Norway wins Eurovision Song Contest, Latvia left in dust

Norway has won this year’s Eurovision Song Contest, gaining the right to host next year’s competition. Belarus-born performer Alexander Rybak and the song “Fairytale” earned an amazing 387 points.

Eurovision this year was held in Moscow. A total of 25 countries, including Estonia and Lithuania, competed in the May 16 final in Olimpisky Indoor Arena.

Latvia’s Intars Busulis, who decided to sing the song “Sastrēgums” in Russian rather than Latvian, failed to make it out of the semi-finals held May 14-15. The song, with music by Kārlis Lācis and lyrics by poet Jānis Elsbergs, was turned into “Probka.”

Norway walked away with the contest. Really, it killed, setting a new record for total points. As voting results were announced from the 42 countries participating in Eurovision, the real battle was for second place. Iceland and Azerbaijan exchanged spots at least a couple of times, but in the end the island nation took second with 218 points.

Estonia’s Urban Symphony held up honorably, earning 129 points and sixth place.

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

Court overturns ban on Rīga ‘pride’ march

A May 16 “pride” march in downtown Rīga by supporters of sexual minorities is on again after a Latvian court overturned a ban on the event.

The Administrative District Court in Rīga ruled May 15 that the Rīga City Council’s Commission on Meetings, Marches and Demonstrations erred when it decided to disallow the march, Latvian media report.

The march, scheduled to begin in the Vērmaņdārzs park and then move into surrounding streets, is being organized by the Mozaīka organization as part of Baltic Friendship Days. City officials originally had approved the event. After conservative politicians and religious leaders complained about the decision, the commission on May 14 cited security concerns when it decided to halt the march.

Mozaīka, an organization that advocates for the rights of gays, lesbian, bisexuals and transgender people, appealed to the administrative court.

In a statement applauding the court’s decision, Mozaīka said it hopes the event will be peaceful.

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

Mozaīka appeals Rīga ban of gay pride parade

A group representing sexual minorities in Latvia has appealed a decision by Rīga officials to ban a planned May 16 march in the city’s downtown.

Mozaīka, a Rīga-based organization advocating for the rights of gays, lesbian, bisexuals and transgender people, has been organizing the Baltic Friendship Days event. The march was scheduled to begin at noon in the Vērmaņdārzs park and then move into surrounding streets.

Mozaīka filed its appeal May 14 with the Administrative District Court in Rīga asking it to overturn a decision by the Rīga City Council’s Commission on Meetings, Marches and Demonstrations disallowing the parade.

The city commission initially approved the march on May 8, but repealed its decision on May 14 citing security concerns.

“We believe this decision to be unlawful, without any legal justification whatsoever, and based on political pressure,” Mozaīka said in a press release.

The commission suggested Mozaīka could hold the march just in the park without going into surrounding streets, or along 11th November Shoreline. Mozaīka, however, rejected the alternatives, arguing the commission’s decision “have no legal justification.”

Numerous conservative politicians and religious leaders protested the commission’s initial approval of the march. In an open letter to Rīga Mayor Jānis Birks, the Rev. Jānis Šmits on May 12 wrote that the commission’s approval was illegal and against the wishes of the majority of city residents. He called on the mayor to overturn the decision and to sack Rīga City Administrator Andris Grīnbergs. Šmits, a member of the conservative First Party of Latvia (Latvijas Pirmā partija), posed a question to Birks: “In whose interests does the Rīga council work—those of 50 amoral homosexuals or those of 1 million Rīga inhabitants?”

Linda Freimane, chair of Mozaīka, said in a statement that the city council had yielded to political pressure.

“All of this foments hatred in Latvia,” she said, “and causes Latvia to become an object of mockery among other European countries.”

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