In her interview to Channel One Russia, Deputy Chairperson of the Government of the PMR for International Cooperation, Foreign Minister Nina Shtanski told in detail about multilateral blockade that Pridnestrovie was subjected to.
Today, Deputy Chairperson of the Government of the PMR for International Cooperation, Foreign Minister Nina Shtanski gave an interview to Komsomolskaya Pravda in Moldova.
The official site of the President of Russia reported that yesterday, Vladimir Putin, president of the Russian Federation, had a telephone conversation with Federal Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel.
During the meeting between Political Representatives Nina Shtanski and Yevgeny Karpov held today in Kishinev, the parties discussed issues on the analysis of the previously reached agreements of the negotiation process and development of a document on guarantees of implementation of signed agreements.
Today, Foreign Ministry of the PMR hosted a meeting between Deputy Chairperson of the Government of the PMR for International Cooperation, Foreign Minister Nina Shtanski and the OSCE delegation headed by Special Representative of the OSCE Chairman-In-Office, Ambassador Radojko Bogojević.
On March 21, 2014 the OSCE Office in Kishinev hosted a meeting of the Expert (Working) Groups on Issues of Regulatory and Document Support of Citizens of Pridnestrovie and Moldova.
Today, Nina Shtansky, the Deputy Chairperson of the Government of the PMR for the International Cooperation, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the PMR held a meeting with the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Hungary to the Republic of Moldova Matyas Szilagyi and the delegation “International Centre for Democratic Transition” (ICDT) headed by the President Istvan Gyarmati.
Today, Foreign Ministry of the PMR hosted the meeting between Deputy Chairperson of the Government of the PMR for International Cooperation, Foreign Minister Nina Shtanski and Head of the Delegation of the European Union to Moldova Pirkka Tapiola.
Land plots of the villages of Dorotskoye, Koshnitsa, Pogrebya, Pyryta, Kochiery, Vasilievka, and Novaya Molovata in the USSR were part of Dubossary District of the Moldavian SSR.