Hertza region
- This article is about the territorial controversy over the region of Hertsa (Herţa). See Hertsa Raion for administrative district in Ukraine.
Hertza region (Ukrainian: Край Герца, Kraj Herca; Romanian: Ţinutul Herța) is a border region within an administrative district (raion) of Hertsa (Herţa) in the southern part of Chernivtsi Oblast in southwestern Ukraine, near Romania.
The population in 2001 was about 32,300 people, 93% of whom are ethnic Romanians.
The territory, historically part of Moldavia, was occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940, following the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, and was attached to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. It was recaptured by Romania during 1941–1944 in the course of the Axis attack on the Soviet Union in World War II, and became part of the Dorohoi County of Bukovina Governorate until the Red Army captured it again in 1944. Soviet annexation of this territory was internationally recognized by the Paris Peace Treaties in 1947.
Romania and Ukraine have signed and ratified a border agreement and are signatories of international treaties and alliances that denounce any territorial claims. Romanian organisations in the region consider Hertza to be historically Romanian, detached from it by the Soviet Union in 1940 in violation of international law. The correspondent of "New Region" Sergei Vulpe with reference to the Bucharest newspaper Ziua reported on April 17, 2008[1] that the President of Romania, Traian Băsescu, stated that Ukraine should return Moldova the southern Bessarabia (Budjak) and the northern Bukovina (Chernivtsi Oblast that includes the Hertza region) if it wants to annex Transnistria.
See also
References
- ↑ (Russian) Траян Бэсеску: Украина должна «разменять» Приднестровье на Буковину и Бессарабию (Traian Basescu: Ukraine should "exchange" Transdnistria for Bukovina and Bessarabia)
External links
- (Romanian) Hertza region Romanian organization protests against Ukrainian changes to its status as a raion
- (Romanian) One of the original Authors of the Ukrainian Constitution speaks about the Hertza region