State media coverage of the street protests in 2002 regarding the
Communists’ attempt to reinstate obligatory study of the
Russian language and to defend the cultural identity that the majority of
Moldovans share with neighboring
Romania was censored. In February 2002, in response to severe censorship of the state broadcast station
Teleradio-Moldova (TVM), hundreds of TVM journalists went on strike in solidarity with the anti-communist opposition. In retribution, a few
journalists and staff members were dismissed or suspended from the station in March. However, in 2004 an improvement was made and the Moldovan Parliament removed Article 170 from the country's Criminal Code. Article 170 called for up to five years imprisonment for
defamation. According to the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, the media climate in Moldova remained restrictive as of 2004. Authorities continued a long-standing campaign to silence independent opposition voices and movements. In a case widely criticized by
human rights defenders, opposition politician
Valeriu Pasat was sentenced to a ten-year prison term. The
United States and
human rights defenders from the
European Union consider him a
political prisoner, and an official statement from Russia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs called the judgment "striking in its cruelty". According to
Amnesty International's 2007 annual report, the state of human rights in Moldova was poor.
Torture and ill-treatment were widespread and conditions in pre-trial detention were poor. A number of treaties protecting
women's rights were ratified, but men, women and children continued to be trafficked for forcible sexual and other exploitation. Measures to protect women against
domestic violence were inadequate. Constitutional changes to abolish the death penalty were made.
Freedom of expression was restricted and opposition politicians were targeted. In 2009, when Moldova experienced its most
serious civil unrest in a decade, several civilians like
Valeriu Boboc were killed by police and many more injured. According to
Human Rights Report of the
United States Department of State, released in April 2011, "In contrast to the previous year, there were no reports of killings by security forces. During the year reports of government exercising undue influence over the media substantially decreased." But "Transnistrian authorities continued to harass independent media and opposition lawmakers; restrict freedom of association, movement, and religion; and discriminate against Romanian speakers." Moldova "has made “noteworthy progress” on religious freedom since the era of the Soviet Union, but it can still take further steps to foster diversity," said the
UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief Heiner Bielefeldt, in Chişinău, in September 2011. On 19 April 2021, the
Council of Europe Action Plan for the Republic of Moldova 2021–2024, which had among its objectives working on the situation of human rights in Moldova, was signed on
Strasbourg, France. ==Rights of vulnerable groups==