Informatīvā sarīkojumā Austrālijas latvieši dzird par partijām un procesu

Pirms divām nedēļām vēlētāji Austrālijā sapulcējās Melburnas latviešu namā, lai noklausītos politologa Ulda Ozoliņa referātu par krīzi Latvijā.

Nedēļu pirms 11. Saeimas vēlēšanām 17. septembrī, Ozoliņš atkal uzstājās, šoreiz apskatot politiskās partijas un balsošanas procesu.

Ozoliņš aizrādīja, ka neskatoties uz jaunākiem partiju reitingiem, paliek daudz vēlētāju, kas vēl nav izšķīrušies par ko balsot, un tieši viņi varētu ietekmēt rezultātus.

Viņš arī apskatīja vēlētaju aktivitāti ārzemēs.

Informatīvo pārrunu rīkoja Melburnas latviešu organizāciju apvienība.

Piedāvājam Ozoliņa referāta audio ierakstu:

Jurjevics sets second novel amid war, corruption in Vietnam

For 14 months from 1967-1968, Juris Jurjevics served as part of American forces in Vietnam. He used that experience as background for his soon-to-be-published second novel, Red Flags.

The book is the story of Erik A. Rider, an Army cop who is sent to the Central Highlands to help stop the flow to the North Vietnamese of cash that is being generated from the opium smuggling. The story begins when, 40 years after the war, Rider is visited by the daughter of his former colonel. Some say Rider was involved in the colonel’s death.

From the back cover publicity:

Rider lands in Cheo Reo, home to hard-pressed soldiers, intelligence operatives, and profiteers of all stripes. The tiny U.S. contingent and their unenthusiastic Vietnamese allies are hopelessly outnumbered by infiltrating enemy infantry. And they’re all surrounded by sixty thousand Montagnard tribespeople who want their mountain homeland back.

The Vietcong are on to Rider’s game and have placed a bounty on his head. As he hunts the opium fields, skirmishes with enemy patrols, and defends the undermanned U.S. base, Rider makes a disturbing discovery: someone close to home has a stake in the opium smuggling ring—and will kill to protect it.

Red Flags is due out Sept. 20 and is being published by the Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Company.

Jurjevics was born in Latvia and came to the United States after World War II along with thousands of other Displaced Persons. After his stint in Vietnam, he began working for publisher Harper & Row. Among other positions in the publishing industry, Jurjevics also co-founded New York-based Soho Press and led it for 20 years.

Jurjevics’ first novel was The Trudeau Vector, published in 2005 (see our review, Death under the northern lights).

Red Flags

Where to buy

Purchase Red Flags from Amazon.com.

Note: Latvians Online receives a commission on purchases.

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

Absentee ballot applications drop 40%

A total of 539 citizens have applied to vote by mail in the Sept. 17 parliamentary election in Latvia, according to data compiled by the Central Election Commission in Rīga. That is a nearly 40 percent decrease from the 890 persons worldwide who planned to cast absentee ballots in the last Saeima election.

Applications to vote by mail were due Sept. 2 and could be submitted to any of 21 Latvian embassies or consulates around world.

The greatest number of applications—174, or about 32 percent of the total—were received by the Latvian Embassy in Washington, D.C.

The Latvian Embassy in Oslo, Norway, was second with 121. That number typically includes Latvia’s soldiers serving in Afghanistan.

Third was the Latvian Embassy in Bonn, Germany, which received 83 absentee ballot applications.

The embassies in London and Stockholm both received 36 applications. The embassy in Ottawa, Canada, got 30 applications.

The embassies in Azerbaijan, Greece, Israel, Russia and Turkey received no absentee ballot applications, according to the election commission’s data.

Persons who applied for absentee ballots had to complete an application form and send along their current Latvian passport. Absentee ballots were to be mailed to applicants between Sept. 3-7.

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