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The
Weekly Crier
Archives
News highlights from Lithuania,
Latvia and Estonia.

News highlights from
February 22March 1, 1999
- Voters in Estonia head to the polls on March 7 to elect a new parliament, the
country's third parliamentary election since regaining independence from Moscow in 1991.
Most of the main political parties agree on the big
issues, including the need to maintain market reforms and to continue to seek European
Union membership, and so campaigning has largely focused on personalities.
The election has largely broken down as a contest
between an alliance of three center, center-right parties and a loose alliance of
center-left groupings, led by controversial Center Party leader Edgar Savisaar.
In a EMOR/Postimees opinion poll, released on March
1, the Center Party was in first place, polling 17 percent support. The Country People's
Party, which has said it would cooperate with the Center Party in any post-election
government, registered 10 percent support.
In the poll, the strongly pro-market Reform Party
drew 15 percent, the Moderates 9 percent and the Fatherland Union 8 percent, apparently
giving the center-right alliance the edge in the election with a total of 32 percent
support.
Edgar Savisaar, widely criticized by the mainstream
media for semi-authoritarian tendencies, has trumpeted a populist message targeted at
Estonian residents who feel they haven't benefited from post-Soviet reforms.
The Center Party leader has made a call to replace
Estonia's flat tax with a progressive tax, the centerpiece of his campaign, arguing that
current tax structures are unfair and contribute to a class-based society.
Savisaar has clearly stuck a chord with many
economically hard-hit voters and also among many ethnic Russian voters who recently won
citizenship and will be voting in an Estonian national election for the first time.
But many other voters intensely dislike and distrust
Savissaar, who has been involved in several political scandals, including one several
years ago in which he was accused of secretly tape recording his political rivals while
interior minister.
Most analysts say that even if Savisaar is the
nominal winner of the election, he will have a hard time wooing enough parties to join him
in order to form a government.
The center-right alliance is thought to have the best
chance of forming the next government, though the three parties may not win enough seats
to form a majority government on their own.
The country's main ruling party, the Coalition Party
scored only 4 percent in the recent opinion poll and could be in danger of falling short
of the 5 percent threshold required to win seats in parliament.
The Coalition Party, lead by Prime Minister Mart
Siimann, has been widely accused of being indecisive and of being passionless about
reforms.
But if the Coalition Party does win four or five
seats, it could end up holding the balance of power. It has not committed itself, but most
analysts say it would be more likely to side with the center-right-not with Savisaar.
Who could end up as prime minister after the election
is not at all clear. Many people have pegged the mild-mannered and widely respected Andres
Tarand of the Moderates as having the best chance to head a new government.
The Reform Party's Siim Kallas or Fatherland's Mart
Laar could also be prime ministerial candidates. But both men have reputations as
uncompromising free-market advocates and may not be acceptable to more moderate
politicians.
Tarand and the Moderates, while declaring they are
very much in favor of market reforms, have said Estonia also needs to devote more
attention to the country's social problems, including growing poverty.
The Moderates have invoked the name of British Prime
Minister Tony Blair, saying Estonia needs to find a Third Way between hands-off free
market policies and a social welfare state.
The Reform Party and Fatherland have said they would
also pay greater attention to social issues, but insist that the market and spurring
stronger growth were the keys to solving Estonia's social ills.
Two Russian-dominated parties, the center-left
Russian Party in Estonia and the far-left United People's Party, are also vying for seats
in the Riigikogu parliament. They have only been registering 2 percent support in opinion
polls, apparently losing many ethnic Russian voters to Edgar Savisaar's Center Party.
- The Baltic states on February 25 officially opened the doors of a joint-military
college, which the three countries say should boost their chances of eventually getting
into NATO.
Officials say the aim of the college, which will be
largely staffed by officers from NATO-member states, is to bring the level of officer
training in the Baltics to a more professional, Western level.
Membership in the U.S.-led alliance has long been a
top foreign policy goal of all three nations. NATO has said its door is open to the
Baltics, but that their fledging armies aren't yet ready militarily to join.
Moscow has adamantly opposed Baltic membership in
NATO, saying their inclusion in the alliance would be a threat to Russia. But Estonian
President Lennart Meri said at opening ceremonies for the military college that the Baltic
countries have a right to decide which security alliance they want to join, without
outside interference.
The first classes at the new Baltic defense college,
dubbed Baltdefcol, will begin in August. The main language of instruction for the
Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian cadets will be English. Danish General Michael Clemmesen
is the first rector of the college, which is being financed by money from different Nordic
and NATO-members nations, including the United States, France, and Germany.
The collegelocated in the Estonian city of
Tartu, some 200 kilometers southeast of Tallinnis just the latest project in
long-running security cooperation between the three ex-Soviet republics.
In recent years, the countries have established a
joint peace-keeping force and a joint mine sweeping unit. They are also setting up a
common air defense system.
Combined, the standing armies in the Baltics number
fewer than 20,000 mendwarfed by the million-man army of neighboring Russia.
- The Latvian town of Gulbene is still in a state of shock following the brutal
murder of three kindergartners and their teacher on February 22.
The murdered childrenall of them girls aged 6,
5 and 4were stabbed to death during the day Monday by a man who slipped into a room
where they had been sleeping.
A 32-year-old teacher at the kindergarten was killed
as she tried to stop the assailant.
A 21-year-old murder suspect, Alexander Koryakov, was
detained by police as he tried to flee the area. He later told police he had stalked the
school for days, and killed the children as part of a plan to become famous as a mass
murderer.
He used a meat cleaver to commit the murders, police
said.
Latvian President Guntis Ulmanis told a nationwide
television audience Monday night that the murders were one of the worst acts of violence
in Latvia in recent years.
He said new security measures should be considered to
make sure such a tragedy would not happen again.
The mayor of Gulbene, Martins Kokars, said stationing
security guards at kindergartens would be an option, but that such measures were beyond
the financial means of most schools.
The city government in Gulbene, some 200 kilometers
east of Riga, said psychologists were being brought in to counsel children who witnessed
the murders.
News highlights from
February 15February 22, 1999
- The three Baltic presidents on February 18 appealed to NATO to keep expanding
the alliance and to include their nations as full alliance members at the earliest
opportunity.
Their joint NATO statement at the end of a one-day
summit in Tallinn comes two months before a special NATO conference in Washington, and
appears aimed at focusing NATOs attention on the Baltic membership bid.
Many analysts dont expect the alliance to issue
new NATO invitations at the Washington summit, and some Baltic officials have expressed
fears the whole expansion process could grind to a halt.
In their statement, the Baltic presidents said their
countries had worked hard at meeting membership criteria and "that the next round of
NATO enlargement should include their countries."
Despite Russian objections to Baltic NATO membership,
Estonian President Lennart Meri told a news conference that eventual NATO membership
remained a cornerstone of Baltic security policy.
"You can never say there is enough security in
the world," he said. "That is why we are interested in and will always be
interested in an expanded NATO."
Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus also tried to
soothe Russian fears, telling journalists that Baltic aspirations to enter NATO
werent a threat to anyone.
"There is no hidden agenda about our desire to
join," he said.
All three Baltic countries made membership in NATO a
top foreign policy goal after regaining independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.
But because of Russian objections, the issue of
Baltic membership has been a highly sensitive one for NATO. The alliance has said the NATO
door remains open to the Baltics, but that they arent yet ready militarily to join.
Some observers in the region have questioned
NATOs commitment to taking in the Baltics, suggesting that the 50-year-old alliance
is trying to put the three nations off politely until Russian opposition dies down.
Latvian President Guntis Ulmanis echoed these
anxieties, saying his country was looking for more clarity from NATO about where the
Baltics stand.
"We want to see a clear NATO strategy, and we
want to see where the Baltic states fit into this strategy," he said.
Lithuanian President Adamkus said the Baltics fully
expected to be NATO members within four to five years, but said they should prepare to
defend themselves on their own in the meantime.
"Our three countries shouldnt just put our
hands down and do nothing," he said. "We should build up our own arm forces so
that, if need be, we can defend ourselves and not depend on somebody else."
Also last week, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe
Talbott also tried to reassure countries that havent yet been invited to join NATO.
He specifically responded to an earlier statement by
Lithuanian Speaker Vytautas Landsbergis that NATOs open-door policy had no
credibility.
"I think it is profoundly wrong to say that the
open-door statement has no meaning," he said. "You will see lots of genuine
signs coming out of the (April) summit that this is a real enlargement process."
- In a 38-page report released on February 17, Latvia laid out its general
economic plans to secure a place in the European Union.
To the disappointment of policy makers, Latvia failed
to win an invitation to hold formal membership talks with the EU. But Latvia was told it
stood a good chance of being invited in 1999 if it stuck firmly to the reform path.
In its report, the Latvian government pledged to
maintain its conservative fiscal policies, including a near-balanced budget and keeping a
stable exchange rate. The report also said that Latvia would strengthen the banking sector
and work harder at modernizing Latvian agriculture.
The government anticipated that GDP growth would be
around 4 percent for 1999, and then would climb to between 5.0-6.3 percent starting in the
year 2000. Officials said inflation would hover around 4.5 percent for several years and
then slowly drop to around 3.5 percent by 2003.
- A serial killer in Estonia who said he learned to enjoy murder was convicted and
sentenced to just eight years in prison on February 15.
Alexander Rubel killed seven people from 1997 to
1998, targeting drunks or people debilitated by illness. He killed at least one of his
victims with an axe.
Rubel was only 17 when he committed the murders and
so eight years in prison was the maximum penalty available to prosecutors under Estonian
law.
Rubel told authorities he killed his first victim out
of curiosity.
"I wanted to see what it was like to kill
someone," he was quoted as saying. "I felt better after that
after killing
one, you immediately want more. I liked to kill."
Court psychologists found that Ruble was of sound
mind, although he claimed he had heard voices telling him to kill after inhaling gasoline.
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