PBLA, ALA tell Saeima to back Zatlers for second term as Latvia’s president

Two leading exile organizations have expressed their support for the re-election of Latvian President Valdis Zatlers, whose first four-year term in office ends in July.

The World Federation of Free Latvians (Pasaules brīvo latviešu apvienība, or PBLA) and the American Latvian Association (Amerikas latviešu apvienība, or ALA) say Zatlers has proven himself a capable leader and urge the parliament to re-elect him.

Zatlers is the only person who has declared his candidacy for president, although several other politicians have been mentioned. Under the Latvian constitution, the president is elected by a simple majority of the 100-member Saeima.

Zatlers in 2007 replaced two-term President Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga, who was Latvia’s first female president. He was elected with 58 votes and was a compromise candidate offered by the coalition government. At the time, Zatlers was chairman of the board of the Hospital of Traumotology and Orthopaedics in Rīga. Critics opposed his election because of his lack of political experience and because he admitted accepting bribes from patients—a common practice in Latvia’s health care system.

However, both the PBLA and ALA applauded Zatlers’s performance as president.

“In the past four years, Valdis Zatlers has become a statesman who is respected in Latvia and internationally, and who is politically independent of those who elected him,” Mārtiņš Sausiņš, chairman of the PBLA, wrote in a May 20 letter to the Saeima.

The president has properly represented Latvia abroad and has strengthened ties with allies, Sausiņš wrote. He has the done the right thing when necessary, such as after the January 2009 riot in Rīga’s Old Town district, when he issued an ultimatum to the government and the Saeima that put an end to the so-called “locomotive principle” in parliamentary elections.

In dealings with the diaspora, Sausiņš wrote, Zatlers has been very responsive on issues of interest to Latvians abroad.  For example, the president has supported renewing dual citizenship for Latvians abroad, supported the Museum of the Occupation, and backed the teaching of Latvian history as a separate subject in Latvian schools.

The ALA adopted a resolution during its 60th anniversary annual meeting in Milwaukee, Wis., supporting the re-election of Zatlers.

“The ALA supports the election of V. Zatlers to a second term not only because during these four years he has grown into the office and done much for the sake of Latvia, but also because we know that for him the law, morality and ethics are not unfamiliar concepts,” ALA Chairman Juris Mežinskis and Public Affairs Director Jānis Kukainis wrote in a May 18 announcement.

Among the ALA’s priorities are encouraging U.S. economic investment in Latvia.

“Unfortunately,” Mežinsksi and Kukainis wrote, “we spend much time polishing Latvia’s image, because in the West there remains a perception that Latvia is governed by the rule of money, not the rule of law.”

A second term for Zatlers, as well as the continued work of the coalition government led by Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovsksi, are important for Latvia’s emergence for economic crisis, they wrote.

While a number of political parties have lined up in whole or in part behind Zatlers, it is not completely clear that he will gain the 51 votes needed to return as president. Political observers have mentioned parliamentary Speaker Solvita Āboltiņa, a member of the Unity coalition, as a potential candidate should Zatlers not get enough ballots on the Saeima’s first vote.

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

Briseles Latviešu teātra viesizrāde Ženevā

Šā gada pavasarī Briseles Latviešu teātris tika iestudējis lugu “Meduspoc draugam” pēc grāmatas par Vinniju Pūku motīviem. Izrādes režisors ir Pēteris Ancāns, un tās pirmizrāde notika 5.aprīlī Briselē.

14.maijā Briseles teātris ieradās viesizrādē Šveicē, ciemojoties pie Ženēvas latviešu skolas bērniem. Latvijas misija ANO Ženēvā atbalstīja šo kultūras notikumu, nodrošinot telpas izrādes norisei. Liels paldies jāsaka Latvijas goda ģenerālkonsulam Šveicē Ragnāram Granelli par dāsno finansiālo atbalstu izrādei.

Briseles Latviešu teātra aktieru stāstā mazais zēns – Kristofers Robins – ir jau pieaugušais, kurš daudz strādā un ne tik bieži priecājas. Jaukais bērnības laiks paliek aizvien tālāka pagātne, līdz reiz sapnī Kristoferu Robinu (Dzintars Kauliņš) apciemo bērnības draugi – Pūks (Toms Torims), Sivēns (Ilze Baranovska), Trusītis (Baiba Kauliņa), Kenga (Kristīna Šmite-Pirotta), Rū (Ričards Klimovičs), Tīģeris (Maija Liepiņa), Ēzelītis Ī-ā (Lauma Rode) un Pūce (Zelma Martinsone)—kuri atgādina, ka reizi pa reizei ikdienas rūpes jānoliek malā un jāļaujas sapņiem. Aktieri un režisors ir lieliski pastrādājuši—ir jaukas dekorācijas, skaisti tērpi un izdevies grims, aktieri strādā no sirds, un izrāde ir pilna mīļuma.

Ženēvas latviešu svētdienas skolā mācās 20 dažāda vecuma bērni. Pati latviešu kopiena ir neliela, un kopienas regulārie kontakti parasti aprobežojas ar 18.novembra un Jāņu svinēšanu, kā arī latviešu skolas nodarbībām. Tāpēc noskatīties teātra izrādi vietējiem latviešu bērniem bija liels notikums, jo ne visiem ir iespējas doties uz teātri Latvijā.

Briseles Latviešu teātra viesizrāde Ženēvā ir ievērojams notikums, kas apliecina gan teātra amatieru aktieru vēlmi ar savu nesavtīgo darbu sagādāt prieku latviešu jaunajai paaudzei, gan dažādu Eiropas valstu latviešu kopienu vēlēšanos un iespēju sadarboties.

Ženēvas bērniem izrāde sagādāja patiesu gandarījumu, it sevišķi tāpēc, ka pēc izrādes aktieri veltīja laiku sarunām ar bērniem, atļaujot prieku fotografēties kopā ar mīļākajiem tēliem un izpētīt izrādes rekvizītu—Trusīša namiņu. Māksliniece Anna Jeršova piepildīja bērnu vēlmes, krāsojot izrādes mazo apmeklētāju sejas līdzīgas viņu iemīļotajiem varoņiem. Ar lielu gandarījumu par redzēto, pilni ar jauniem iespaidiem un ar ēzelīša Ī-ā dzimšanas dienas svinībām sarūpētās kūkas gabalu vēderā mazie (un lielie skatītāji) devās mājup, kļuvuši par vienu latviskuma pēcpusdienu bagātāki.

Dace Mažeika, Ženēvas latviešu skolas vadītāja

Description of image

Latviešu bērni Ženēvā ar interesi skatās Briseles Latviešu teātri. Foto: Kārlis Bogens

U.S. Secret Service opens office to help combat cybercrime in Baltics

The U.S. Embassy in Estonia will soon house an office of the U.S. Secret Service, which will focus on helping the Baltic nations combat financial crimes, according to an embassy press release.

The office will open May 20 in Tallinn and will be staffed by four individuals, including an attaché, and assistant attaché, an investigator and an adminstrative support officer, according to the embassy’s website.

“It is primarily seeking to assist all three nations with the protection of their financial infrastructure,” according to the website. “To this end it will endeavor to reduce the losses they incur due to cybercrime, financial fraud, identity theft and through counterfeit currency.”

Estonia was chosen as the site for the Secret Service office in part because of “the investigative nexus it provides in combating cyber-crime,” according to the press release.

Estonian government computer systems incurred a widespread cyberattack in 2007, which officials blamed on Russian hackers.

Two years later, the FBI placed a cybercrime agent in Estonia to help the country deal with future attacks and to help investigate cybercrime aimed at U.S. interests.