MD 2022
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30 images
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22 images
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10 imagesA view of International Airport in Chisinau, Moldova, on Monday, Nov 21, 2022. (VX Photo/ Vudi Xhymshiti) Moldovan international airport is located 13 km from the centre of the capital Chisinau. The IATA airport code KIV is derived from Kishinev. It is the primary and biggest airport of the Republic of Moldova. Its runway is 3590 metres in length and 45 metres in width with the assigned 4D- code, being operable 24 hours a day.
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14 imagesInterim general prosecutor, Chisinau, Moldova "My country has chosen a European path, and we will enforce the law; we will fight corruption," said interim General Prosecutor Ion Munteanu during an interview in Chisinau, Moldova, on Monday, Nov 21, 2022. (VX Photo/ Vudi Xhymshiti)
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24 images
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9 imagesProtestors hold placards demanding a reduction of the cost of living during a protest organised by the Moldovan Socialist Party along with its youth branch 'Yung Guard" outside the Presidential Palace in Chisinau, Moldova, on Wednesday, Nov 16, 2022. The protest was timed to the fact that "Maia Sandu came to power 2 years ago" said a 'Young Guard' press officer Nikita Romenschi. (VX Photo/ Vudi Xhymshiti)
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10 imagesAround 330 trolleybuses run every day on the existing passenger transport routes in the Moldovan capital Chisinau, transporting 400 thousand passengers daily. In this set of images, you will see trolleybuses riding along the Bulevard Stefan Cel Mare in Chisinau, Moldova on Monday, Nov 14, 2022. A trolleybus is powered by electricity drawn from two overhead wires by trolley poles. The small ex-Soviet state relies on Russian natural gas supplied by Gazprom and is grappling with a 40% cut in deliveries that has hurt its ability to provide enough electricity to its 2.5 million population. (VX Photo/ Vudi Xhymshiti)
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31 imagesSeveral thousand protesters calling Moldova's pro-Western leaders to leave the high office marched through the ex-Soviet state's capital for the ninth consecutive Sunday, Nov 13, 2022. (VX Photo/ Vudi Xhymshiti) The small ex-Soviet state relies on Russian natural gas supplied by Gazprom and is grappling with a 40% cut in deliveries that has hurt its ability to provide enough electricity to its 2.5 million population. President Maia Sandu argues that the protests are "a hybrid war" from Moscow. Protests are an initiative of Ilan Shor convicted of fraud and found refuge in Israel in connection with a $1 billion bank scandal.
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19 imagesPeople walk to school, work and return home in the Moldavian capital Chisinau as an energy crisis looms to hit the country led by the pro-European oriented political leadership. The small ex-Soviet state relies on Russian natural gas supplied by Gazprom and is grappling with a 40% cut in deliveries that has hurt its ability to provide enough electricity to its 2.5 million population.