Final approval

Published: 1 July 2000 y., Saturday
The bill, which has broad public support, was introduced last month by Parliament Speaker Vytautas Landsbergis, a staunch anti-communist and the president during Lithuania's independence drive from Moscow in the early 90s. The law obliges the Lithuanian government to seek money from Russia for repressions and for environmental damage caused during 1940-91 Soviet rule. It says a commission should be set up to decide on an exact sum to request. No figures are mentioned in the bill, though Lithuanian officials have earlier calculated that Soviet rule cost their country over 100 billion dollars. Russia has scoffed at the proposed law and said it could harm Lithuanian-Russian relations. Yegor Stoyev, chairman of the Russian Federation Council, argued the day after the law was adopted that Lithuania should be thankful for all the infrastructure projects funded and built during Soviet rule. He also mocked Lithuanian lawmakers for only considering a request for damages going back to the Soviet period.
Šaltinis: The Weekly Crier
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

EU constitution negotiations enter endgame

The Irish Presidency of the European Union starts its most challenging month on Monday as foreign ministers meet to thrash out the text of a constitution for the bloc, ahead of a summit of EU leaders on June 17 more »

Putin faces power vacuum in Chechnya - expert

Russian President Vladimir Putin was unequivocal in his response to the Chechen leader’s murder: the killers of the Chechen president would meet justice, he vowed more »

New Polish leader pleads for time

Polish Prime Minister-designate Marek Belka has appealed to parliament to end the country's political uncertainty and back him in a vote of confidence more »

Ahern stalks compromise on EU constitution

A constitution for the EU must be signed by all the 25 members - according to Bertie Ahern, prime minister of the EU's current presiding nation Ireland more »

Brown signals no retreat at EU constitution talks

Britain will fight to safeguard its "red lines" in the final negotiations on the new EU constitution more »

Russian president visits Chechen capital

President Vladimir Putin paid a surprise visit Tuesday to the Chechen capital of Grozny, two days after its Moscow-backed leader was killed in a bombing more »

China-EU Economic and Trade Forum 2004

China and the European Union (EU) will soon launch negotiations over compensation for China's possible losses caused by the EU's enlargement on May 1 more »

A Plan of Actions

Moldova to insist on Russian troops' withdrawal from Transdnestria more »

EC Slams Libyan Death Verdicts for Bulgarians

A statement issued on behalf of European Commission chief Romano Prodi said the commission was "extremely preoccupied and deeply disappointed" with Thursday's verdict against the Bulgarian medics in Libya more »

SCO: Divided in unity

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), a six-member group that embraces Russia, China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, has been keen to mint itself as a full-fledged international organization more »