Coşuri, Guşa, Şura-Bondureni, Buda, Soroca, Chişleac, Bursuci, Odaeva, Şura (lângă Gaisân) etc. Th. Burada înfăţişează din gubernia Cherson în 1893 următoarele sate moldoveneşti: Iasca, Grădiniţa, Sevărtaica, Belcauca (spre Ovideopol), Mălăieşti, Floarea, Tei, Coşarca, Buturul, Perperiţa, Goiana, Siclia, Corotna, Cioburceni, Speia, Caragaciu, Taşlâc, Doroţcaia, Voznisevsca (pe Bug), Moldovca şi Cantacuzinovca. Acelaşi aromân Burada în 1906 găseşte în Podolia satele româneşti: Lescovăţ, Ruda, Ivaneţ, Rogozna, Studeniţa, Uşiţa, Lipciani, Serebia, Buşa, Coşniţa, Gruşca, Ocniţa, Camenca, Lăpuşna, Sărăţei, Râbniţa, Botuşani, Pietrosul, Slobozia, Domniţa, Balta, Moşneagul, Senina, Bursucul. Diana Teodorescu 19:24, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- Umm, so? Several of these, like Tecucica (Текучка) or Râbniţa (Рыбница) are not Romanian names at all, too... --Illythr 21:29, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Crime and corruption in Transnistria
About the economy, there is a big difference between Transnistria and the rest of Moldova in regards to living standarts, crime and corruption. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1602963,00.html Radiation rockets on sale to ‘terrorists’ Diana Teodorescu 19:24, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Links?
Why are there no links to the Transnistria side? I am not on the Transnsistria side, I do not take sides, but I remember that we voted on this, and had a long discussion, and it took forever. And now someone just removed these links, and no discussion. This is extremism, and vandalism, and I will revert all of the changes that are made if you discuss this. Warning: This applies to both sides. I will revert both sides if this continues, so stop it...... Pernambuco 19:24, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- I'm sorry. As this is an encyclopedia, we should only utilize information that is certified by official or credible sources. Paragraphs like U.S. Department od State position are very credible and we need official position like that. If you remove them, that's not in conformity with the POV neutrality policy of Wikipedia--Diana Teodorescu 19:25, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Cyrillic script for Romanian
The article lacks on the imposition of Cyrillic script for written Romanian, the cyrilic script was imposed --Diana Teodorescu 19:40, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Name-a stylistic thing
A stylistic thing which, in my opinion, is not done right here, is the name of the entity in the fact box. It says ".....Transdniester Respublika".... Ususally, it should be only Transnistria. As it is done, for example, with other sepparatist regions. OSCE as "Transdniestrian region of Moldova". --Diana Teodorescu 20:34, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
Tags
Don't revert, when users disagree about neutrality, it is normal for the article to have a POV tag until the differences are worked out as long as the differences are being worked out. The tag simply shows that there is a serious disagreement on article's neutrality and users are working on it. The discussion on the talk page shows the work in process. Here we have the work in process, neutrality is disputed in a very clear way and yet you and other users are in denial and persist in attempts to hide the dispute from Wikipedians by removing the text. My goal is not lecturize and even less so "impress" you. I call on you to respect the disagreement and stop trying to sweep it under the rug by hiding the POV text. All I said is that there's a mechanism in the policy and if this continues, I will have to use it (file report). I think you have a great knowledge and I admire your perseverance for trying to redeem the image of the otherwise quite dubious, illegal criminal Transnistrian government but you have to understand that some facts are just there to stay and that real facts are very hard to manipulate and you should give it up right now. However, if you are sincerely trying to commit to this article, then I think we can work something out. Which is why I ask you to stop pushing your POV or maybe is better not to edit this article for a while.--Diana Teodorescu 22:04, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
- One of the five pillars of Wikipedia, the Wikiquette includes a guideline of how to work towards NPOV. You have ignored that guideline and introduced your changes without any prior discussion. That is why I and other editors reverted you. The fact that Pernambuco got blocked for it is a shame. --Illythr 23:03, 29 December 2006 (UTC)