Lithuania gave final approval to a controversial new law that that demands Moscow compensate the country for five decades of Soviet occupation. Passage of the law provoked a sharp, angry response from politicians in Russia.
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.
The most popular articles
Hungary to receive EUR 3.1 billion from EU structural and cohesion funds
more »
PM wants foreign to lead anticorruption campaign
more »
EU regrets Castro's defiant rejection of aid for impoverished Cuba
more »
Visa-Free Travel to the EU for Russians Can Wait: Finnish Minister
more »
'No' in EU referendum doesn't require early elections in Estonia
more »
Hungarian Foreign Minister and his Slovak counterpart agreed on the principles of a possible solution to the long-standing dispute over the implementation in Slovakia of the controversial Hungarian Status Law
more »
Latvia Protests Russian Statement on Situation of Minorities
more »
Christopher Smith: Belarusian Nation Deserves Better Fate
more »
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Dr Mahathir Mohamad continued his hectic schedule in Ukraine
more »
A decision on deploying troops to Liberia may hinge on needs elsewhere as troop levels stay high in Iraq
more »