Oleg Brega vorbeste despre perchezitie


Relatare telefonica din Chisinau pentru Antena 3


5 răspunsuri la “Oleg Brega vorbeste despre perchezitie”

  1. Felicitari Brega !

    Dar oameni ca voi puteau face mult mai mult pentru al voastra tara din afara ei decat din interiorul ei unde deveniti victime ,arestati ,batuti si umiliti !

    sa sti ca si telefonul iti este inregistrat din 24 in 24 de oare,ma ia voma si mi se repeta iara cand aud pe ceia ce raspunde la nr. tau sima face sa astept zeci de minute ca Moldova dictatorului sa ia si ei o leafa de la lunga distanta .

    formez tel . tau sim raspunde o cetateana moldoveanca ;aloooooooooo,cu cine doriti.—;stati putin ca acum il chem;oleg !vino la telefon ,dar vino ca te asteapta cineva de atata timp !

    asteptazi va rog ca amuu vine,si iara ,si iara se repeta ;dar vino ca te asteapta cineva de atata timp !

  2. After four days of demonstrations in Chisinau , things were quiet in the Moldovan capital Friday morning.

    The night before, the hot topic in the local SMS text and email communication was the peaceful rally set to begin at 10am, but the city’s central square was relatively empty at that time – fewer than 50 people gathered.

    The meeting was named the „flower revolution”.

    On Thursday, opposition parties were given four days to recount the ballots and the authorities had instructed schoolmasters and parents to keep the children and teenagers inside, „to avoid bloodshed”.

    Hundreds of young people have been taken into police custody and courts are busy looking at the charges to decide who stays on and who walks away.
    Hundreds of young people have been taken into police custody and courts are busy looking at the charges to decide who stays on and who walks away.

    The law enforcement agencies continue with searches and arrests, discretely during the day and quite brutally at night.

    Oleg Brega
    Oleg Brega
    Oleg Brega, the reporter who was beaten by at least four men in police uniforms and in civilian clothes on Wednesday, had his home searched by the police yesterday.

    He recognised some of them – they had been part of the gang beating a day before. Oleg was not told the reason for his Wednesday arrest, or the search of his home a day later. No charges have been pressed so far.

    Instead, he was called this morning to testify as a „witness” in the Prosecutor-General’s office, in a case against his brother Ghenadie Brega.

    The latter, a civil rights activist and freelance journalist, organised the Tuesday peaceful meeting in the Moldovan capital, Chisinau. The authorities think he masterminded the „coup d’etat” attempt in Moldova.

    Oleg was expected to leave the Prosecutor-General’s office within hours and return to his desk at JurnalTV .

    There, the police broke into the editorial offices and seized computers, tapes, discs, documents, and reporter information. No search warrant was shown, and superior officers did not explain what they were looking for.
    There, the police broke into the editorial offices and seized computers, tapes, discs, documents, and reporter information. No search warrant was shown, and superior officers did not explain what they were looking for.

    „The cases concerning persons who are not convenient for the sitting regime are solved surprisingly fast, while true criminals are free,” Mr. Brega said by telephone minutes before talking to prosecutors.
    http://www.mediahelpingmedia.org/content/view/371/1/

  3. Moldova’s president has ordered a ballot recount after mass protests and opposition accusations that the country’s recent parliamentary election was rigged.

    Allegations against the government include using dead people’s names on electoral rolls, intimidation of journalists and the brutal treatment of protesters.

    The expected Flower Revolution announced by youngsters for Friday morning in Chisinau, the Moldovan capital, has been postponed over allegations that the government would provoke them into a possible repetition of the violence that took place in the city on Tuesday.

    Organisers say the authorities had been preparing to lure the demonstrators into entering the offices of government buildings in the city centre in order to justify the continuing violence used by Vladimir Voronin, the country’s president, to suppress any dissent.

    They say this tactic was used by the authorities when between 100 and 200 people stormed the parliament and presidential offices earlier this week after up to 30,000 people gathered in the capital to protest against the result of Sunday’s election.

    Instead, the organisers called on voters to report alleged abuses during the election, including using dead people’s names on electoral rolls, and to ignore provocations from what they say is a communist-orchestrated coup d’etat.

    At least 200 people, many of them schoolchildren, have been arrested by the police since Tuesday’s mass demonstration

    Some of those who have been released say the police have acted brutally and tortured the detainees.

    Zinaida Grecianii, Moldova’s prime minister, warned on Thursday of her government’s determination to use force against protesters.

    Appearing on national television, she branded the protesters as „bandits” and described the fraud allegations as lie, but refused to elaborate.

    Vote rigging

    The accusations of vote rigging are shared by many independent media and opposition parties in Moldova, with gathering evidence of fraud by the communists prior to and during the April 5 election 2009.

    Ziarul de Garda, an investigative newspaper, said that voter lists were full of names of people who had passed away.

    On its website (www.garda.com.md), it published witness reports about „dead men voting”.

    The newspaper said other irregularities showed that the lists included people who had moved elsewhere or were working abroad and yet had still voted in their original constituencies.

    Between 100 and 200 people stormed the parliament on Tuesday [Jurnal de Chisinau]
    Overall, nearly 200,000 vote ballots are considered fake.

    This is the number of extra voters introduced in the lists for the 2009 parliamentary election.

    Official statistics show that the country’s population, which was less than 4.1 million during the previous election four years ago, has declined by at least one fifth since then.

    An estimated 300,000 to 900,000 people have emigrated or left the country for seasonable work.

    Under these circumstances, Jurnal de Chisinau (www.jurnal.md), another newspaper critical of the government, pointed out that the real number of voters should have decreased, not increased.

    Alliance for Our Moldova (AMN), one of the three main opposition parties, held an emergency news conference to complain that the electoral lists had not made been public by the authorities in spite of promises to do so.

    AMN and its partner parties, the Liberal party and the Liberal-Democratic party, have also opened hotlines for voters’ complaints.

    Election ‘stolen’

    Before the election, none but the Communist party enjoyed access to public television, which remains the largest source of information for most Moldovans.

    The pre-election debate on Moldova-1, the state-controlled television channel, was poorly managed and gained low ratings.

    Even now, conditions for gathering information about alleged electoral fraud are not favourable for any media which are not affiliated to the Communist party or the government.

    Up to 30,000 people gathered in the capital to protest against the result of Sunday’s election
    Aneta Grosu, editor-in-chief of Ziarul de Garda, said: „We are collecting witness reports about the fraud. It is already clear that the election was stolen.

    „Two of our reporters were stopped and intimidated in the street by men in civilian clothes and their tapes removed. Thanks God none was beaten – just kicked a few times.”

    Such allegations are dismissed by the government and the Communist party who say that the opposition cannot accept the democratic defeat.

    On Friday, Jurnal de Chisinau announced that Rodica Mahu, its editor-in-chief, had been taken from the street in daylight early in the morning by policemen in civilian clothes, virtually without explanation.

    She was released in the afternoon and was told the reason for her detentions was „the collection of information that can be used to storm state institutions”.

    Colleagues of Mahu, who is among the country’s leading investigative journalists, said the newspaper’s offices had also been searched by the police on Wednesday without a warrant from a judge.

    Officers seized computers, tapes, discs, documents, and journalistic materials.

    Film crew intimidated

    In another incident, ProTV, a local independent station, said its film crew had been intimidated and forced by the police to hand over their tapes.

    At least one Romanian journalist has been detained and many foreign journalists have been turned back at the country’s borders, without any plausible explanation.

    On Wednesday, Oleg Brega, another journalist, was attacked by policemen in uniforms and civilian clothes.

    Police and security agents have been accused of inciting violence
    His home was searched the next day, again without a warrant.

    Brega had filmed scenes which showed police officers and security agents participating in the vandalisation of the parliament and presidential buildings.

    On Friday, Brega was called to the prosecutor-general’s office to testify against his brother Ghenadie Brega, who is accused of masterminding Tuesday’s ‘coup d’etat’.

    Speaking to Al Jazeera, Brega said the communists had won thanks to the vote of people who were no longer alive.

    „But if they lived, they would certainly have voted against [the government],” he said.

    „They would have turned round and round in their graves, if they were able to see this mess.”
    http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2009/04/2009410145958156265.html

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