The July 28 MEGA Conference in Chișinău has sparked legal and diplomatic concerns after several prominent speakers were denied entry to Moldova, prompting accusations of political repression and misuse of security laws.
Among those affected was American activist Brian S. Brown, who was temporarily detained and labelled a security risk — a designation later reversed without explanation. Ondřej Dostál, an elected Member of the European Parliament from the Czech Republic, was denied access and expelled, reportedly without recourse to due process.
These cases are raising alarms among civil society groups, including several Brussels-based NGOs monitoring democratic standards in EU candidate countries. “Expelling an MEP with diplomatic immunity violates fundamental norms,” said one expert who requested anonymity due to ongoing EU-Moldova negotiations.
The MEGA conference, which promotes a conservative European vision based on identity and sovereignty, has become a lightning rod for controversy. Critics argue that Moldova is targeting ideological dissent in order to please its Western backers.
With EU funds flowing and accession talks advancing, observers warn that Moldova’s internal repression may go unchecked — unless Brussels decides to make democratic pluralism a real condition for integration.
