NYT: For a couple million euros, Latvian manor is all yours

A 16th century manor property in rural Latvia, plus its 95-room mansion, has been featured in the real estate section of The New York Times.

Kukšu Manor House (Kukšu muiža), which now serves as a hotel, is located near Tukums and is on the market for EUR 2.1 million (about USD 2.8 million), according to the newspaper.

“This 17-acre property in the Latvian countryside, known as Kukšu Manor, was first mentioned in historical documents in 1530,” reporter Alison Gregor wrote in a story posted April 4. “The current owner describes the 18,000-square-foot home as having had a long, rich history of ownership. It underwent an extensive renovation in 1856, and after World War II was used by collective farmers.”

The story continues by describing the property and the mansion, but also examines the slow recovery of the Latvian real estate market, which was beaten back when the country’s economic bubble burst as part of the global recession.

The Kukšu manor opened as a hotel in 2006, according to the property’s website, www.kuksumuiza.lv.

The property is listed by Rīga-based Baltic Sotheby’s International Realty. While buying the Kukšu manor would set its new owner back a couple of million euros, it is not the most expensive real estate listed by Sotheby’s in Latvia. That honor goes to the manor house at Krimulda, near Sigulda, priced at EUR 8.5 million (about USD 11.3 million).

Kukšu muiža

The Kukšu Manor House, which sits on a 17-acre property near Tukums, has been highlighted by The New York Times in a story about Latvia’s real estate market. (Photo by Baltic Sotheby’s International Realty)

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. confirms next ambassador to Latvia

The next U.S. ambassador to Latvia will be a career diplomat who has previously served in Estonia, a spokesperson for the U.S. Embassy in Rīga announced March 30.

The U.S. Senate on March 29 confirmed Mark Pekala’s nomination as the new ambassador. He will replace Ambassador Judith G. Garber when her term expires at the end of July, said Kristīne Kreile, media specialist in the embassy.

Pekala was nominated by President Barack Obama.

Pekala since August 2010 has served as director of the Entry-Level Division of the U.S. State Department’s Human Resources Bureau. He also has served as the deputy chief of mission in Paris. From 2005 to 2007, he was deputy assistant secretary in the State Department’s Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs, where he oversaw relations with 15 Baltic, Nordic and Central European countries.

Among other posts he has held, Pekala from 2002-2005 was deputy chief of mission in the U.S. Embassy in Estonia.

In his nomination testimony before the U.S. Senate’s Foreign Relations Committee, Pekala on March 21 said that as ambassador he would work to help American business expand in Latvia; continue Latvia’s engagement with other countries such as Moldova and Afghanistan; and foster dialogue between ethnic Latvians and minorities in the country.

Among issues Pekala noted in his testimony was Latvia’s history and the recent national referendum that, if successful, would have made Russian a second official language.

“Almost a third of Latvia’s residents are ethnic Russians, of whom just under 300,000 are non-citizens,” Pekala said, according to his prepared statement. “We are encouraged to see the Latvian government considering measures that would improve integration of this population; we hope that the recent language referendum can be used by both sides as a means to open a constructive dialog between ethnic Russians and ethnic Latvians.”

Pekala and his wife, Maria, have two young daughters.

Garber became the U.S. ambassador to Latvia in 2009.

Muckraking website’s editor wounded; Rīga mayor slammed for comment

The editor of a muckraking website that has published compromising emails from Rīga Mayor Nils Ušakovs has been shot in his apartment building, Latvian media report.

Leonīds Jākobsons, editor of kompromat.lv, was wounded the evening of March 29 in the stairwell of his apartment building on Čaka iela in Rīga. He was able to call for help and was taken to a hospital for treatment. Jākobsons is reportedly in stable condition, according to local media.

Jākabsons’ website late last year published a series of emails that were stolen from Ušakovs’ account. The correspondence, written in 2008 when Ušakovs was a member of parliament, raised suspicions that his political party—the center-left Harmony Centre (Saskaņas Centrs)—had received illegal campaign financing, possibly through Russia’s embassy in Rīga.

The editor’s apartment was searched by police in December and Jākabsons was held in jail for two days, a move that was strongly condemned by the Paris-based press rights organization Reporters Without Borders.

The Latvian Association of Journalists (Latvijas Žurnālistu asociācija) condemned the March 29 attack on Jākobsons, announcing in a statement that such events are unacceptable in a democratic state.

Jākobsons’ reporting methods have at times been questionable, the journalists association said, but added that persons who believe their reputation has been damaged may under Latvian press law turn to the courts for remedy.

Ušakovs, meanwhile, was being roundly criticized by a number of social media users. They were reacting to a message the mayor posted on his Twitter account.

“About the wounded Leonids Jākobsons,” Ušakovs wrote in Latvian. “1. My sympathy to the victim and my wish that the police quickly resolve this case. 2. I have an alibi :).”

Several Twitter users called the mayor’s message cynical and said he has created a public relations crisis for himself.

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