Posted on 03/27/2005 10:41:36 PM PST by jb6
In a park in the Latvian capital Riga, a small group of protesters gathers, all Russian, some wearing paper hats inscribed with the word "Alien". Latvian police carry out a small, bureaucratic piece of harassment. With a tape, and much officiousness, they measure the distance between the demonstrators and the nearest public building, a school on the other side of the road.
The protest is two metres too close, so the police move it a little further down the path.
The protesters don't mind. They are there to object to a much greater injustice.
More than 450,000 Russians and native Russian-speakers - out of a total Latvian population of 2.3m - are classed as "non-citizens" because they have failed (or refused) to take a test in Latvian language and history, which would allow them to have citizenship.
This was local election day, and they were protesting about the fact that as "aliens", despite having lived in Latvia all their lives, they had no right to take part in the elections - whereas citizens of other EU countries could vote if they had lived there for a mere six months.
"I was born here," said one young man. "I pay the same taxes as Latvians. Yet I'm not allowed to vote for the politicians who spend those taxes."
"I'm here to protest against the government's policy of dividing society along ethnic lines," said another.
The fate of the non-citizens - who account for 20% of the entire population of Latvia - is a complex one.
Soviet migrants
When Latvia gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, it granted automatic citizenship to those who had lived in the first independent Latvian state - between 1918 and 1940 - but not to those who immigrated here after the war, when Latvia was occupied by the Soviet Union.
Latvia suffered hugely under Soviet rule.
Thousands were arrested and sent to Siberian labour camps, or executed, during the Stalin years.
MEP Tatjana Zdanoka uses her position to highlight the issue Later, hundreds of thousands of Russians, Belarussians and Ukrainians flooded into the republic under a deliberate policy of Russification. The Latvian language was squeezed out of official use.
Latvians were resentful citizens of the USSR. By 1991, they comprised only half of the population of their own country, while in Riga only a third were Latvian.
Even today, Russian is heard as commonly as Latvian on the streets of Riga.
But the government is determined to revive the Latvian identity. It says its policy towards Russians who immigrated here during the Soviet period is aimed not at punishing them for the sins of the Soviet regime (as some suspect) but at ensuring that they learn Latvian and integrate fully into society.
In order to naturalise, Russians must take a test in Latvian, and pass an exam about Latvian history - in which they must "correctly" answer that the country was occupied and colonised, not liberated, by the Soviet Union in 1945.
Many of the Russians at the demonstration on election day said they found that psychologically difficult. They said they wanted to integrate (and many could speak Latvian), but they found the idea of applying for citizenship humiliating.
"I lived here - same as them - and I was a citizen of the USSR," said a middle-aged woman. "They deprived me of my citizenship, and now I must apply to become one! I just won't do it."
Separate, but together
Tatjana Zdanoka is Latvia's only Russian member of the European Parliament and uses her position to publicise the position of the Russian minority.
She says her mother, who has lived in Latvia for 60 years and worked here for 45 years as a schoolteacher, has no right to vote.
"She is 83 and has bad eyes. Of course she's not capable of taking any kind of exam."
Facts about Latvia Latvia was independent from 1918 to 1939 After World War II it was a part of the USSR It regained independence in 1991 700,000 Soviet-time migrants and their children became non-citizens By the time Latvia joined the EU in 2004, this figure had dropped to around 450,000 Latvia's total population is 2,3m (including non-citizens)
Igor Vatolin, a journalist on the newspaper Chas and a Russian rights activist, said the Latvian Popular Front, which led the fight for independence at the end of the 1980s, promised citizenship to everyone living in the republic.
"But they reneged on that - even though thousands of Russians voted with them in favour of independence in the referendum of 1991," he said.
There is no ethnic strife in the streets of Latvia. The two peoples live peacefully together. But politicians on both sides, and in Russia itself, stir things up.
Moscow rarely misses a chance to complain at international meetings of Latvia's "human rights abuses", while the head of the Latvian parliament's foreign affairs committee, Aleksandrs Kirsteins, has described the non-citizens as "civilian occupiers".
He called for an agreement with the Russian government under which all the unwanted foreigners would be herded on to trains and shipped back to their "ethnic homeland" - with a brass band playing on the platform to see them off.
Latvia's two communities deserve credit for by and large ignoring such provocative statements. Despite the bitterness and insecurity on both sides, they have succeeded in forging a peaceful co-existence - somewhat separate, but together.
NEWSFLASH! Latvians hate Russians! The Baltic states require Russian citizens to get a travel Visa to enter. But Americans can come and go as they please!
So it's ok for them to ban people born in Latvia from voting, while giving Germans or Spaniards who reside there for 6 months the right to vote? Is it ok that they have government sponsored Nazi marches every year, like two weeks ago in Riga?
Old grugdes die hard!
Old grugdes might die hard but this is out and out racism in a supposed republican system. This is worse then segregation, by and far and to a much larger percentage of a population. I'm sure if these were Jews or Gypsies or gads, Muslims, the EU would be up in arms and screaming bloody murder. Russians don't count, obviously, they're not even human. /sarcasm
bump
Time for "Soviet migrants" to go back home to Russia.
You sound a lot like some certain men in white sheets with signs of "Nigro go back to Africa" or "Jews leave". Your true colors are showing again.
And you sound like the race-baiting communist you are.
The sooner "economic migrants" who refuse to assimilate go back to their lands of origin where their true loyalties lie, the better.
I guess you can't read where people born there are being denied citizenship vs those Germans or Spainards who arrive for only 6 months. Oh but these are Russians and we know your hatred runs through your soul. I bet you didn't even read through the article, did you? Otherwise you wouldn't make such a stupid statement.
Russians will just have to get used to their formerly conquered and enslaved neighbors behaving as free and sovereign nations do.
The only thing that I can say on this day is I pity your shriveled tainted soul and the hatred that grows in it. Sad is all you're proving to be.
You are racist against Poles, Latvians, Lithuanians, Ukrainians, Georgians, etc. You are a malicious and notorious hatemonger and a Russian supremacist. Go peddle your leftist illegal alien cheerleading to DU where commie scum like you belong.
Your bloody genocidal Soviet Russian empire is over. Get used to it. Time for the invaders to go home.
Tailgunner is finally showing his racism in full bloom. bump.
Keep talking, bring that evil to the surface. Show us your hatred, since that is the only driving force you seem to show. Who know's maybe God's love might reach that shrivelled hate filled little heart of yours, but then again, maybe not.
No hatred. Just common sense. I don't support illegal aliens in the US either, but you will support anyone Russian for any reason.
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