Today, the fifteenth of May marks the 73rd anniversary of the day when Latvian democracy was brutally extinguished. On the night of May 15, 1934 a power mad politician named Karlis Ulmanis usurped power, and set into motion a chain of events that brought misfortune and misery upon the Latvian people. Several corrupt and misguided officers from the Army and the national guard “Aizsargi” at the behest of General Janis Balodis moved against key government offices, communication and transportation facilities. Many elected officials were illegally detained, as were any military officers that resisted the coup d’etat.
The Satversme, the constitution of the Latvian Republic was nullified and civil liberties were suspended. The Saeima (parliament) was was dismissed, political parties were outlawed, newspapers were closed. Thousands of citizens were rounded up off the streets and arrested. Some 400 high-profile citizens were deemed “enemies” of Ulmanis’ rule and were herded into a concentration camp established near the city of Liepaja.
Karlis Ulmanis instituted what he called a “Nationalist Dictatorship,” and usurped power—crowning himself as “Vadonis,” a title akin to Führer or Supreme Leader. The resulting regime was the most authoritarian dictatorship in all of Europe, with Ulmanis ruling by decree and making decisions with practically unlimited powers. Ulmanis’ state was the only dictatorship in Europe that retained no formal representation whatsoever. An attache of Mussolini’s Italian embassy praised the resulting Latvian state as being “truly Fascist.”
National policy in Ulmanis’ Latvia was strictly controlled, and an ethno-centric form of government followed. Ethnic minorities were persecuted. The economy, especially the agriculture and manufacturing sectors, were micromanaged to an extreme degree. This resulted in rapid economic growth, during which Latvia attained a very high standard of living. This, however, came at the cost of liberty and civil rights.
May 15th is a dark day in Latvian history, a stain on the nation’s honor. My condolances to Ulmanis’ victims and their descendants.
/R
