Čikāgas Piecīši catalog now available for download

What’s on your iPod? What, you don’t have the complete Čikāgas Piecīši catalog?! Now you can, thanks to Platforma Music. The Rīga-based recording company is offering digital downloads of all Piecīši albums.

Platforma announced the availability of the MP3 files on Dec. 17, just weeks after the legendary Latvian-American band completed a November tour of Latvia—complete with a Nov. 18 concert in Rīga.

Single songs cost 47 santīms and full albums cost LVL 4.72.

Ten albums ranging from the 1963 debut Čikāgas Piecīši sveicina to this year’s retrospective compilation Čikāgas Piecīšu zelts are already online. Platforma promises that an album of children’s stories and other recordings will soon follow.

Platforma’s television commercial featuring the group can be viewed on YouTube.

For a look back on the history of Čikāgas Piecīši, see Egils Kaljo’s article from November 2007.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

IMF, Latvia agree on loan package worth billions

A loan package worth EUR 7.5 billion (USD 10.5 billion), aimed at helping Latvia stabilize its economy, has been announced by the International Monetary Fund.

The agreement between the IMF and Latvian authorities still needs the approval of the fund’s executive board, but that is expected before the end of the year.

The Dec. 19 announcement by the IMF comes a week after the Saeima approved a tighter 2009 budget that includes big cuts in government spending and higher taxes.

The loan package includes:

  • EUR 3.1 billion from the European Union
  • EUR 1.8 billion from Denmark, Norway and Sweden.
  • EUR 1.7 billion from the IMF.
  • EUR 400 million from the World Bank.
  • EUR 200 million from the Czech Republic.
  • EUR 100 million each from Estonia, Poland and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

“We will continue assisting the Latvian authorities in their courageous efforts to adjust in the midst of the global financial turmoil and we will work closely with them and other stakeholders as the program unfolds,” IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said in a press release.

A World Bank spokesperson said the organization welcomes the agreement.

“This is a fragile period,” said Shigeo Katsu, the World Bank’s vice president for Europe and Central Asia, said in a press release, “so we must do everything we can to prevent the financial crisis from becoming a human crisis. As part of the international effort, the World Bank stands ready to do its part to provide financing and help tackle long-term structural problems.”

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

U.S. embassy in Rīga gets suspicious letter

The U.S. embassy in Rīga is one of 18 American diplomatic missions to which a suspicious white powder was found in envelopes mailed earlier this month, the State Department and FBI have confirmed. The powder was not toxic.

The envelopes began to arrive at the embassies on Dec. 15, a State Department spokesman said Dec. 18.

In a Dec. 18 press briefing in Washington, D.C., State Department Spokesman Sean McCormack confirmed envelopes also were received at diplomatic missions in Berlin, Bern, Brussels, Bucharest, Copenhagen, Dublin, the Hague, Luxembourg, Madrid, Oslo, Paris, Prague, Reykjavik, Rome, Stockholm, Tallinn and Tokyo.

Each envelope, according to a FBI press release, was mailed from Texas and contained “a similar typewritten letter and a white powder substance.” Letters also were sent to 40 different governors’ offices around the U.S. In each case, field testing found the powder to be harmless. However, the FBI said, mailing such envelopes still is a federal crime and the matter remains under investigation.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.