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Ministry of Internal Affairs (Moldova)

Ministry of Internal Affairs
Ministerul Afacerilor Interne
Seal of the Ministry

Headquarters in Chișinău
Ministry overview
Formed6 June 1990; 34 years ago (6 June 1990)
JurisdictionGovernment of Moldova
Headquarters75 Ștefan cel Mare Avenue, Chișinău,
Minister responsible
Ministry executives
  • Vladislav Cojuhari, Deputy Secretary General
  • Daniela Misail-Nichitin, Secretary of State
  • Jana Costachi, Secretary of State
  • Andrei Cecoltan, Secretary of State
Websitemai.gov.md

The Ministry of Internal Affairs (Romanian: Ministerul Afacerilor Interne, MAI) is one of the fourteen ministries of the Government of Moldova. It is the main executive body responsible for the Trupele de Carabinieri.

History

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During the Moldavian Democratic Republic, Vladimir Cristi served as Director General for Internal Affairs.

The Ministry was created upon cessation by Soviet Union of Bessarabia which was part of Romania in 1940. On 8 August 1940 The Government of Soviet Union has announced creation of NKVD Internal affairs organization that was responsible public order and state secret service in newly created Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. After the World War II now with permanent soviet occupation local organization of NKVD on 26 March 1946 changes name to Ministry of Internal Affairs thus being direct inherit to current Ministry of Internal Affairs of Moldova. On 18 December 1990 the Parliament of newly Independent Moldovan Republic adopted law in relation to name of police (Poliţia) instead of Militsiya.

Among the departments of the Ministry are the General Division of State Guard, the Division of Information and Operative Evidence and the Department of Public order.

Ministers

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No. Portrait Name

(Birth–Death)

Office term Cabinet
1 Generalul Ion Costaș susținând un discurs pentru comemorarea eroilor căzuți în confruntările de pe Nistru (25100446319) Ion Costaș

(born 1944)

6 June 1990 5 February 1992 Druc

Muravschi

2 Constantin Antoci

(born 1949)

5 February 1992 24 January 1997 Muravschi

Sangheli I-II

3 Mihail Plămădeală

(born 1945)

24 January 1997 22 May 1998 Ciubuc I
4 VictorCatan8333 Victor Catan

(born 1949)

22 May 1998 21 December 1999 Ciubuc II

Sturza

5 Vladimir Țurcan

(born 1954)

21 December 1999 19 April 2001 Braghiș
6 Vasile Drăgănel

(born 1962)

19 April 2001 27 February 2002 Tarlev I
7 Gheorghe Papuc

(born 1954)

27 February 2002 31 March 2008 Tarlev I-II
8 Valentin Mejinschi

(born 1967)

31 March 2008 21 October 2008 Greceanîi I
9 Gheorghe Papuc

(born 1954)

21 October 2008 25 September 2009 Greceanîi I-II
10 VictorCatan8333 Victor Catan

(born 1949)

25 September 2009 14 January 2011 Filat I
11 Alexei Roibu

(born 1954)

14 January 2011 24 July 2012 Filat II
12 Dorin Recean

(born 1974)

24 July 2012 18 February 2015 Filat II

Leancă

13 Oleg Balan (2015) Oleg Balan

(born 1969)

18 February 2015 20 January 2016 Gaburici

Streleț

14 Alexandru Jizdan

(born 1975)

20 January 2016 8 June 2019 Filip
15 Andrei Năstase in November 2017 Andrei Năstase

(born 1975)

8 June 2019 14 November 2019 Sandu
16 Voicu in August 2019 Pavel Voicu

(born 1973)

14 November 2019 6 August 2021 Chicu
17 Ana Revenco

(born 1977)

6 August 2021 14 July 2023 Gavrilița

Recean

18 Adrian Efros

(born 1982)

17 July 2023 Incumbent Recean

Structure

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The ministry has the following organizational structure:[1]

Subordinate institutions

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References

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  1. ^ "Organigrama | Ministerul Afacerilor Interne". www.mai.gov.md. Retrieved 2021-08-26.
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