Latvia – The Other Russia http://www.theotherrussia.org News from the Coalition for Democracy in Russia Tue, 01 Feb 2011 17:00:38 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.6 Banned from Latvia, Luzhkov Tries for Austria, Britain http://www.theotherrussia.org/2011/02/01/banned-from-latvia-luzhkov-tries-for-austria-britain/ Tue, 01 Feb 2011 16:59:25 +0000 http://www.theotherrussia.org/?p=5151 Yury Luzhkov with his two daughters and wife. Source: KommersantAfter being fired from his post as Moscow’s longtime mayor, some analysts speculated that Yury Luzhkov might very well stage a campaign for the Russian presidency. Over the past few months, however, evidence has begun to accumulate that Luzhkov is actually attempting to flee the country. On Tuesday, ITAR-TASS reported that the former mayor has been granted an entry visa to Great Britain.

While there was no talk of a permanent residency visa for Luzhkov, a source told ITAR-TASS, the entry visa was granted on the basis of “reunifying their family.” Shortly after he was fired, Luzhkov sent his teenage daughters to London to study. His wife, billionaire real estate mogul Yelena Baturina, is also currently in London.

According to Kasparov.ru, Baturina’s status as a major investor with significant financial interests in the British economy allow her to hold a special British business visa. Thanks to this visa, she can obtain a residential permit and then make a claim for British citizenship.

The news comes two weeks after Luzhkov failed in an attempt to obtain citizenship in Latvia. He applied shortly before New Year’s, having deposited 200 thousand Lats (about 400 thousand USD) into a Latvian bank account; he reportedly already owned real estate in Jurmala. However, Riga declared the disgraced mayor persona non grata and put him on a blacklist of foreigners.

Media reports later surfaced that Luzhkov was trying to obtain citizenship in Austria.

The ex-mayor himself says that he has no plans to leave Russia “if the motherland itself doesn’t disown me.” According to a source close to the mayor, Luzhkov simply does not want to rely on Russian passport services and decided to obtain one from a country in the Schengen Area.

If he does decide to flee to Britain, Yury Luzhkov would not be the first Russian public figure in trouble with the Kremlin to do so. Oligarch Boris Berezovsky took asylum in London in 2001 after Russian authorities began investigating his business activities. Britain has turned down all three extradition requests to send Berezovsky back to Russia, where he was convicted in absentia of embezzlement and theft in several different criminal suits.

Yury Luzhkov was fired by Russian President Dmitri Medvedev on September 28, 2010, as a result of “a loss of confidence.” His decision was preceded by a massive propaganda campaign, in which federal television aired multiple scandalous stories criticizing the mayor and his wife. Medvedev later specified that he fired Luzhkov because of the high level of corruption in Moscow.

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Latvia Lists Russia as Major Threat to Its National Security http://www.theotherrussia.org/2008/07/10/latvia-lists-russia-as-major-threat-to-its-national-security/ Thu, 10 Jul 2008 20:34:00 +0000 http://www.theotherrussia.org/2008/07/10/latvia-lists-russia-as-major-threat-to-its-national-security/ Latvian flag over the Saeima. Source: bbi.lvThe Latvian National Security Council has included Russia in a list of major security threats to the Baltic state. As the RIA Novosti news agency reports, the agency places Russia’s threat alongside terrorism, drug trafficking and illegal immigration.

According to the report, published July 9th, Russia poses less of a military threat than an economic one because it “uses energy instruments as a means of influence.” The paper then speaks of Russia’s rising geopolitical role, which Latvia must now reckon with.

The report also notes that recently signed border agreements between Russian and Latvia retain a large deal of contradictions, which impede a normal dialogue between the countries.

Latvia is the second country to classify Russia as a threat in the past week. On July 4th, The Times newspaper reported that the British security services see Russia as the third most serious threat facing the country, after Iran and Al-Qaeda.

In 2005, Latvia’s Parliament, the Saeima, asked that Russia pay reparations for the years of Soviet occupation, in the amount of 60 to 100 billion dollars.

Ivars Godmanis, the Latvian Prime Minster, will introduce the National Security Council report to Latvia’s ministers on July 10th.

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In an Open Letter, the Russian Opposition Asks Latvian Authorities For Impartiality http://www.theotherrussia.org/2008/04/09/russian-oppositions-open-letter-asks-latvian-authorities-for-impartiality/ Wed, 09 Apr 2008 00:53:37 +0000 http://www.theotherrussia.org/2008/04/09/russian-oppositions-open-letter-asks-latvian-authorities-for-impartiality/ April 7, 2008: A wide group of Russian opposition leaders, human rights activists and celebrities have sent an open letter to the authorities of Latvia, requesting objectivity in the investigation against Vladimir Linderman, a columnist and opposition leader deported by Russian authorities.

Linderman, who writes as “Vladimir Abel” in a variety of print and online media, is currently imprisoned on charges of possessing explosives, and of plotting an assassination attempt against Latvia’s former president in 2002. The authors of the letter claim the charges are “politically motivated and unsubstantiated,” and that Linderman was targeted by Russian law enforcement for his active roles in The Other Russia coalition and the banned National Bolshevik Party.

The letter was originally signed by 24 persons, and is now gathering further signatures online.

To the President of the Republic of Latvia
To the Minister of the Interior of the Republic of Latvia
To the General Prosecutor of the Republic of Latvia

Dear Sirs!

We are appealing to you in connection with the situation surrounding Vladimir Ilyich Linderman, a non-Latvian citizen. At the present moment, since March 20th 2008, V. I. Linderman has been held in a temporary detention facility in Riga. He was deported from Russia to Latvia on March 19th, after a ruling by the Izmailovsky court in Moscow.

On March 20th 2008, the Latvian prosecutor’s office filed charges again Vladimir Linderman. He is accused of storing explosives and of calling for the overthrow of the political system.

We have reason to believe that the current charges are politically motivated and unsubstantiated. Firstly, back in 2004, the court dropped charges, on grounds of lack of evidence, against A. Petrov, O. Morozova, and R. Krumgold, who were involved in the same case as Linderman, and were accused of storing explosives and calling for the overthrow of the political system. Secondly, some of the publicly known details used to charge Linderman are astonishing. For instance, the fact that during a search of his apartment, a TNT block with a detonator was supposedly found in an armchair that his ten-year-old daughter had a habit of jumping on.

Further, we want to note that the work and thoughts of Vladimir Linderman were connected exclusively with Russia in all the past years. Precisely in Russia did V. Linderman become one of the [physical] and ideological leaders of The Other Russia political coalition. The coalition advocates non-violent struggle for the restoration of democratic institutions in Russia, starting with the institution of free and fair elections. In the past few years, dozens of Vladimir Linderman’s articles, devoted to the restoration of democratic institutions in Russia, were published (on Kasparov.ru, Grani.ru, and others). It is important to note, that in Russia, V. Linderman has not had any civil or criminal charges levied against him.

It is no secret that activists and participants of The Other Russia coalition are constantly persecuted by the law enforcement agencies in Russia over their political and human-rights activities. It seems to us, that the fortune of V. Linderman (in particular, that he was refused Russian citizenship, as well as the constant violation of his rights and persecution in Russia), is directly connected with the attitude of the Russian clandestine services. As an example, it is worth noting certain facts: In 2003, V. Linderman was arrested by the FSB when he was planning to meet his 80-year-old mother, who came specially from Riga (he did manage get to see her then). In 2005, officers of the Ministry of Internal Affairs detained V. Linderman when his daughter came from Riga.

We retain hope, and ask that the fortune and case of Vladimir Ilyich Linderman be decided conscientiously, impartially and in a balanced way. We ask that you take into account that V. Linderman’s elderly mother, wife and four children, who he has not seen for several years, reside in Latvia. We ask that you also take into account the persecution of V. Linderman over his political activities and views, on the part of the Russian clandestine services.

We once again express our hope in your impartiality.

With respect,

Garry Kasparov, 13th world chess champion, leader of the United Civil Front
Vladimir Bukovsky, writer, human rights advocate
Eduard Limonov, chairman of The Other Russia executive committee
Nikita Belykh, chairman of the Union of Right Forces party
Aleksei Prigarin, first secretary of the Central Committee of the Russian Party of Communists – CPSU
Maxim Reznik, chairman of the St. Petersburg branch of the Yabloko party
Sergei Udaltsov, leader of the Vanguard of Red Youth
Anatoly Baranov, editor-in-chief of Forum.msk.ru
Aleksandr Ryklin, journalist, editor-in-chief of Ej.ru
Alexei Kondaurov, deputy of the State Duma, fourth assembly, reserve Major-General
Valery Panyushkin, journalist
Ilya Yashin, co-chair of the Yabloko youth wing
Aleksandr Osovtsov, member of The Other Russia executive committee
Sergei Mozgovoy, co-president of the Institute of Freedom of Conscience
Yevgeny Ikhlov, human right advocate
Aleksei Devotchenko, Distinguished Artist of Russia
Yuliya Malysheva, leader of the Russian National-democratic Youth Union
Oksana Chelysheva, chair of the Society for Russian-Chechen Friendship (Finland)
Stanislav Dmitrievsky, director of the Fund for the Support of Tolerance (Nizhny-Novgorod)
Marina Litvinovich, member of The Other Russia executive committee
Aleksandr Averin, member of The Other Russia executive committee
Sergei Kogan, leader of the NABAT trade union
Denis Bilunov, executive director of the United Civil Front
Nadezhda Mityushkina

More names at Kasparov.ru (RUS)

translated by theotherrussia.org
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