Latvia advances to final of Eurovision

Latvia’s six-man group Bonaparti.lv and the song “Questa notte” have made it through to the final of the Eurovision Song Contest, according to telephone voting results following the semi-final competition May 10 in Helsinki, Finland.

Bonaparti.lv performed last in a field of 28 countries. Latvia and nine other nations—Belarus, Bulgaria, Georgia, Hungary, Macedonia, Moldova, Serbia, Slovenia and Turkey—will return to the stage May 12 to compete in the final along with entries from 14 other countries.

Eurovision officials will reveal actual tallies from the semi-final only after the final competition. All that is known is that Latvia will perform 14th, halfway through the final show.

Bonaparti.lv consists of six tenors: Andris Ābelīte, Andris Ērglis, Normunds Jakušonoks, Roberto Meloni, Zigfrīds Muktupāvels and Kaspars Tīmanis.

Latvia first competed in Eurovision in 2000, when BrainStorm (Prāta Vētra) finished third overall. In 2002, Marija Naumova won the contest, which meant that Latvia got to host Eurovision in 2003.

Last year, the a capella group Cosmos represented Latvia, but finished 16th overall. That meant Latvia this year had to compete in the semi-final.

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

Saeima adopts resolution supporting Estonia

The Saeima, Latvia’s parliament, has adopted a resolution supporting Estonia and condemning comments by Russian officials that may be viewed as meddling in Estonia’s internal affairs.

The parliament’s May 10 vote came a day after the World Federation of Free Latvians strongly criticized legislators’ failure to support Estonia during recent unrest over plans to move a memorial to Soviet troops. The resolution was adopted 71-21.

The resolution condemns “the comments of high officials and Duma deputies of the Russian Federation, which can be seen as interference in the internal affairs of the Republic of Estonia.”

The document also reminds Russia of its obligation to protect Estonia’s diplomatic personnel and asks Russia hold responsible those who organized a siege of the Estonian embassy in Moscow.

The Saeima’s Foreign Affairs Commission on May 9 rejected a similar declaration offered by 10 members of the opposition party Jaunais laiks (New Era). The Jaunais laiks resolution also called on the parliaments of other European Union members to do likewise.

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

PBLA slams Saeima over inaction on Estonia’s troubles

In a sharply worded open letter to Latvia’s parliament, the World Federation of Free Latvians has criticized legislators for not acting quickly to support Estonia in the face of verbal attacks from Russia over the controversial removal of a downtown Tallinn monument to World War II-era Soviet soldiers.

The federation is “deeply disappointed” in the Saeima’s “reluctance, delay and fear” in supporting Estonia, the letter states. The May 8 letter is signed by the board of the federation (known in Latvian as the Pasaules brīvo latviešu apvienība, or PBLA).

To save face, the Saeima should adopt a resolution of support for Estonia, the PBLA said.

The PBLA’s concern stems from Russia’s reaction to Estonia’s removal of the Bronze Soldier from Tallinn’s Freedom Square, as well as plans to relocate the remains of 14 Red Army soldiers from an area near the monument. Estonia’s Russian-speaking minority viewed the statue’s removal as an affront, leading to two days of unrest April 26-27 during which hundreds were arrested, dozens were injured and one man—a Russian citizen and permanent resident of Estonia—died. The Latvian embassy in Tallinn also was attacked.

Estonia has blamed Russia for fomenting the unrest, for cyberattacks on Estonian government Web sites that followed the unrest, for a siege by a youth organization of the Estonian embassy in Moscow and for what it says are distorted Russian media reports on the situation in Tallinn.

Estonia’s foreign minister, Urmas Paet, in a May 1 statement called on the European Union to defend Estonia’s interests.

“The issue of the Bronze Soldier and vandalism in Tallinn are Estonia’s internal matters but the coordinated activities undertaken against Estonia by Russia are a matter of the entire European Union,” Paet said in the statement.

Russia has had strong words of its own.

“We are all outraged by this sacrilege, blasphemy and the methods used to disperse the demonstrators who tried to defend the sacred object, put up in memory of Europe’s liberation,” Sergey Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister, said during an April 27 press conference in Norway, according to ministry’s Information and Press Department.

The PBLA criticized ruling Latvian coalition parties for failing to bring a resolution to the floor during the Saeima’s first meeting after the Tallinn riot. Opposition parties did propose a resolution, but it was defeated.

The PBLA wants the Saeima to adopt a resolution supporting the Estonian government and its sovereign decisions, condemning the vandalism and theft that occurred in the streets of Tallinn, condemning high Russian officials and members of parliament who have attempted to meddle in Estonia’s internal affairs, and condemning Russian authorities for their unwillingness to end the blockade of the Estonian embassy in Moscow and to guarantee the safety of embassy personnel in accordance with the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations.

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