Israeli President Shimon Peres has taken part in the ceremony to open a museum honoring a couple who saved some 50 Jews from extermination in Nazi-occupied Latvia. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
Israeli President Shimon Peres has taken part in the ceremony to open a museum honoring a couple who saved some 50 Jews from extermination in Nazi-occupied Latvia. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
President Obama looks forward to welcoming President Toomas Hendrik Ilves of Estonia, President Dalia Grybauskaite of Lithuania, and President Andris Berzins of Latvia to the White House on Friday, August 30. This joint meeting will highlight the significant transformations the Baltic states have undergone since restoring their independence two decades ago. Estonia, Lithuania, and Latvia are valued NATO allies, and the four leaders will discuss a broad range of mutual interests, including regional cooperation on shared challenges, energy security, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership negotiations, defense, and cyber cooperation. The Presidents will also discuss joint efforts to advance human rights and democratic values, including development assistance for emerging democracies around the world.
A fast, reliable Internet connection is imperative for most small and medium businesses. A new study from Akamai suggests that the Internet is getting faster overall, but just how fast varies from one country to the next—or even between different regions within a country.
Akamai gathers data from customers around the world, and analyzes it through its Intelligent Platform analysis tool to produce the quarterly State of the Internet report. The data from the first quarter of 2013 shows a four percent increase in the average global connection speed.
The news for the United States is mixed. Akamai reports an overall increase of nearly 30 percent for the average Internet connection in the US. However, at an average of 8.6Mbps, the United States still fell from eighth to ninth place overall this quarter. That makes the United States about 40 percent slower than the first place nation—South Korea—and leaves the US behind Latvia and the Czech Republic.
As if slower Internet speeds aren’t bad enough for business customers, US broadband also costs more. A study from the US Small Business Administration (SBA) study on the impact of broadband speed and price on small business found that an average business in a metropolitan area spends $115 per month for Internet access, while an average business in a rural area spend $93 per month. The catch for rural businesses is that they’re getting significantly slower Internet speeds for the money.
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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld
Just last week I wrote about Estonia and how the media narrative of a quickly developing tech powerhouse was difficult to square with the country’s weak labor market and swiftly-declining population. Seeing how rapidly Estonia’s population has been contracting inspired me to take a closer look at the demographics of Latvia and Lithuania, the other two formerly Soviet republics with which it is always grouped. And the numbers were shocking, even to someone like me who keeps a reasonably close eye on the region. The Baltics, often presented in the Western press as daring economic reformers and paragons of “new Europe,” appear to be the most rapidly depopulating area in the entire world. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
A trio of 2013 NHL Draft prospects helped the United States to a 7-1 win against Latvia in Group A play at Bolshoy Ice Dome on Day 4 of the 2013 IIHF World Under-18 Hockey Championship.
Tyler Kelleher scored twice, and Tyler Motte and Hudson Fa…
Latvia‘s rescue service says it has rescued more than 220 people who became stranded on large ice floes in two separate places in the Gulf of Riga.
State Fire and Rescue Service spokeswoman Viktorija Sembele says boats, ships and helicopters were mobilized in the rescue operation after large sections of ice broke away from the shore and floated into the gulf due to warm southerly winds.
Sembele said Friday that 180 people were rescued in the town of Vakarbulli near the capital Riga and a further 41 people were rescued in the resort town of Jurmala.
Rescue operations involving people stranded on ice floes occur regularly in the Baltic states, particularly with ice fishermen who often stray far from the shore.
When formerly communist countries joined the European Union in 2004 and 2007 there was a general sense of euphoria. After being artificially cut off from Europe by the dead hand of state socialism, Bulgaria, Romania, Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, Latvia, Estonia, and (my ancestral homeland of) Lithuania had regained their rightful place in the world and taken a very large step away from their troubled history of Russian and Soviet domination. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Filed under: Banking, Global Economy, Economy
The government of Cyprus has drafted another plan to submit to the country’s parliament today that will exempt small savings account holders from the proposed raid on all deposits in the country’s banks. Under the latest proposal, savers with less than €20,000 (about $26,000) in their accounts will not pay the 6.75% levy that the government had agreed to over the weekend.
Under the original plan, all accounts under €100,000 would have paid the 6.75% tax; accounts greater than €100,000 will still pay a 9.9% levy as outlined in the original agreement.
The government needs to raise €5.8 billion as a precondition to receiving a €10 billion bailout package from the European Central Bank. By exempting small account holders and holding the other rates steady, the Cypriot government may not hit that target.
As for the big depositors – primarily large Russian shell companies that use Cypriot banks to hide assets – this is just a cost of doing business. They can live with a 10% tax. If they had been forced to pay for the whole disaster, say at a rate of 30%, they would have withdrawn all their funds and taken the party someplace else. According to Pawelmorski, some funds are already headed for Latvia.
Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Banking & Finance, Economy, International Markets
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By hnn
RIGA, Latvia — Over a thousand Latvians on Saturday commemorated Nazi-allied World War II soldiers while police used force to prevent violence from erupting between participants and ethnic Russians, who are a minority in the country.
Many Latvians consider March 16, or Legionnaires Day, an opportunity to commemorate war veterans, while Russians see it as an attempt to glorify fascism and whitewash a black chapter in Latvia’s history.
Latvia, which gained its independence after World War I, was occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940, then by Nazi Germany a year later, and again by the Soviets in 1944. During the Nazi occupation thousands of Latvians were forcibly conscripted into the Waffen SS divisions, and many Latvians consider them to be heroes who fought for independence from communism.
Some 250,000 Latvians fought alongside either the Germans or the Soviets, with approximately 150,000 eventually dying in battles….
…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University
Filed under: Global Economy, Economy
If there is any question about the existence of a new recession in Europe, statistics operation Eurostat answered it. The agency has reported gross domestic product data for the final quarter of 2012:
GDP fell by 0.6% in the euro area (EA17) and by 0.5% in the EU27 during the fourth quarter of 2012, compared with the previous quarter, according to second estimates published by Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union. In the third quarter of 2012, growth rates were -0.1% and +0.1% respectively.
Compared with the same quarter of the previous year, GDP fell by 0.9% in the euro area and by 0.6% in the EU27 in the fourth quarter of 2012, after -0.6% and -0.4% respectively in the previous quarter.
And:
Among Member States for which data are available for the fourth quarter of 2012, Latvia (+1.3%), Estonia (+0.9%) and Lithuania (+0.7%) recorded the highest growth compared with the previous quarter, and Portugal (-1.8%), Cyprus and Slovenia (both -1.0%) the largest decreases.
Greece, the poorest stepchild in the region, did not release fourth-quarter numbers.
Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Economy, International Markets
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Filed under: Investing
Thoughts on Dow Record
Almost every financial and general newspaper or news website has as its headline a story about the record peak of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The same media appear evenly split on what happens now. Will the market race relentlessly higher, or will economic realities cause it to crash? A small sampling:
CNBC: As the Dow surged to a record high on Tuesday, one analyst has labeled the index the “new safe haven.”
CNN Money: Yes, the Dow may be at an all-time high. And the broader S&P 500 may soon hit a new peak of its own. But the American consumer is still hurting. Do not forget that as you read all the headlines about this record-setting bull market.
Wall Street Journal: Some money managers said they are starting to embrace the stock market‘s gravity-defying rally, rather than keep looking worriedly in the rearview mirror at lingering consequences of the financial crisis.
New York Times: Nearly all strategists point out that it is much better to buy at a market bottom than to invest after a record has been set. Nonetheless, for those willing to accept the risk, there are strong arguments, based on history and on market fundamentals, for believing that the bull market may still have room to run.
Galaxy S IV Buzz
The frenzy over the launch of the new Samsung Galaxy S IV increases by the day. The smartphone will replace the wildly successful Galaxy S III, which has been called the Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) iPhone killer. If the Galaxy S IV is as good as billed, the iPhone will be slaughtered. Some observers are not quite as excited about the phone because they do not expect much of an upgrade. CNET reports:
There’s one complaint that often crops up with the Galaxy S III: it feels “plastic-y.”
At a time when competitors are using glass, aluminum, and even higher quality plastics such as polycarbonate, Samsung has stuck to its guns with a thin, bendable plastic body.
Which is why the Galaxy S4 won’t stray too far from that design philosophy.
European GDP Still Slipping
If there is any question about the existence of a new recession in Europe, statistics operation Eurostat answered it. The agency has reported gross domestic product data for the final quarter of 2012:
GDP fell by 0.6% in the euro area (EA17) and by 0.5% in the EU27 during the fourth quarter of 2012, compared with the previous quarter, according to second estimates published by Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union. In the third quarter of 2012, growth rates were -0.1% and +0.1% respectively.
Compared with the same quarter of the previous year, GDP fell by 0.9% in the euro area and by 0.6% in the EU27 in the fourth quarter of 2012, after -0.6% and -0.4% respectively in the previous quarter.
And:
Among Member States for which data are available for the fourth quarter of 2012, Latvia (+1.3%), Estonia (+0.9%)and Lithuania (+0.7%) recorded the highest growth compared with the previous quarter, and Portugal (-1.8%), Cyprus and Slovenia (both -1.0%) the largest …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance
Latvia has formally applied to adopt the euro currency 2014, a move that could see the Baltic state become the bloc’s 18th member.
The move had been expected and comes after Latvia met the required financial criteria, including levels of state debt, budget deficit and inflation.
Polls, however, indicate that nearly two-thirds of Latvia‘s population is against swapping the lat for the euro, which only last year some investors were betting would collapse.
A government spokesman said Monday that the formal request would be given to the European Union’s Monetary Affairs Commissioner, Olli Rehn, on March 5 in Brussels.
The commission, along with the European Central Bank, will likely decide on Latvia‘s request in June.
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The 91st running of the Pike’s Peak International Hill Climb is scheduled to begin on June 30. Like last year’s event, the 12.42 mile course – fully paved these days – starts at 9,390 feet elevation and doesn’t stop climbing until it reaches an impressive 14,110 feet (the air is so thin up there that the FAA requires pilots to use oxygen at that altitude).
There will be an assortment of internal combustion machines racing to the summit, entries from France, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Sweden, Brazil, Canada, Great Britain, Hungary, Czech Republic, Poland and Belgium, but all eyes will be on the electric showdown between Rod Millen and Nobuhiro “Monster” Tajima, from Japan. 61-year-old Millen is a familiar name to Toyota racing fans, and he will be driving the Toyota TMG EV P002 (it won the Electric title last year), while Tajima will be again piloting the Monster Sport E-Runner (which was forced out of the field last year after a fire broke out).
Other entrants include Rhys Millen driving a 2013 Hyundai PM58OT and Paul Dallenbach, who will be driving Millen’s Hyundai Genesis Coupe (it set the all-time speed mark last year).
Tickets and camping permits may be purchased online at the PPIHC official site, and the official press release announcing Millen’s run is available below.
Continue reading Rod Millen to face Monster Tajima in Electric Division of Pikes Peak Hill Climb
Rod Millen to face Monster Tajima in Electric Division of Pikes Peak Hill Climb originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 11 Feb 2013 18:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog
They were losses that ultimately still counted as wins.
Latvia and Austria were each defeated in overtime Sunday in their Olympic qualification games, but the points they gained were enough to punch their tickets to the 2014 Winter Games in Soc… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at NHL
To save money during the harsh Baltic winter, Romanas Ziabkinas did something unremarkable: He turned off his central heating and installed a cheaper electric heater. Now he finds himself neck-deep in legal woes.
His utility company refused to recognize the switch and is suing him for some 25,000 litas ($10,000) in unpaid utility bills for his apartment in Lithuania‘s capital. “Splitting from the Soviet Union was easier than leaving this heating system,” he says.
Ziabkinas plight is extreme but his frustrations over heating costs are shared by a majority of Lithuanians, who have seen prices soar over the past several years, especially since the shuttering of its only nuclear power plant in 2009, forcing the country to import more Russian gas to keep warm. Lithuania‘s decision to scrap atomic power over safety concerns has put it under a new kind of threat: intimidation from Russia, which critics say shows no hesitation to use its energy dominance to bully former vassal states.
While gas prices have tended to fall globally in recent years thanks to deposits of shale gas in places like the U.S., Lithuanian households have looked on in horror in the past seven years as the retail cost of natural gas pumped from Siberia spiked 450 percent — or from $169 to $769 per 1,000 cubic meters.
Lithuania, a country of 3 million people, currently pays Russia a wholesale price of about $540 per 1,000 cubic meters of natural gas piped from Siberia, roughly 15 percent more than Baltic neighbors Latvia and Estonia and 25 percent more than Germany.
Many Lithuanians feel they are being punished by Russia for unsolved political issues, just as the Kremlin has used gas supplies to goad Ukraine and Belarus over political and economic disputes.
Lithuania has demanded compensation from Moscow for alleged damages incurred during the Soviet occupation from 1945 to 1991, and last year enacted a European Union directive to separate gas supply and distribution, a direct blow to Russia‘s commercial interests in the country. Estonia and Latvia, which also receive all their gas from Russia, have done neither — and are thus rewarded with cheaper prices.
Gazprom rarely comments on gas price deals with individual countries, using the secrecy to haggle with each individual nation separately — playing one off the other — in what is seen as an extension of Kremlin foreign policy.
Lithuania has a long-term supply agreement with Russia‘s state-owned gas monopoly Gazprom, which expires in 2015. Russia has justified the price rises by saying the deal allows it to index gas rates to oil prices. The catch is that Russia has given discounts to friendly nations, while sticking to the full price for those with which it has disputes.
“We believe Lithuania should pay a fifth less than it does now,” Prime Minister Algirdas Butkevicius recently told reporters.
Lithuania‘s previous center-right government sued Gazprom in international arbitration court for 5 billion litas ($1.9 billion) over gas price hikes and has called on the EU to investigate the company’s alleged unfair pricing policies. Butkevicius, however, is willing to scrap the litigation in exchange for cheaper gas.
Regardless of the legal outcome, heating now seems a luxury many Lithuanians can’t afford — and with tragic consequences. Last winter a 77-year-old pensioner in the southern district of Alytus was found frozen to death in his house. In another case, an 80-year-old woman who lived alone died in her bed in 2011, her body stuck to the frozen bed sheets.
Many people who can’t afford their heating bill don’t pay it, resulting in an increasingly large income hole that utilities fear they’ll never recover. In Vilnius, the total amount of unpaid heating bills surpassed 40 million litas ($15 million) last year, while in Kaunas, Lithuania‘s second largest city, the number was $17 million.
Toma Gajauskiene, a 25-year-old Lithuanian language teacher, feels that she’s drowning in unpaid heating bills for her apartment in a high-rise building. She earns some 1,200 litas ($460) per month, and has a small child and an unemployed husband to support.
“Last December was not too cold, but the heating bill stands at 500 litas, almost half of what I make,” Gajauskiene said. “For January the bill will be at least double, but I simply cannot pay more than 300 litas for heating because my family will not have money to buy food.”
Lithuanians also pay more for heating due to insulation problems stemming from the Soviet era. In the years after World War II, some 80 percent of Lithuania‘s population moved in less than a decade from villages to cities, where they were placed in Soviet apartment blocks hastily and without regard for efficient insulation.
“To the Soviets, it was easier to build new towns and concrete multi-story houses with thin walls and then heat them without counting energy costs. Gas and oil was free those days, but now it’s simply outrageous,” said Vytautas Stasiunas, head of the Lithuanian District Heating Association.
Nearly all of Lithuania‘s leaders have vowed to invest hundreds of millions of dollars in energy-saving housing renovations — promises that have gone unfulfilled.
“There are dozens of awful mistakes made in the energy sector by each and every cabinet since independence. These mistakes are affecting everybody in this country,” Stasiunas said.
Not surprisingly, Lithuanians — who have one of the lowest personal income levels in the 27-member EU — aren’t waiting around and are searching for alternatives.
Ivan Soloduchin, owner of small heating solutions company in Vilnius, says he can’t keep up with orders to help people shut down gas boilers and replace them with firewood boilers or heat pumps. Heating a private home of up to 100 square meters (1,070 square feet) requires up to 20 cubic meters of birch wood. That comes to less than 2,300 litas ($880) for a five-month heating season. Natural-gas users in the same size property would pay up to $500 during a particularly cold month.
“I’m getting up to 10 orders per week, and clients keep on coming even in the middle of winter,” Soloduchin said. “Ten years ago owners of new houses wouldn’t even look my way since firewood was considered dirty and old fashioned — everyone wanted gas boilers. Now things have changed.”
Nerijus Pienelis, who trades firewood in the Elektrenai town some 50 kilometers (30 miles) from Vilnius, says that demand is growing every year.
“It used to be remaining farms and villages where people used my production,” he said. “Now most of the wood goes to the national capital, where even rich people burn it.”
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
Latvian lawmakers have passed a law necessary for adopting the euro in January 2014 despite widespread opposition to the country’s adoption of the troubled European single currency.
The law represents a final legal obstacle before Latvia formally asks to become the 18th European Union country that uses the euro, a step expected next month.
A small group of protesters gathered outside Parliament on Thursday to heckle lawmakers as they headed to vote.
Recent polls suggest a majority of Latvians are against adopting the euro in light of the debt crisis that has afflicted the eurozone for over three years and fears that the Baltic country will have to help bail out struggling countries.
Many are demanding a referendum, but the center-right government says it won’t hold a separate vote.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News
Three people allegedly involved for years in cybercriminal activities in Eastern Europe have been charged in a U.S. court for creating and distributing the Gozi virus that infected more than 1 million computers and allowed cybercriminals to steal millions of dollars over a five-year period.
The three defendants, Nikita Kuzmin of Russia, Mihai Ionut Paunescu of Romania, and Deniss Calovskis of Latvia, face a variety of charges in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Wednesday. Gozi targeted online banking credentials and other online accounts and infected 40,000 computers in the U.S., including 160 at NASA, the U.S. space agency.
Kuzmin, the alleged chief architect and promoter of Gozi, faces charges of bank fraud and conspiracy, access device fraud and conspiracy, and computer intrusion, among other charges. Kuzmin allegedly began working on Gozi in 2005, and computer security experts discovered the threat in 2007, according to court documents.
Paunescu, who allegedly provided secure hosting to the creators of Gozi, the Zeus Trojan and the SpyEye Trojan, faces charges of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion, conspiracy to commit bank fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld
By Ross Kenneth Urken, Contributor The approaching year of the snake on the Chinese calendar will ring in a new era in opulence for DARTZ Mortorz Company, the Latvia-based luxury tank manufacturer. The Black Snake, the company’s first non-armored vehicle, is based on the Mercedes GL 63 AMG and is geared only for the Chinese market with an even more sybaritic Middle East model, the Black Falcon, to arrive later this year.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest