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

"He is not a candidate for anything"

Solana Plays Down Talk He Wants Top EU Job more »

The Talks

Following his talks with Finnish counterpart Erkki Tuomioja, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said at a press conference that they had dealt with bilateral cooperation on the regional level more »

The War on Terror

Diplomats Look to Cold War Tactics for Help in Arab World more »

Fradkov blasts idea of Russian compensation for Estonia

The question of Russia paying compensation to Estonia for damage allegedly done when it was part of the Soviet Union cannot be raised more »

BULGARIA TO SUPPORT MACEDONIA ON ITS ROAD TO NATO AND EU

As NATO member, Bulgaria will grant full support to Macedonia's efforts for accession to the Alliance and European Union more »

The Constitutional Treaty

The Taoiseach and President of the European Council, Mr Bertie Ahern announced this evening that EU leaders have reached agreement on a new Constitutional Treaty for Europe at the European Council in Brussels more »

Hu leaves Romania, visits Uzbekistan

Chinese culture is front and centre this week in Uzbekistan more »

Bush to Meet With Hungarian Leader

President Bush will meet with Hungarian Prime Minister Peter Medgyessy on Tuesday more »

The forum

International forum on Eurasian integration open in Astana more »