Riot police scramble down the embankment of the shattered presidential palace Tuesday April 7, 2009, in Chisinau, Moldova, during protests against the declared results of Sunday's parliamentary elections. Many thousands of demonstrators attempted to storm the presidential palace and parliament in a violent demonstration against what they said were fraudulent elections. (AP Photo/John McConnico)
Protestors storm the presidential building in central Chisinau on April 7, 2009. Over 30 people including both protestors and police were injured in protests against the results of Moldovan legislative elections, the head doctor at Chisinau's emergency hospital said. AFP PHOTO / VADIM DENISOV
Anti-communist demonstrators protest in front of a bonfire on the steps of parliament Tuesday April 7, 2009, in Chisinau, Moldova, during protests against the declared results of Sunday's parliamentary elections. Many thousands of demonstrators attempted to storm the presidential palace and parliament in a violent demonstration against what they said were fraudulent elections. (AP Photo/John McConnico)
A woman gestures, as anti-communist demonstrators protest outside the presidential palace Monday April 6, 2009 in Chisinau, Moldova. The Communist Party have again won parliamentary elections but it was not certain whether they would have enough seats in parliament to have their candidate replace outgoing Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin. (AP Photo/John McConnico)
Mai multi scutieri se odihnesc in fata cladirii Guvernului Republicii Moldova, in timpul protestelor de la Chisinau, miercuri, 8 aprilie 2009. LINA GRAU/NewsIn FOTO
epa01691190 A pictured made available 08 April shows Moldovan police officers clashing with demonstrators during anti-communist demonstrations in Chisinau, Moldova on 07 April 2009. Thousands of anti-communists protesters, most of them students, gathered to contest parliamentary elections results, asking for new elections. Although Moldova's ruling communist party gained enough votes to hold on to power in parliament on 05 April 2009, they lacked the number of seats to install a new president. EPA/DUMITRU DORU
epa01691191 A pictured made available 08 April shows Moldovan police officers clashing with demonstrators during anti-communist demonstrations in Chisinau, Moldova on 07 April 2009. Thousands of anti-communists protesters, most of them students, gathered to contest parliamentary elections results, asking for new elections. Although Moldova's ruling communist party gained enough votes to hold on to power in parliament on 05 April 2009, they lacked the number of seats to install a new president. EPA/DUMITRU DORU
epa01691193 A pictured made available 08 April shows Moldovan police officers clashing with demonstrators during anti-communist demonstrations in Chisinau, Moldova on 07 April 2009. Thousands of anti-communists protesters, most of them students, gathered to contest parliamentary elections results, asking for new elections. Although Moldova's ruling communist party gained enough votes to hold on to power in parliament on 05 April 2009, they lacked the number of seats to install a new president. EPA/DUMITRU DORU
Demonstrators shout and gesture during a rally in Chisinau April 8, 2009. Moldova's Communist rulers arrested 193 opposition protesters early on Wednesday and riot police regained control of the presidential offices and parliament, ransacked in anti-government riots. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich (MOLDOVA CONFLICT POLITICS ELECTIONS)
Police guard the government headquarters in Chisinau April 8, 2009. Moldova's Communist rulers arrested 193 opposition protesters early on Wednesday and riot police regained control of the presidential offices and parliament, ransacked in anti-government riots. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich (MOLDOVA CONFLICT POLITICS ELECTIONS)
Moldovan women clean up debris left by protestors in front of the parliament building in Chisinau on April 8, 2009. Digital tools like Twitter, Facebook and SMS text messaging played a key role in the massive youth protests that rocked the Communist government in the former Soviet republic of Moldova this week. AFP PHOTO / VIKTOR DRACHEV
Demonstrators shout as they wave Romanian and European flags during a support rally for opposition Moldovans on April 8, 2009 in font of European headquarters in Brussels. Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin on April 8 accused neighboring Romania of involvement in the anti-Communist riots that shook the capital Chisinau on April 7. Moldovan police on April 8 seized control of the parliament from young protestors who had stormed and ransacked the building after anger against an April 5 Communist election victory boiled over into violence. AFP PHOTO / DOMINIQUE FAGET