Ministry of Foreign Affairs about long queues at some polling stations abroad: "Electoral officials are managing the situation"
Electoral officials manage the queues reported at some polling stations outside the country according to "regulatory norms", said the spokeswoman of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Liliana Barbăroșie, for Teleradio-Moldova.
"We welcome the increased interest of voters outside the country in today's election. Electoral officials manage the situation according to the regulations".
We remind that queues have been created at some polling stations outside the country. The Promo-LEX election observation mission reported cases of organized transport of voters. "There is an increased activity in this regard in Istanbul," said the head of observation mission of Promo-LEX, Nicolae Panfil.
Meanwhile, the media from Romania wrote that the Republic of Moldova had notified several European Union countries, including Romania, that Russia would try to disrupt the diaspora's vote at polling stations abroad. A government source, who asked not to be identified, told Reuters on Sunday that polling stations in Italy, France, Germany, Spain, Canada, Romania, the US and the UK could be targeted by Moscow, including through fake alerts with a bomb, writes Digi24. The MAE told Teleradio-Moldova that it does not have "such data".