Posted on 02/22/2005 2:17:23 PM PST by Lukasz
Kaliningrad hosted a Constituent Congress of Pespublika public movement Monday. The activists pledged to lead an attack for getting a republic status for Kaliningrad, within Russia though.
Two weeks ago, in the course of his visit to Kaliningrad, Ilya Klebanov, Russian presidents plenipotentiary to the Northwestern Federal District, unexpectedly supported the idea of assigning an overseas status to the Russian enclave in Europe. Then, members of the Expert Council of the Kaliningrad Region (a public organization backed up by the local authorities) explained to Klebanov that it would mean an autonomous entrance of the region in the euro zone and allow Kaliningrad residents to freely travel and work in Europe. Klebanov repudiated his statement on the same day, and some time later, the RF Interior Ministry declared there was no special status for the Kaliningrad Region set forth in the RF Constitution.
Nevertheless, the passions have not calmed in Kaliningrad. Sergey Pasko, chairman of the Baltic Republican Party, triggered creation of Kaliningrad Public Movement Respublika targeted at getting an international state-legal status for the Kaliningrad Region so that it may have independent relations with the EU but will retain associated membership within the RF.
20 days ago, the RF Constitutional Court upheld the award of the Kaliningrad Regions Court on banning activities of the Baltic Republican Party, established far back in the spring of 1992. The Law on Political Parties requires that each party should have regional branches at least in half of the RF constituents and at least 10,000 members in strength. As to the Baltic Republican Party, it has slightly more than 500 members and is known nowhere, apart from Kaliningrad.
The yesterdays Congress was mostly attended by students and entrepreneurs. Pasko introduced his accomplice Vitautas Lopata, who is a deputy of the regional Duma and co-chairman of the movement. Respublika is not the Baltic Republican Party. There is interaction, but not more. We have shifted to the higher level we are preparing a legal basis, Pasko specified.
We have been told for 11 years that Kaliningrad is a ground for the European cooperation, or a pilot region or an area of friendship. In reality, all those statements of the Moscow minion officials are far from constitutional, Lopata said, adding Kaliningrads initiative for becoming a Russian republic will be the most constitutional of all. It wont be sedition if the 22nd republic appears on the map of the country, Lopata noted. But Vasily Grachev, the war veteran who spoke after Lopata, specified if the region becomes a republic, Moscow will no longer be responsible for it.
The new movement has an emblem an orange flag which reads KOD Respublika (Russian for Kaliningrad Public Movement Republic). Pasko denied any analogy with Ukraine. It is the brightest color spectrum, he pointed out.
The movement will pile up funds from the business companies, members of the regional Union of Entrepreneurs, in which Pasko presides.
Kaliningrad authorities declined to comment on establishment of the new movement yesterday. An anonymous source with the regional government said that for Moscow, all supporters of Pasko are separatists and any movement towards independence may hinder the region itself in its negotiations with the European Union and federal center.
The Institute of Me is also located in Kaliningrad!
Maybe they should go back to calling the area East Prussia...rather than honoring one of Stalin's flunkeys.
Now that's an architectural masterpiece from the Mikhail Suslov Academy of Fine Arts.
Looks like the inspiration behind Jenga.
Please put me on your Eastern European ping list, sir.
As for Memel, wouldn't it simply be easier for Russia to cede this sliver of land to Poland or Lithuania; I'm sure most of the inhabitants (formerly German, but removed after 1945) are Polish or Lithuanian anyway.
"Maybe they should go back to calling the area East Prussia...rather than honoring one of Stalin's flunkeys."
Indeed East Prussia used to be quite a bit larger...the southern half of East Prussia was handed over to Poland in 1945 along with some German territories further west, in compensation from the eastern territories Stalin was taking from Poland.
"People of more than 97 nationalities live in the Kaliningrad region. Most numerous are Russians - 78%"
Oops, my mistake based upon an assumption, sir.
Surely this minuscule enclave, this tiny isolated piece of real-estate, owned by Russia, is more of a financial drain than a benefit, to Russia.
One of course never wishes to see one's own country broken up piece-by-piece, but I for one as an American, for example, would not object to spinning Puerto Rico free, or all those isolated Pacific islands which we presently subsidize.
Nobody did poured concrete like the Soviets.
Klaipeda (Memel) is already part of Lithuania.
"Kaliningrad used to be Konigsberg (or Koenigsberg)"
Same difference..."oe" is an alternative way to spell a German word with an o-umlaut (earlier spelled with a little "e" written over the "o"). I don't know how to type the umlaut in this system, but obviously there is a way. (I've seen "o+" used as a way to write the same thing online as well.)
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