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

News Highlights from
July 27August 3, 1998
Despite a bitter history of invasion, few Balts believe their
nations are now under military threat, according to a recent poll commissioned in part by
NATO.
Fewer than five percent of respondents in the
Baltics said they thought there wasn't any serious threat of attack from abroad, according
to the poll conducted by the Tallinn-based Saar Poll agency for both NATO and
Lithuanias Foreign Ministry.
In the short term, most Balts said they see
more serious threats coming from within. Over 60 percent of Latvian residents surveyed
said crime and corruption posed the greatest danger to national security.
Even if there were attacks on their countries,
a vast majority of Balts expressed little confidence in their national armies. In all
three countries, over 70 percent of respondents said they didnt believe their
militaries could successfully repulse an aggressor.
They also said they had no faith that Western
countries would come to their aid. Only 15 percent of those polled in Latvia and
Lithuania, and 23 percent in Estonia said the West would offer military assistance.
A majority did say they believed the
Baltics would receive strong diplomatic support.
Prosecutors say they could press charges after a Latvian man
received serious knife wounds during the reenactment of a medieval-era skirmish over the
weekend.
Gatis Indrevics, 18, was sparring in the garb
of a medieval knight when a fellow combatant reached inadvertently for a real knife and
thrust it into Indrevics side.
The Baltic News Service said the attacker had
become overly excited in the heat of the mock battle and mistook the sharp-edged knife for
a blunt, stylized knife that normally poses no risk.
Indrevics is still in intensive care, but his
life is not in danger.
Prosecutors said the man who knifed Indrevics
could be charged with reckless endangerment, which carries a maximum penalty of one year
in prison.
The mishap took place in Cesis, some 75
kilometers northeast of Riga, a stronghold of 13th century German knights who fought to
Christianize pagan peoples along the Baltic coast.
Reenacting battles from the era has become
popular in Latvia in recent years. Injuries during reenactments are rare.
Emigration of Russians from the Baltic states to Russia has
slowed steadily in recent years and is now just several thousand a year.
Around 10,000 Russians left the Baltics
for Russia in 1997, down from around 80,000 in 1992, according to figures recently
released by Moscows migration board.
In Estonia, 3,483 Russians departed for
Russia in 1997 compared to 24,440 in 1992; in Latvia, 5,638 left in 1997 compared to
27,271 in 1992. In Lithuania, 1,785 people moved to Russia last year, compared to 15, 354
in 1992.
Russian migration head, Tatayna Regent,
told the Baltic News Service that mass migration of Russians had virtually ceased.
Those who live there now dont want
to emigratethey want to live in the Baltics, she said.
Riga and Tallinn had the dubious honor of making it onto a
recently published list of the worlds most expensive cities. More than 175
cities were rated by the Geneva-based Corporate Resources Group, which surveyed American
ex-pats living in the cities. Hong Kong was rated the costliest city, followed by Tokyo,
Beijing and Moscow. Riga ranked 45th, above the likes of Helsinki, Chicago and Los
Angeles. Tallinn was 109th; Vilnius was not on the list. For the survey, the cost of
living in New York was the baseline and assigned a rate of 100.
To follow is an abridged version of the list:
1. Hong Kong 157
2. Tokyo 154
3. Beijing 153
4. Moscow 151
5. Shanghai, China 144
6. Osaka, Japan 140
7. Guangzhou, China 122
8. St. Petersburg, Russia 115
9. Dalian, China 112
10. London 111
11. Shenzhen, China 110
12. Kiev, Ukraine 110
13. Singapore 109
14. Luanda, Angola 105
15. Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania 103
16. Sao Paulo, Brazil 102
17. Geneva 100
18. Zurich, Switzerland 100
19. Tel Aviv, Israel 100
20. Buenos Aires, Argentina 100
21. New York 100
26. Tehran, Iran 97
27. Hanoi, Vietnam 96
28. Oslo, Norway 96
45. RIGA, LATVIA 88
51. Los Angeles 86
52. Chicago 85
53. Honolulu 85.
57. Helsinki, Finland 84
60. Berlin 83
61. Stockholm, Sweden 82
72. Washington, D.C. 80
73. Boston 80
102. Prague, Czech Republic 74
104. Toronto 74
105. Lusaka, Zambia
106. Barcelona, Spain 74
107. Lyon, France 73
108. Pointe Noire, Republic of Congo
109. TALLINN, ESTONIA 73
110. Dakar, Senegal 73
111. Leipzig, Germany 73
113. Auckland, New Zealand 72
114. Melbourne, Australia 72
News Highlights from
July 20July 27, 1998
Israels chief rabbi arrived in Lithuanias capital on
July 22 to negotiate the fate of some 300 Jewish holy scriptures which survived Nazi
occupation and decades of Soviet neglect.
Rabbi Israel Meir Lau is seeking possession of the
scriptures, or Torahs, in order to hand them over to synagogues or to dispose of them
according to strict religious custom. They are now being kept in the Lithuanian National
Library in Vilnius.
While Rabbi Laus visit is unofficial, he is
being accompanied by several leading officials from Israels Ministry of Religious
Affairs. The delegation will meet with Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus on Friday.
Jewish religious leaders have expressed concern that
the sacred scrolls, which are hand-written by rabbis on parchment made from cow hides, are
not currently being stored according to religious law.
The scriptures originally came from synagogues all
across Lithuania, a main center of European Jewry before World War II. Over 90 percent of
some 250,000 Lithuanian Jews were killed during the Nazi occupation from 941-1944.
Many of the holy parchments were saved and hidden
away before Nazis ransacked and torched virtually all the synagogues in Lithuania. Some
scriptures not immediately destroyed by the Nazis were desecratedsome made into
lampshades.
During Soviet rule in Lithuania, from 1944-1991,
Jewish scriptures were badly neglected and, in some cases, also destroyed.
The Israeli embassybased in the Latvian
capital Rigasaid many of the scriptures now in Lithuanias central library are
in poor condition. Some had apparently been lying for years on the floor of Catholic
monastery, embassy press spokesman Joel Lion said in a telephone
interview.
Lion said he didnt expect a formal
agreement on the scrolls during the rabbis visit. He insisted the issue of the
scrolls was not a contentious one with Lithuania, but said people in the small
Baltic nation needed to appreciate their importance.
"We just want to explain to the Lithuanians how
we see the problem, to explain that these things are not like books," he said.
"I dont know if their is resistance from the Lithuanians or simply a lack of
knowledge." Lion said the scrolls are so sacred that when, in the process of writing,
a rabbi writes the name of god, he has to bathe himself. Damaged scriptures are supposed
to be buried in consecrated ground, and those in good condition must be kept in a
synagogue.
"According to Jewish tradition, those are the
only two options," he said.
Lithuanian-Israeli relations have at time been
strained over the role some Lithuanians played in the Holocaust. Israel has criticized the
country in the past for acting too slowly to bring Lithuanians accused of Nazi war crimes
to justice.
But the Israeli embassy spokesman said relations had
normalized. "We are just two countries with normal relations that have to solve some
problems rooted in the past," he said. "The issue of the these scrolls is one of
those issues."
EU Commissioner Hans Van den Broek has called on Russia to stop
applying economic pressure on Latvia, saying any sanctions against the small Baltic state
were counterproductive.
"Weve made it clear to Russia that we do
not accept their attempts to mix political and economic issues," Van den Broek said
in a speech at Latvias stock exchange building in Riga on July 20. "We resist
unjustified pressure on an EU candidate."
In recent months, Russia has threatened to divert
lucrative transit trade away from Latvia to penalize the country for allegedly
discriminating against its large Russian-speaking minority. Moscow also recently imposed
higher fees for Latvian rail traffic through Russia. While the Latvian government says
Russian sanctions are starting to bite, many independent observers say it is still unclear
whether Latvias economy is being adversely affected.
Russia says it is defending the interests of some
700,000 Russian-speakers in Latvia who have still not qualified for Latvian citizenship.
It says Latvian naturalization laws are too stringent, and permanently disenfranchise
Russian-speakers.
Latvia recently softened some naturalization
rules, including granting automatic citizenship to children of non-citizens born after
1991. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) praised the changes,
but Moscow says they dont go far enough.
Van den Broek also threw his support behind the
citizenship amendments. "We do not think Latvia should do more than is asked by the
OSCE," he said.
He also argued that Russian economic pressure
would backfire. "We think Russias pressure on Latvia hurts the aims Russia says
it pursues," he said. "This pressure will scare the non-citizens away from
integration into Latvian society rather than encourage their integration."
The EU Commissioner, however, also urged Latvia
to work harder at bringing Russian-speakers into the mainstream of Latvian
society.
"We hope that Latvia will take all
necessary steps to foster this integration," he said. "This applies to the
citizenship law, but also to language laws, and to the need to enhance Latvian-language
training for non-Latvian speakers."
European Commissioner Hans van den Broek said Tuesday in
Lithuania that the country was making good economic progressbut stopped short of
promising that it would get an invite this year to start talks on EU membership.
Speaking at a press conference at the end of a
one-day visit to the Baltic-coast nation, van den Broek praised Lithuania for speeding up
privatizaton and spurring strong economic growthset to top 5 percent for 1998.
But he refused to predict how soon Lithuania
would join the EU, or whether it would even be asked later late this year to begin
membership talks.
"Lithuania will join the EU, the
faster the better. But making this happen is a technical exercise which we will conduct
scrupulously," he told journalists. "If a country joins before it is ready, this
would harm the country and it would harm the EU."
He said Lithuania still needed to make
progress "in the modernization of enterprises, and in achieving a clear, transparent
and predictable economic environment."
Among the three Baltic states, only Estonia has
received a coveted invite to begin negotiations on full EU membership. The other two
Baltics, Lithuania and Latvia, have expressed anger at being left out, saying they
deserved to start EU talks as much as Estonia.
In addition to Estonia, Poland, Hungary, the Czech
Republic and Cyprus also got the nod from the EU and have already begun talks on joining
the elite European body.
After meeting the EU Commissioner Tuesday,
Lithuanian Foreign Minister Algirdas Saudargas expressed confidence that the EU
Commissioner would report back to Brussels that Lithuania was also now a prime EU
candidate.
He insisted that his country was not far behind
the other leading EU candidates, like Poland and Hungary. But he said an economic gap
could develop if Lithuania was again left off the EUs list.
"We are seeking an invitation to negotiations by
the end of this year so as to prevent such a gap from forming," BNS quoted him as
saying. Brussels is currently drafting a new report on EU-candidate countries.
The report will be delivered at an EU meeting
this December, when the EU could extend new invitations.
Both Lithuania and Latviawhich the EU
Commissioner visited on Mondayhave said they are confident they will receive one.
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