No. 294 from  21 December 2007

AMENDED
LP81 of 07.05.10, MO87-90/04.06.10 art.250
LP64-XVIII of 12.11.09, MO171-172/27.11.09 art.533

Chapter 1
GENERAL NOTIONS AND PRINCIPLES

ARTICLE 1. Political parties
(1) Political Parties are voluntary associations, with the status of legal entity, of citizens of the Republic of Moldova with the right to vote, which through the joint activities and on the basis of the principle of free participation, are contributing to the concept, expression and accomplishment of their political will.
 (2) Political parties, being the democratic institutions of the state of law, promote democratic values and political pluralism, contribute to the formation of public opinion, participate via submitting and supporting the candidates for the election for public office, encourage the participation of citizens in elections, perform other activities under the provisions of the current legislation.
 (3) Political parties may set up structures that will address particular problems of some social and professional groups.
 (4) In order to implement their political will, parties may affiliate with some international political organizations, with similar values, conceptions, ideals and goals.
ARTICLE 2. Territorial principle of political parties’ organization
(1) Political parties are organized under the administrative –territorial organization of the Republic of Moldova.
 (2) Leading bodies, branches and structures of political parties may have their headquarters in the territory which is under the Republic of Moldova’s jurisdiction.
 (3) Political parties cannot set up their structures and bodies within other institutions, organizations and enterprises.  
ARTICLE 3. Restrictions related to parties’ activity
(1) Associations of citizens of the Republic of Moldova may act as political parties only performing activities with a political character, being constituted pursuant to the law and observing the sovereignty, unitary character of the state, territorial integrity, democratic values and legal order of the Republic of Moldova.  
(2) Political parties that through their statute and program dissipate contrary ideas to the provisions of the Constitution of the Republic of Moldova are prohibited.
(3) Political parties are prohibited from affiliation with the international political organizations which through the character, goals and their activity infringe on the values specified by paragraph (1) of this article. 
(4) Parties are prohibited from organizing military, paramilitary activities, as well as other kind of activities forbidden by the law.
(5) Any interference with the internal activity of political parties is prohibited, except the cases stipulated by the law.
(6) In the Republic of Moldova, establishment and activity of any parties or other states’ political organizations, as well as their branches and structures is prohibited.
(7) The establishment of political parties on the basis of ethnic and racial criteria is prohibited.
ARTICLE 4. Political parties insignias.
(1) Each political party has a full name, an abbreviation and unique symbols.
(2) Full name, abbreviation and insignias should be clearly distinguished from those of parties that were registered before in the Republic of Moldova, including those of parties withdrawn from the Register of political parties. Use of the same graphic insignias by parties, regardless of the geometric shape they are placed in, is prohibited.
(3) The mentioned insignias in paragraph (1) may not be reproduced or combined with the state insignias of the Republic of Moldova, other states, international organizations, religious worships, and they must not project the scope and provisions of article 3 paragraphs (1) – (2).
(4) The political parties may use, as such or in a specific combination, the insignias of the international political parties of which they are members.
ARTICLE 5. Support of political parties provided by the state
(1) With the aim of stimulating the efficient exercise of government activities and, in order to efficiently establish, via this exercise, the principle of public wellness, the state supports the development of political parties. Through this law and other normative acts, legal mechanisms for the functioning of political parties and their structures are established Financing for political parties and their structures is established from private sources and from the state budget.
(2) Discrimination in order to get the state assistance for political parties is prohibited.
(3) The state support of political parties is done only according to the law.

Chapter 2
MEMBERS OF POLITICAL PARTIES

ARTICLE 6. Right of the citizens of the Republic of Moldova to political association
(1) Members of political parties may be citizens of the Republic of Moldova which, under the norms stipulated by the current legislation, have the right to vote. The membership is certified by the identity card. The form of the identity card for each political party is established by statute.
(2) Citizens of the Republic of Moldova have the right to freedom of association in political parties, the right to participate in those activities and the right to leave political parties.  No one may be forced to join or not to join a political party.
(3) Every person who becomes a member of a political party is required to make a written declaration, on its own responsibility, confirming that he or she is or is not a member of any other political party.
(4) Persons that, pursuant to the provisions of the legislation in force, are prohibited from participating in activities with political character cannot be members of political parties.
ARTICLE 7. Admission to a political party. Gain and loss of the party’s membership
 (1) To become member of a political party, a citizen of the Republic of Moldova submits a written request to the party. The relevant body of the political party that is authorized to accept new members will decide to accept or deny the request for admission to the party. 
(2) The citizen of the Republic of Moldova cannot be simultaneously member of two or more political parties. Through the admission to another political party, the person automatically looses membership in the party he/she was a member of before.
 (3) The admission to another political party, as well as the loss of its membership, cannot create privileges or restrictions on exercising the fundamental rights and duties of the individual.
(4) Members of political parties may resign from the party by submitting a written request.
 (5) Gain and loss of political party membership is regulated through the internal norms of the party, in compliance with the provisions of the party’s statute.

Chapter 3
REGISTRATION AND RECORD OF POLITICAL PARTIES

ARTICLE 8. Submission of documents for registering the political party
 (1) The following documents should be submitted to the Ministry of Justice for registration of a political party:
a) request to register the political party;
b) statute of the political party;
c) program of the political party;
d) document of establishment with a list of the political party’s members. A minimum of 4 000 members is required, constitutive acts of the territorial organizations of the party, the list of delegates who participate at the constituting congress. At the time of the parties’ establishment, at least half of, its members must be residents of second level administrative-territorial units from the Republic of Moldova, with no less than 120 residents in each of the administrative-territorial units.   The membership list is constituted on the basis of admission requests and will consist of: name, surname, date of birth, residence, number of identity card, personal code, place of work, and member’s signature;
e) a declaration concerning the legal residence of the party;
f) proof of a bank account;
(2) The documents mentioned in paragraph (1) letter b), c) and d) are accompanied with their copies in electronic version.
(3) The Ministry of Justice, within the period of a month from the date of documents submission provided by paragraph (1), will adopt a decision of political party’s registration or, if the party has not obeyed the provisions of the present law, a decision of rejection the party’s registration.
(3) The Ministry of Justice, in one month from the date of submittal of the documents provided in paragraph (1), shall adopt a decision of registration of the political party or, in case of non-observance to the requirements of the present law, a decision through which the registration of the party is refused.
(4) The decision of the Ministry of Justice concerning the rejection of the political party’s registration can be appealed within 10 days from the date of its adoption by the Chisinau Court of Appeal. 
 (5) For the registration of the political party’s statute, as well as of the modifications and amendments made in it, a state fee in the amount of 200 lei is paid.
(6) During the party’s registration, the participation of the representative of its leading body is compulsory.  
(7) A political party becomes legal entity at the date of the registration of its statute and is included in the Register of Political Parties.
ARTICLE 9. Declaring void the decision regarding the registration of a political party
The decision of political party’s registration may be declared void through a decision of the court.
ARTICLE 10. Registration of amendments and completion introduced in the political party’s statutes and programs
 (1) Amendment or completion of political party’s statutes and programs may be done in compliance with the procedure established in the political party’s statute.
 (2)The Ministry of Justice is informed of any amendment to the political party’s statute or program during a period of not more than 30 days from the date of adoption.
 (3)The registration of amendments and completions to the statute of the program of the political party is done by the Ministry of Justice according to the foreseen procedure in article 8, paragraph (3) – (6), which apply correspondingly.

ARTICLE 11. Political parties’ record
 (1) The Ministry of Justice maintains the Register of political parties that is a legal instrument of recording political parties from the Republic of Moldova.
(2) The Ministry of Justice is the sole institution with the right to make amendments in the Register of political parties.
(3) The public has access to the information from the Register of political parties.
(4) The information on the registration or withdrawal of political parties, as well as the introduction of amendments and completions to their statutes is published in the Official Gazette and on the Ministry of Justice’s web site. The Ministry of Justice is responsible for publishing the information provided by the present article.
     
Chapter 4
ORGANISATION AND ACTIVITY OF POLITICAL PARTIES

 SECTION 1: Organization of political parties
ARTICLE 12. Grounds for organization and activity of political parties
(1) Every political party is organized and acts on the basis of its statute and program.
(2) The political party’s statute and program have to be approved by their relevant bodies approved by its statute. 
ARTICLE 13. Statute of political party
(1) The political party’s statute must include the following:
a) full name and abbreviation;
b) description of permanent insignias;
c) in an appendix, the white-black and colored permanent symbol in a graphic form;
d) a short review of pursued goals by the political activity;
e) conditions and procedure of designation of delegates to the general assembly;
f) members rights and obligations;
g) disciplinary sanctions, membership application procedures, as well as the competent body with right to apply penalties;
h) executive bodies, their election procedure, and their mandates;
i) the competent body that can initiate the party’s reorganization or determine affiliation with a political alliance or another form of parties’ association;
j) the body competent to designate candidates for elections in the local public administration and in Parliament, the procedure of designating candidates, as well as the procedure of modifying the list of candidates;
k) how the party may cease its activity;
l) the party’s financial resources and management of its goods, in compliance with the stipulations of the law;
m) the structures of the party responsible of accounting;
n) the modality of the internal financial control;
o) the competent body to represent party in connection with the state authorities and other physic and legal persons;
p) other compulsory provisions, pursuant to the law.
(2) The political party’s statute should expressly provide its organizational-legal form – political party.
ARTICLE 14. Structure of political party
(1) Political parties have central bodies and territorial organizations.
(2) The leading forum, i.e., the General Assembly of the party’s members or delegates, and the executive body, irrespective of the name they have according to the statute of the party, are compulsory for each political party, regardless of the name stipulated by the party’s statute.  These are managed on both the central level of party’s leading body and on the level of its territorial organizations.
(3) The political parties’ territorial organizations are established accordingly to the Republic of Moldova’s administrative – territorial organization criteria.  
ARTICLE 15. The party’s General Assembly
(1) The General Assembly of party’s members or delegates, at the national level, is the party’s supreme decision body. It may be named in another way, pursuant to the statute. The procedure for convening and the sequence of meetings of this body are provided by political party’s statute.
(2) During the meetings of political party’s General Assembly only members of this may participate as delegates. 

SECTION 2: Activity of political parties
ARTICLE 16. Rights of political parties
(1) All political parties have equal rights to participate in the elections of Parliament, and local public administration authorities.
(2) During the elections, all the participating political parties and those candidates for public offices benefit from broadcasting service at the national TV and radio channels, for free and under fair conditions, under the law,. 
(3) Political parties have the right to organize meetings, demonstrations and other kinds of such activities, observing the public order, pursuant to the relevant laws in force.
ARTICLE 17. Activity of political parties
(1) Parties develop their activities in order to fulfill their political will as reflected in the stipulations of their statutes and programs, registered in the established way, under the laws in force.    
(2) In order to fulfill goals and tasks provided by the statute and their political program, parties may:
a) disseminate freely, through available means, information about their activities;
b) participate, independently or in association with other political parties, with their candidates in elections organized under the provisions of electoral legislation;
c) set up and own means of mass-media, and to carry out editorial activities, pursuant to the laws in force;
d) perform any other activities not prohibited by the law.
ARTICLE 18. Duties and responsibility of political parties
(1) Political parties are obliged to respect the legislation of the Republic of Moldova and their statutes provisions.
(2) In case of a legislative amendment, or if any statutes or programs of the parties are inconsistent with the provisions of the law, parties will adjust their documents in accordance with the law, through amendments and completions in compliance with the established procedure.
(3) Political parties must respond to their assumed obligations with their own patrimony.
 (4) Political parties are not responsible for their members’ obligations, nor are members of political parties responsible for the assumed duties of parties.
ARTICLE 19.Decisions of political parties
Decisions of political parties and their territorial organizations are adopted by majority vote, as stipulated by the statute.

Chapter 5
REORGANIZATION AND CESSATION OF POLITICAL PARTY ACTIVITY

SECTION1: Reorganization of political parties
ARTICLE 20. Reorganization of political parties
Political parties, according to the decision of their leading bodies, may reorganize through merger (unification and absorption), desegregation (division and separation) or transformation, according to the law.
ARTICLE 21. Limitation of the activity of the political party
(1) The activity of the political party may be limited if through its actions serious damages are caused to the political pluralism or to the fundamental democratic principles.
(2) In case when actions mentioned under paragraph (1) are found, the Ministry of Justice, through written request, shall request from the leading body of the respective political party, in at most one month, to take measures to cease these actions and to inform the ministry about the latter.
(3) If the leading body of the political party has not fulfilled the request o the Ministry of Justice, the activity of the political party shall be limited for a period of until 6 months through decision of the Chisinau Court of Appeal, at the request of the Ministry of Justice, which is submitted within 5 days after the expiry of the period provided in paragraph (2).
(4) The decision of the Chisinau Court of Appeal can be appealed within 10 days at the Supreme Court of Justice. The Appeal shall be examined within 15 days.
(5) During the period of limitation of the activity of the political party, the party is forbidden the founding of mass media, organization of assemblies, meetings, demonstrations, pickets and other public actions, use of all kinds of bank deposits, except the cases when deductions for contracting parties are needed, deductions related to individual labor contracts, deductions for repairing the damages caused by the actions of the political party, as well as deductions for payment of taxes, fees and fines.
(6) After elimination of all non-conformities for which the activity of the political party has been limited, the party shall inform the Ministry of Justice about this, which, within 5 days shall authorize the re-launch of its activity.
(7) If, during the period when the activity of the political party was limited, the actions for which the activity of the political party was limited are repeated or if, during the first year from the date of the last limitation of the activity of the party, it commits similar violations, the Ministry of Justice shall request from the Chisinau Court of Appeal the dissolution of the respective party.
(8) The activity of the political party cannot be limited one month prior to the Parliamentary elections or to the local general elections, as well as during the period of these elections.
ARTICLE 22. Discontinuance of the political parties’ activity
(1) The political party’s activity may cease in case of:
a) reorganization, in cases provided by this law, if the party looses its legal personality through the process of reorganization;
b) self-dissolution, through the decision of its supreme decision body;
c) its dissolution through the decision of the Chisinau Court of Appeals, at the notification of the Ministry of Justice;
d) assessment of the party’s unconstitutionality through the decision of the Constitutional Court;
(2) The Ministry of Justice may request the Chisinau Court of Appeals to dissolve a political party if there is at least one of the following reasons:
a) the party operates based on its statute and program with amendments and completions that have not been registered in the way provided by the law;
b) during one year, which begins from the date of the final decision of the Chisinau Court of Appeal limiting the activity of the party, it committed actions similar to those for which the activity of the party has been limited;
Letter c) was excluded through Law No. 81 from 07.05.2010, in force from 04.06.2010.
d) the fulfillment of party’s political will is accomplished through illicit ways or means or contrary to the public order;
(3) The final decision of the Chisinau Court of Appeals referring to the political parties’ dissolution is transmitted to the Ministry of Justice that will note in the Register of political parties the beginning of its liquidation.
 (4) In order to dissolve a political party the Ministry of Justice, in order to perform the decision of the Chisinau Court of Appeals, will establish a commission of political party’s liquidation. The existence of a political party ceases only after the procedures of liquidation, ending with parties’ withdrawal from the Register of political parties.
 (5) After the cessation of political party’s activity, its patrimony will be transferred, free of charge, in state property to be used for charitable activities.
ARTICLE 23. The procedure of political party’s liquidation
(1) Dissolution of a political party pursuant to article 22 paragraph (1) letter b) is performed, with the Ministry of Justice participation, by its collegiate leading body or by other persons assigned by the general assembly.
 (2) In the decision adopted by the general assembly to liquidate the political party, the procedure and terms of liquidation, the destination of the remained goods after the liquidation, as well as the deadline when creditors may present their claims will be established. Liquidation should not take more than 30 days and begins from the date of publication of this decision in the Official Gazette of the Republic of Moldova.
 (3) If the political party’s liquidation is performed pursuant to article 22 paragraph (1) letters c) and d), then the liquidators will be appointed, through a decision of liquidation of the relevant court.
 (4) The bodies’ mandate of party or other social – politic organization is ceased, begins with the assignment of liquidators. The liquidators are obliged to fulfill all the requests stipulated by this law referred to the publication of the notice regarding the party’s or other social-politic organization liquidation. The notice regarding the liquidation will comprise:
a) name of liquidators and headquarters of the party or other social-politic organization;
b) procedure and term in order to realize the liquidation process, deadline when creditors may submit their claims;
c) invitation of the creditors in order to submit evidence of their claims. Known creditors will be invited through individual notification.
 (5) Once they have been assigned, the liquidators are obliged to develop a list of the political party’s goods without delay, precisely indicating the assets and liabilities of the party. The list will be signed by liquidators and leaders of the permanent leading body.
(6) The liquidators are obliged to pursue the ongoing activities, to carry out the creditors’ claims, and, if cash is insufficient, to pay all the debts, they have the right to sell the political party’s goods.  For the damages brought about because of them, the liquidators are responsible to both political party being liquidated and to third parties.
 (7) After the end of the political party liquidation procedure, the liquidators are obliged to work out the liquidation balance and to submit it for approval to the Ministry of Justice and fiscal inspectorate bodies, as well as to publish it in the Official Gazette of the Republic of Moldova. The assets that remain after the fulfillment of all the creditors’ claims will be transferred as revenues to the state budget are to be used in charitable aims.
 (8) In all the cases of political party liquidation, in order to be entered in the Register of political parties, the liquidators submit to the Ministry of Justice the following documents:
a) request concerning the withdrawal of the political party from the Register of political parties;
b) registration certificate (original);
c) document that confirms all the payments to the state budget, issued by the fiscal inspectorate;
d) documents of the party’s creation (original);
e) document for allowing the stamps to be destroyed, issued by the authorized body of police;
f) copy of notification on the political party’s liquidation, published in the Official Gazette of the Republic of Moldova.
 (9) Liquidators duties’ cease with the ending of all financial-banking activities.
  

 Chapter 7
PATRIMONY OF POLITICAL PARTIES

ARTICLE 24. Patrimony of political parties
(1) Political parties have the right to own, with the property deed, buildings, equipment, publishing houses, printing works, transportation means, and other goods not prohibited by the law. The political parties’ goods may not be used for goals other than the fulfillment of tasks provided by their statute.
 (2) The right of ownership of the political parties is regulated through the norms of civil legislation of the Republic of Moldova.
 (3) Political parties is entitled to unfold editorial activity, activity closely related to its property management, as well as other economic activity which directly results from the aims provided for in the statute.
 (4) Political parties cannot have in their possession, at their disposal or in use, weapons, explosives or other materials dangerous for life and health of the population, nor can they accept them for depositing or holding.
(5) Political parties’ patrimony cannot be distributed among their members.
ARTICLE 25. Financial sources of the political parties
(1) Financing of political parties may proceed from the following sources:
a) dues from the party’s members;
b) donations, including those collected from the recreational, cultural, sports or other mass activities organized by the party;
c) grants from the state budget, pursuant to the settlement of the present law and to the annual budgetary law;
d) other legally-obtained revenues according to art. 24 para. (3).
(2) Political parties cannot use financial sources other than those stipulated by article (1).
(3) Amount and way the dues is paid by members of a political party is established by the party’s statute.
(4) Revenue and payment activities of political parties are performed through accounts in Moldovan lei and foreign currency, opened in banks with the headquarters in the Republic of Moldova.
 (5) Income provided by article (1) is exempt from taxes or is taxable according to the Tax Code.
(6) Public or private financing cannot limit the independence of political parties.
 (7) The violation of legal provisions related to the financing of the political parties and related to the way of using by the political parties of the financial means and goods is penalized by law.
 (8) The political parties do not have the right to open bank accounts abroad.
ARTICLE 26. Donations
(1) The donation is the patrimony transmitted free of charge and non-conditionally to the political party and accepted by the latter.
(2) The annual revenues of a political party originated from donations cannot exceed the equivalent of 0,1% of the projected income to the state budget for that year.
 (3) An individual may offer donations to one or more parties. The donations offered by one individual to one or more parties, during a budgetary year, cannot exceed the total worth of 500 average salaries of the country, provided for that year. If the individual is a party member, the mentioned sum is included in the amount of party quotas paid by him/her during one year.
 (4) Donations made by a legal person to one or more political parties during a year, cannot exceed the amount 1000 average salaries of the country, provided for that year.
(5) Direct of indirect financing, material support of any kind of the political parties by other states and international organizations, by enterprises, institutions and organizations financed by the stat or with state capital, foreign capital, by non-commercial organizations, trade unions, charitable and religious organizations, by Moldovan citizens who are minors or abroad, by physical persons who are not citizens of Moldova, by anonymous persons and in the name of third parties, are forbidden.
(6) The part of the value of the donations, received by the political party, which exceeds the established amounts, as well as the sums received in violation of paragraph (5) are transferred as revenues to the state budget in accordance with the decision of the court.

ARTICLE 27. Public character of donations for political parties
(1) Each political party keeps a record of the register of received donations, including the donator’s identity and residence, and if the case demands, the headquarters and the amount donated.
(2)Political parties cannot receive anonymous donations or donations which exceed the limitations provided by the law.
(3) In case of receiving anonymous or donations which exceed the provided limitations foreseen in the present law, within the period of 10 days, the political party is obliged to pay these amounts to the state budget. .
ARTICLE 28. Financing of political parties from the state budget
(1) The annual amount allocated from the state budget for financing political parties constitutes 0, 2% of the projected accumulation in the state budget for a budgetary year and is distributed as follows:
a) 50% is rendered to political parties proportionally with mandates obtained in the parliamentary elections and validated by the setting up of the new legislature of the Parliament of the Republic of Moldova,
b) 50% is distributed to political parties proportionally with number of votes obtained in the general local elections, if these acquired not less than 20 offices in the representative bodies of the second level territorial-administrative units.
 (2) Political parties loose their right to receive allocations from the state budget if:
a) their activity was limited, for the whole period of activity limitation;
b) lose their legal personality;
c) infringe on the financing provisions of the party, as well as on conditions stipulated by the paragraph (3) of this article;
d) begin the process of liquidation.
(3) Political parties which during the elections exceeded the maximum limit of expenditures provided by the law, and parties that were financed through the infringement of the law provisions, lose the right to receive financial allocations from the state budget.
 (4)If a party loses its right to financing from the state budget by exceeding the approved limit of expenditures during the elections, this political party may regain its right after the next election, under the conditions of paragraph (1).
 (5) A party that has lost the right to financing from the state budget due to infringement of the procedure for receiving income regains this right after correcting the violation that was the reasoning for the financing suspension.
 (6) The allocated amounts for the financing of political parties are transferred to their account, under the conditions and in the amounts described in paragraph (1), by Central Electoral Commission on the votes obtained by the political parties.
 (7) This amount is transferred to political parties from the state budget throughout the whole year, in equal monthly payments.
 (8) In case of losing the right to be financed from the state budget, under the conditions of this law, the transfer of the respective amount ceases beginning with the first month following the month when this party lost its right.
(9) In case of reorganization of certain political parties that have the right to be financed from the state budget in the conditions of paragraph (1), the mentioned right is transferred to the successors by right – the reorganized political parties.
ARTICLE 29. Use of allocations from the state budget
(1) Political parties will use proceeds from the state budget allocations, at the decision of their leading bodies, for the following goals:
a) headquarters maintenance;
b) personnel expenditures;
c) expenditures for media and advertising material;
d) expenditures for trips in country or abroad;
e) expenditures for telecommunications;
f) expenditures for organizing activities with political character;
g) expenditures for delegations from abroad;
h) payment of member dues in international organizations that this party is member;
i) investments in corporate goods and real estate, necessary for the activity of this party;
j) protocol expenditures;
k) stationery expenditures;
l) election expenditures.
(2) Incomes proceeded from the state budget allocations used for purposes other than those stipulated in paragraph (1) are returned to the state budget based on the final decision of the Chisinau Court of Appeal.
 (3) Use of incomes proceeded from the state budget allocations are reflected distinctly in the political parties accounting.
(4) The control of using allocations from the state budget shall be done in accordance to the law by the competent bodies.
Article 30. Financial reports
(1) Political parties, in accordance with the regulation approved by the Ministry of Justice, annually, until 31 March, shall present financial reports to the Court of Accounts, Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Justice.
(2) The reports mentioned in paragraph (1) shall be checked by the Court of Accounts relating to the subsidies received from the state budget, and by the Ministry of Finance, through its subordinated structures, relating to other revenues.
(3) The violation of the regulations related to the financing of political parties or related to the use by these of the means that belong to them makes them responsible according to the law.

Article 31. The public character of the information regarding the financing of electoral campaign
(1) The expenditures supported by the political parties in the electoral campaigns constitute information of public interest.
(2) At the date of registration as electoral candidate, and, consequently, at each two weeks until the date of concluding the elections, each political party which takes part in elections, in accordance with the regulation approved by the Central Electoral Commission, shall present to it reports related to the financial means of the party, including the expenses made in the respective electoral campaign, and regarding the sources from which these expenses were made. Later, similar reports for the entire electoral campaign shall be presented to the Central Electoral Commission within one month after the publication of the elections’ results.
(3) In case that, after the checks made at the request of the Central Electoral Commission by the competent bodies, it is found that the political party registered as electoral candidate has received or used financial means with violation of the provisions of the present law, the Central Electoral Commission will address the Supreme Court of Justice with a request to annul the registration of the party as electoral competitor. The Supreme Court of Justice shall examine the request within 5 days, but not later than one day prior to the election.
(4) If the information presented by a political party in the conditions of paragraph (2) is incomplete, the Central Electoral Commission has the right to request from the respective party supplementary data regarding the amount of each revenue on the account of this party and about the origin of these financial means.
(5) The Central Electoral Commission shall publicize on its webpage, within 2 months from the date of the elections, based on the information presented by the political parties, the expenditures of each political party for the respective electoral campaign.
 


 Chapter 8. FINAL AND TRANSITORY PROVISIONS
Article 32.
(1) This law comes into force on the date of publication, except art. 28, which will be applied starting from 1 July 2013 for the Parliamentary elections and from 1 July 2011 for the local general elections.
(2) At the date when this law comes into force the Law of the Republic of Moldova concerning parties and other social-politic organization, nr. 718-XII din 17.09.1991 is abrogated.
Article 33.
The norms of the legislation that regulate the activity of political parties are applied to social-political organizations with status of legal entity of the citizens of the Republic of Moldova with the right to vote.
(2) The provisions of the legislation that regulate the activity of non - commercial organizations are applied to political parties and social-political organizationsif this law does not stipulate other provisions.
 Article 34.
(1) The Government:
a) in a period of 3 months:
- will elaborate and present to the Parliament of Moldova in the established way, proposals related to the detailed procedure of declaring political parties as non-constitutional;
- will present to the Parliament proposals for bringing into conformity the legislation in force with the present law;
b) will include in the draft Law on the state budget for 2009 allocations for the financing of political parties in accordance with the present law.
(2)  The political parties and the social-economic organizations, until 1 October 2008, will bring into conformity with the present law the documents that are the basis for their constituting and functioning, as well as their entire activity.

THE CHAIRPERSON OF PARLIAMENT



Social benefits have an important role in supporting the vulnerable. The analysis of official data shows that pension increases reduced poverty in Moldova by 12 percentage points. Still, these increases are insufficient for a sizeable part of the population, including retirees. The income of about four in 10 retirees is insufficient for avoiding poverty. Another at-risk category is households with children. Social benefits represent one of the income sources of these families. On average, they contribute 7.2 percent to the incomes of the households with children, the most important social benefits being the social insurance payments, especially pensions (5.0 percent). Based on the welfare of families with children, it has been assessed that social benefits, including pensions, contribute a greater share of the income of the least prosperous households. This fact shows that poor households are more dependent on social insurance payments.

Studies show that social assistance has an insignificant effect on poverty. Poverty rates in the case of households receiving social assistance payments (child care benefits and individual allowances), differ by less than one percentage point before and after the payment. From the perspective of the efficiency of social benefits distribution, it should be pointed out that only 26 percent of the poor­est households benefited from individual allowances in the amount of 26.2 percent of the total sum in 2008, while more prosperous households were granted 14.3 percent of the total amount for this type of benefits. It is forecast that the introduction of social aid will improve the distribution of social benefits and will contribute even more to the reduction of poverty. Besides the provision of different social services, the current system for social protection of children offers two types of social benefits for children, based on the principles of social insur­ance and social assistance: i) child care benefits for children under 1.5/3, independent of income; ii) child care benefits for children aged between 1.5/3 and 16, depending on the income of the parents. These two types of benefits are granted according to categories, so that the propor­tion of households with children benefiting from these social payments practically does not differ depending on the welfare of the household. An analysis of the way childcare benefits for children under 1.5/3 cover households, shows that that there are certain flaws, like the inclusion in the system of prosperous households, the main reason being the gaps in the criteria applied when assessing the real level of the household's welfare. In 2008, some 35 percent of the poorest families received child care benefits amounting to 38 percent of their income, while 6.6 percent of prosperous families received child care benefits, with the sums covering 5.3 percent of their total income. At the same time, once social aid based on an assessment of households' incomes was introduced, the Government took the decision to annul child care benefits for children aged between 1.5/3 and 16.

Targeting child care benefits towards the most vulnerable categories is an effective way of using the resources allocated to children. At the same time, the creation of an equitable child support system can contribute to the reduction of child poverty only if the payments are substantial. Over recent years, child care benefits have increased; their size, however, is still insignificant. In this way, childcare benefits for children aged under 1.5/3 contributed to the reduction of poverty rate in 2008 by 0.5 percentage points, while child care benefits for children aged between 1.5/3 and 16 contributed a 0.2 percentage point reduction. Benefits paid by category have a greater impact on child poverty in urban areas, since salaries are higher in cities and therefore the child care benefits for children aged under 1.5/3 are more significant.
No. 125 of 11 May 2007

     The Parliament adopts the present law.

Chapter I
GENERAL DISPOSITIONS

    Article 1. The subject of regulation
   This law regulates the relations related to freedom of conscience and religion guaranteed by the Constitution of the Republic of Moldova and international human rights treaties to which Moldova is party, and the legal status of religious denominations and their component parts.
    Article 2. Legal framework
    (1) The legal framework for freedom of conscience, denominations and their component parts is the Moldovan Constitution, international treaties to which Moldova is a party and this law.
    (2) The provisions of the Constitution and the laws relating to freedom of conscience and religion shall be interpreted and enforced in accordance with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, international treaties to which Moldova is party. If international treaties to which Moldova is party provide for other rules than those stipulated by this Law, the rules of international treaties shall apply.
    Article 3. General terms
    For the purpose of this law, the following terms are defined:
    religious denomination - component part, legal entity, operating in Moldova according to the doctrinal, canonical, moral, disciplinary and historical own traditions of worship, consisting of persons subject to jurisdiction of Republic of Moldova, which practice in common religious beliefs, respecting the established traditions, rites and ceremonies;
   component part of a denomination - the community or religious institution of any denomination;
   religious community - local part of religious denomination representing an association of persons which is created and operates on principles of free consent, autonomy, self-management, equality of all members, created to jointly practice faith. Religious communities are parishes, monasteries or monastic communities, congregations, brotherhoods, other religious communities;
    religious institution - regional or central part of a denomination, founded without recording its membership, representing a religious establishment or part. Religious institutions are considered dioceses, parishes, deaconates, religious, social or charitable missions, institutions of theological education, pilgrimage centers, religious associations and foundations, church disciplinary courts and other similar institutions;
   religious beliefs - the totality of ideas, principles and doctrines of faith or religious dogma a person believes in, accepts voluntarily, shares with others and follows during lifetime;
   religious activity - activity directed towards fulfilling spiritual needs of the believers (share the faith, religious education, religious ceremonies, conducting blessing and preaching, religious training and improvement) and other activities aimed at ensuring the denominational and material religious practices (publishing, marketing and dissemination of literature with religious content, production, sale and dissemination of religious objects, making garments of worship etc.).
   believer - someone who believes in certain religious truths and is willingly a part of a religious community whose members share the same beliefs, faith, participate in performing the same activities and religious practices, subject to a religious authority freely chosen;
    religious denomination leader – a person elected or appointed as head of a religious denomination, empowered to represent it the relationships with the State and any third party;
   representative of religious denomination - the person elected or appointed in a religious denomination or its components parts;
    place of worship - the construction or building of a religious community in which religious services are officiated;
   religious objects - objects used in religious services, such as liturgical vessels, metal icons and lithography, crosses, crucifixes, church furniture and specific religious medallions with specific images of religious worship and others. Religious calendars, postcards, flyers, church art albums, movies, picture labels of religious art objects are considered objects of worship, except those part of national heritage, religious products for business such as incense and candles, including decorative weddings and baptisms ones, specific fabrics and embroidery used to manufacture garments and other necessary items for practicing that religious worship;
    religious services - all the actions arising from the denomination’s religious teachings;
   improper proselytism - action to change a person's or a group of people’ religious beliefs by resorting to violent means, abuse of authority, blackmail, fraud, threat, coercion, religious hatred, deceit, psychological manipulation or different subliminal techniques.
    Article 4. Freedom of conscience and religion
    (1) Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion. This right must be exercised in a spirit of tolerance and mutual respect and shall include freedom to belong or not to a particular religion, or not to have certain beliefs, to change the religion or belief, to practice a religion or belief individually, jointly, in public or in private, by teaching, practicing and ritual observance. Every individual and religious community can freely join any religious denomination.
    (2) The exercise of the right to freedom of expression of religious beliefs may be restricted under the law, only if the restriction serves a legitimate purpose and represents, in a democratic society, public safety measures needed to maintain public order, health and morals, or to protect the rights and freedoms of individuals.
    (3) The state excludes any assessment of religious beliefs’ legitimacy.
    (4) Abusive proselytism is forbidden.
    Article 5. General rights and obligations
(1) No one may be prosecuted for belief, thought or religious disbelief.
    (2) Belief, thought, religion, and activity within a religious denomination cannot be an obstacle for the acquisition and exercise of civil or political rights.
    Article 6. Freedom of religious association
(1) No one may be compelled to practice, to join or not and to contribute to the expenses of a religious denomination.
(2) No one may belong simultaneously to two or more religious denominations. A believer may freely join any religious denomination only after its withdrawal from previous one.
(3)  A religious community may join any religious denomination or dissociate from it by free will of its members, without additional approval or outside barriers.
Article 7. Defending the right of religious association
(1) The right to religious association of believers and their communities is legally or administratively guaranteed and supervised by the State, in order to ensure the observance of the legality of the process. At the believers’ initiative, the actions of the state bodies and denominations, persons with public functions, as well as private individuals, who create difficulties in the process of setting up religious communities and conduct their legitimate activities, can be called in court or petitioned.
(2) Judicial or administrative protection of the right to religious association may result in restoration of the violated right, stopping the actions of state bodies and denominations, persons with public functions and individuals that create difficulties in the process of exercising and restoring the damage caused by violations of this right.
    (3) The state guarantees to religious communities the protection of their legitimate rights and interests.
   (4) Issues that affect the interests of religious communities are settled, in cases stipulated by law, by the state, with the participation of the representatives of religious communities concerned.
    (5) Unfounded interference of state bodies and denominations, responsible persons with public functions in the activity of religious communities, and vice versa shall be prohibited. 
Article 8. Religious intolerance
    Law shall punish religious intolerance and religious hatred, manifested through acts that limit the free practice of worship.
Article 9. Legal Protection
    Any act that violates the rights enshrined in this law and exercised within its limits may be legally challenged.
    Article 10. Military Service
    The state shall establish by law alternative service for people who cannot perform military service due to confessional reasons.
    Article 11. The secret of confession
    Law protects the secret of confession.
    Article 12. Religious holidays
    The state guarantees the use of the recognized religious holidays for relaxation and spiritual elevation.
    Article 13. Church discipline courts
    Religious denominations that have church discipline courts to discipline subordinate staff shall present to the Ministry of Justice regulations to be approved, according to the procedures destined to the component parts of denominations. Church discipline courts are legal entities subject to state registration and cannot substitute the courts.
    Article 14. Cemeteries
(1) Denominations’ local religious components can have and maintain, independently or jointly, cemeteries for their believers.
(2) The establishment, maintenance and liquidation of cemeteries is governed by the Regulation on cemeteries, approved by the Government.

Chapter II
Relationship between the state and religions denominations

    Article 15. The state and denominations
    (1) All denominations are autonomous, separated from the state with equal rights before the law and public authorities. Discrimination against one or another religious denomination is punishable under law.
    (2) The state does not interfere with religious activities of denominations.
    (3) The state shall control the economic and financial activities of religious denominations. The component parts of denominations, as well as institutions and enterprises established by them shall be tax exempted.
    (4) The state and its institutions can cooperate and conclude, as appropriate, cooperation agreements or arrangements with any religious denomination or its parts.
    (5) The State recognizes the special importance and leading role of the Orthodox Christian religion and, respectively, the Moldovan Orthodox Church in the life, history and culture of the people of Moldova.
    (6) The state encourages and supports social, moral, cultural and religious charity activities performed by denominations and their component parts.
    (7) The state shall issue official registered documents. These acts must precede religious blessing or approval.
    (8) Any requirement to indicate the official documents of belonging to a religious denomination is illegitimate.

Chapter III
Creation and registration of religious denominations and their component parts

    Article 16. Freedom of establishment and functioning of religious denominations
    (1) Religious denominations are set up on a voluntary basis by persons under the jurisdiction of Moldova, with full legal capacity in order to commonly practice their faith.
    (2) All denominations are free to set up and can function freely under the present law.
    (3) All denominations shall be constituted according to their own rules, canons and traditions based on the believers’ free will and faith.
(3) Religious communities can be formed or dissolved based on the free will of their members, without additional approval or outside barriers.
    Article 17. Legal personality
(1) All denominations and their component parts are legal entities under this law.
(2) As legal entities, denominations and their component parts are equal in rights and obligations, subject to Civil Code norms.
(3)  Canon law relationships between denominations and religious communities cannot substitute nor vitiate the relationships between the registered civil law legal entities.
    Article 18. The statute of denominations and their component parts
(1) All denominations and their component parts shall function under statutes adopted by their founders.
(2) The statute of the denomination or its component part must contain the following:
    a) the exact and complete name, showing confession, premises and activity area;
    b) basic principles of faith
    c) goals, objectives and main forms of activity;
    d) the structure, constitution of governing and control bodies and their attributions;
    e) the designation and dismissal of governing bodies’ members;
    f) the members’ rights and obligations;
    g) property and cash funds;
    h) introducing amendments and addenda to the Statute;
    i) cessation (liquidation or dissolution), and distribution of assets in case of cessation.
    (3) Subsequent change and completion of the denomination’s statute shall be done according to the procedure set forth for registration.
    Article 19. Denominations’ registration
(1) In order to be registered, denominations shall submit to the Ministry of Justice the following documents:
a) the registration application;
b) the statutes adopted by the founders;
c) the minutes of the constituting meeting;
d) the list of founders with signatures of at least 100 of them, citizens of the Republic of Moldova;
e) the fundamental principles of their faith.
   (2) The Ministry of Justice shall verify the compliance of the submitted documents with this law.
    (3) The failure to present at least one of the documents specified in par. (1) entitles the Ministry of Justice not to examine the registration application.
    (4) If the constituent documents submitted meet the requirements of this law, the Ministry of Justice shall issue within 15 days a certificate of registration of the respective denomination.
     (5) The denominations are considered registered once the registration certificate is issued, being exempt from the registration fee.
     (6) Data on state registration of religious denominations are recorded in the register of religious denominations and their component parts.
    (7) If the documents submitted by the denomination do not meet the requirements of this law and harm the interests of society, state security, life and health, the Ministry of Justice shall refuse the registration of that denomination, indicating the reasons. The signatories of the constituting act may appeal the refusal decision in court.
    Article 20. Registration of denominations components parts
     (1) Religious communities shall be set up on a voluntary basis by individuals under the jurisdiction of Moldova, with full legal capacity in order to commonly practice their faith.
     (2) For registration, religious communities must submit to the Ministry of Justice the following documents:
     a) the registration request from the governing body of the community;
     b) the community’s status adopted by the founders;
     c) the minutes of the constituting meeting, indicating the legal representative or representatives of the community;
     d) the list of the founders, with signatures of at least 10 of them, citizens of the Republic of Moldova;
      e) the denomination’s written consent to which the community decided to join voluntarily.
     (3) In order to be registered, the religious institutions - dioceses, parishes, religious missions, social or charitable brotherhoods, institutions, religious associations and foundations and theological educational institutions, pilgrimage centers, church disciplinary courts – shall submit to the Ministry of Justice their statutes, the denomination’s written consent to which they belong and the constituting or reconstituting acts, indicating the legal representative or representatives of the institution.
 (4) The Ministry of Justice shall verify the compliance of the submitted documents with the provisions of this law.
 (5) Failure to present at least one of the documents specified in par. (2) and (3) entitles the Ministry of Justice not to examine the registration application.
  (6) If the submitted constituent documents meet the requirements of this law, the Ministry of Justice shall issue to the denomination’s component part, within 15 days, the registration certificate.
     (7) The denominations’ component parts shall be considered registered once the registration certificate is issued, being exempt from the registration fee.
     (8) Data on state registration of denominations’ component parts shall be recorded in the register of religious denominations and their component parts.
     (9) If the submitted documents of the denomination’s component parts do not correspond to this law, the Ministry of Justice shall refuse the registration of that component part of the denomination, indicating the reasons.
    Article 21. Registration certificate
    (1) The document certifying state registration of religious denomination or its component parts is issued by the Ministry of Justice.
    (2) The certificate of registration form is approved by the Ministry of Justice.
    Article 22. The register of religious denominations and their component parts
(1) The Ministry of Justice keeps the register of religious denominations and their component parts.
(2) The register of religious denominations and their component parts shall include:
a) the date of state registration of religious denominations and their component parts;
b) the name of the denominations and their component parts;
c) data management of religious bodies and their component parts;
d) name and surname of the leaders (representatives) of religious denominations and their component parts;
e) the premises of the religious denominations and their component parts;
f)  information about the amendments introduced in the statutes of religious denominations and their component parts.
    Article 23. The name of religious denominations and their component parts
    (1) During their work, religious denomination and their component parts are required to use the exact and complete name, according to the certificate of registration.
    (2) After registration, the name of religious denominations or their component parts becomes enforceable against third parties.
Chapter IV
Suspension and cessation of the religious denominations’ and their parts’ activity
    Article 24. Suspension of religious denominations’ and their component parts’ activity
(1) The activity of religious denominations and their component parts can be judicially suspended for a period of up to one year.
(2) The grounds for suspending the activity can constitute:
    a) conducting actions that violate the Moldovan Constitution, this Law and other legal norms;
    b) carrying out activities harming state security, public order, life and human security;
    c) derogation from the statutory purposes;
    b) incitement to religious hatred and discord;
    e) repeated warnings from the Ministry of Justice, within a year, regarding the need to eliminate violations of this law.
     (3) The Ministry of Justice shall warn in written form the religious leaders on violations of this law and set a reasonable deadline for their removal.
    (4) The Ministry of Justice is entitled to sue in court to obtain the suspension of religious denominations’ or any of their parts’ activity, upon presenting conclusive evidence of their guilt.
    Article 25. Cessation of the religious denominations and their component parts’ activity
(1) As a basis for cessation of religious denominations and their component parts’ activity can be used:
a) a corresponding decision of the founders, as provided by the Civil Code;
b) the decision of the court, where religious denominations or their parts carry out grievous or repeated acts provided in article 24 par. (2) or fail to comply with earlier court decision of suspending the activity of religious denomination and their component parts.
    (2) The Ministry of Justice is entitled to sue the religious denominations and their component parts in order to cease their activity, upon presenting conclusive evidence of their guilt.
Chapter V
The activity of religions denomination
    Article 26. Religious services
(1) Religious services shall be officiated in places of worship and on their own territory, in cemeteries, at the believers’ homes worship and in other public areas agreed with public local authorities.
(2) All religious denominations have the right to celebrate religious services in orphanages, boarding homes for elderly and disabled, prisons, military, medical, educational, police and other institutions at the request of persons within these institutions and having the respective administration’s agreement.
    Article 27. Representation
    Every religious denomination, regardless of the number of believers, has a central body.
    Article 28. The language of the events
    The religious denominations shall use during their manifestations and activities the believers native language or the traditional language of the worship. The religious denominations’ and their component parts’ correspondence shall be conducted the state official language. In official relations with the state authorities, the religious denominations and their component parts shall use the state official language.
    Article 29. Religious literature and religious objects
    All religious denominations have the exclusive right:
    a) to create press departments for believers, edit, purchase, import, export and spread religious literature;
    b) to produce and commercialize specific worship objects;
    c) establish fees for pilgrimage to holy places;
    d) organize within the country and abroad exhibitions, including with sale, of worship objects.
    Article 30. Taxable income
    Income from the production and editing activity is taxed according to tax legislation.
    Article 31. Philanthropic and sponsorship activities
   The Law on Philanthropic and Sponsorship and tax legislation regulates Philanthropic and sponsorship activities of religious denominations and their component parts.

Chapter VI
Moral-religious and theological education

    Article 32. Organizing moral and theological education 
(1) All religious denominations are free to organize education for training their own staff.
    (2) All religious denominations may establish theological institutions of any degree, with separate status or extended status of institutions from home and abroad.
    (3) Theological institutions of any level, at the denomination’s request may be subject to state licensing or accreditation.
    (4) Theological institutions of all levels become legal entities only upon registration under this law.
    (5) Seminarians and theology students shall enjoy all the rights and facilities provided for pupils and students within state education.
   (6) Diplomas and certificates issued by accredited theological institutions are valid only within the respective religious denomination, except the cases provided in cooperation agreements between the state and the religious denominations.
    (7) Moral-religious education in state schools of all levels is optional and voluntary, except the cases provided in cooperation agreements between the state and religious associations.
    (8) The agreements between the state and religious associations will provide for the children’s right to be exempted from religious classes, based on their parents or guardians’ request.

Chapter VII
Church clerks 

    Article 33. Church clerks 
    (1) National religious leaders, elected according to the religious denomination’s status, must be citizens of the Republic of Moldova.
    (2) The religious activity of foreigners in public places can be performed with prior announcement of the respective city hall.
    Article 34. Employment
    Component parts of religious denominations and their enterprises may hire employees under labor law.
    Article 35. Work contract
    The employment of church clerks shall be made under an individual employment contract concluded in written form.
    Article 36. Social insurances
    Social insurance and social assistance of the church clerks shall be made according to the law.
    Article 37. Establishing pensions
    Regardless of the pensions established by denominations, the church clerks shall be set pension insurances according to the law.
    Article 38. Liability for violation of this law
    (1) Persons who violate this law shall be liable under law.
    (2) Violation of this law by religious clerks does not implicitly involve the denomination’s responsibility.

Chapter VIII
Religious denominations’ ownership 

    Article 39. Ownership right 
    (1) Every religious denomination and each of its component parts may hold, use and freely dispose of a separate ownership.
(2) Religious denominations or their component parts’ ownership shall be used in accordance with national and international standards accepted by the Republic of Moldova.
   (3) Buildings, constructions, land, vehicles, equipment, publishing and printing houses, radio and television, publications, worship objects, other products of social and charitable purpose, financial resources and other material assets necessary to ensure the activity of religious denominations and their component parts may become part of their property. 
    (4) All religious denominations and their component parts may own any intellectual property objects under national laws and international treaties to which Moldova is party.
    (5) All religious denominations and their component parts can have their own symbols, flags, pennants, heraldic signs, etc., officially registered according to the procedure established for religious denominations and their component parts.
    (6) Religious denominations, their component parts, institutions and enterprises created by them shall have the exclusive ownership right over the assets acquired or created by them at the expense of own funds, donations of citizens, public associations, received from the state or obtained by other means provided by law. Ownership rights involve, for each topic covered, the right to possess, dispose and freely use the property created or legally acquired.
    Article 40. Defending ownership rights
    (1) All religious denominations, their component parts, institutions and enterprises created by them are entitled to claim their property from an illegal possession.
   (2) The Republic of Moldova shall defend property rights of all religious denominations, their component parts, institutions and enterprises, both of goods situated in the country, and of those situated abroad.
  (3) The protection of property rights of religious denominations, their component parts, institutions and enterprises shall be carried out in courts, according to the law.
Article    41. Financial means of religious denominations and their component parts
    Financial means of religious denominations and their component parts are formed out of voluntary and other contributions of the believers and denominations, revenue from religious activity, sale of religious objects and entrepreneurial activity, legacies, donations from individuals and legal persons from Moldova and abroad, and other sources not prohibited by law.
    Article 42. Religious land
    Religions and their component parts may possess or use land in accordance with law.
   Article    43. Tax incentives
    (1) The state promotes a preferential tax policy in relation to religious denomination.
    (2) Religious denominations’ component parts that possess places of worship and the land, on which they are constructed, are exempt from taxes on real estate and land tax under the Tax Code.
    (3) When dealing with religious denominations, public authorities will not give preference to any one of them.
    Article 44. Historical an cultural monuments 
    (1) Places of worship, objects of art and other assets owned or used by religious denominations and their component parts, recognized as historical or cultural monuments shall be maintained and used by religious denominations according to the statute of these assets and legislation on monuments’ protection.
    (2) Joint obligations of the state and religious denominations and their component parts for storage, maintenance and use of the assets specified in par. (1) may be specified in cooperation agreements between state and religion.
    Article 45. Assets and interests from abroad
The religious denominations’ assets from as well as Moldovan citizens’ religious interests abroad are subject to international conventions.

Chapter IX
Final Provisions 

    Article 46
(1) The statutes and other documents of the religious denomination and their component parts shall be valid only if they do not contradict this law.
    (2) All religions and their component parts registered before the entry into force of this law are not subject to re-registration procedure.
    (3) Upon the entry into force of this Law, the Law on Religious Denominations No. 979-XII from 24 March 1992, as amended, is repealed.


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