PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Latvia
Geography
Area: 64,100 sq. km. (25,640 sq. mi.); about the
size of West Virginia.
Cities (2002): Capital--Riga (739,232).
Other cities--Daugavpils (112,609);
Liepaja (86,985); Jelgava (65,754); Jurmala
(55,156); Ventspils (44,010); Rezekne (37,777).
Terrain: Fertile low-lying plains predominate in
central Latvia, highlands in Vidzeme and Latgale
to the east, and hilly moraine in the western
Kurzeme region. Forests cover one-third of the
country, with over 3,000 small lakes and
numerous bogs.
Land use: 20% arable land, 8% meadows and
pastures, 45% forest and woodland, 26.7% other.
Climate: Temperate, with four seasons of almost
equal length. January temperatures average -5oC
(23oF); July 17oC (63oF).
Annual precipitation averages 57 centimeters (23
in.).
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Latvian(s).
Population: 2,331,480.
Growth rate: -0.6%. Birth rate--8.6/1,000.
Death rate--13.9/1,000. Divorce rate--2.5/1,000.
Migration rate--1,500 immigrants, 3,300
emigrants.
Density--36.4/1 km2. Urban dwellers--68.9%.
Major ethnic groups: Latvian 58.5%, Russians
29%, Belarusians 3.9%, Ukrainians 2.6%, Poles
2.5%.
Religions: Lutheran, Orthodox, Roman Catholic.
State language: Latvian. Russian also is spoken
by most people.
Education: Years compulsory--9. By 1989,
60% of the adult populace had finished high
school, and 12% had completed college.
Attendance--408,000 students in 1,057
schools and 90,000 university students.
Literacy--99%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--9.8/1,000.
Life expectancy--65.4 yrs. male, 76.8
yrs. female.
Work force (989,000 people): Industry--16.9%;
agriculture/forestry--14.9%; trade--14.9%;
education--8.9%;
transport/communications--8.7%; public
administration/defense--6.9%;
construction--6.1%; healthcare/social
welfare--6.1%.
Government
Type: Parliamentary democracy.
Constitution: The law "On the Republic of Latvia
Status as a State," passed by Parliament on
August 21, 1991, provided for the reinstatement
of the 1922 constitution.
Branches: Executive--President (head of
state), elected by Parliament every 4 years;
Prime Minister (head of government).
Legislative--Saeima (100-member body).
Judicial--Supreme Court. Administrative
regions: 26 "rural" districts and 6 districts in
Riga.
Principal political factions: New Era--24 seats,
People's Party--20 seats, Latvia's First
Party--14 seats, Farmers and Greens--12 seats,
National Harmony Party--9 seats, Fatherland and
Freedom--7 seats, For Human Rights in United
Latvia--6 seats, Latvia's Socialist Party--5
seats; there are three independent members.
Suffrage: 18 years universal.
Economy (2002 data)
GDP: $8.41 billion.
Growth rate: 6.1%.
Inflation rate: 1.9%.
Unemployment: 8.5%.
Average annual wages: $3,359.
Natural resources: Peat, limestone, dolomite,
gypsum, timber.
Agriculture/forestry (4.5% of GDP): Products--cattle,
dairy foods, cereals, potatoes. Cultivable
land--2.48 million hectares, of which 75% is
arable, 25% meadow and pasture.
Manufacturing (14.8% of GDP): Light electrical
equipment and fittings, textiles and footwear,
technological instruments, construction
materials, processed foods.
Public services--15%; construction--6.1%;
energy/water--3.6%; trade--19.9%;
transport and communications--14.5%;
business services--11.1%; financial
services--4.6%; other services--5.5%.
Trade: Exports--$2.28 billion: wood/wood
products 33.6%; metals 13.2%, textiles 12.8%,
machines 6.5%, food/food products 7.1. Major
markets--Germany 15.5%, U.K. 14.6%, Sweden
10.5%, Lithuania 8.4%, Estonia 6.0%. Imports--$4.04
billion: energy 9.7%, machinery 21.3%, chemicals
10.4%, food/food products 21.8%, metals 8.4%,
vehicles 9.8%. Partners--Germany 17.2%,
Lithuania 9.8%, Russia 8.8%, Finland 8%, Sweden
6.4%.
GEOGRAPHY
Between 55.40 and 58.05 latitude and 20.58 and
28.14 longitude, Latvia lies on the eastern
shores of the Baltic Sea on the level
northwestern part of the rising East European
platform. About 98% of the country lies under
200m elevation (640 ft.). The damp climate
resembles New England's. With the exception of
the coastal plains, the Ice Age divided Latvia
into three main regions: the morainic Western
and Eastern uplands and the Middle lowlands.
Latvia holds over 12,000 rivers, only 17 of
which are longer than 60 miles, and over 3,000
small lakes, most of which are eutrophic.
Woodland, more than half of which is pine,
covers 41% of the country. Other than peat,
dolomite, and limestone, natural resources are
scarce. Latvia holds 531km (329 mi.) of sandy
coastline, and the ports of Liepaja and
Ventspils provide important warm-water harbors
for the Baltic littoral, although the Bay of
Riga itself is rather polluted.
Today, Latvia is slightly larger than
Denmark, Estonia, the Netherlands, and
Switzerland. Its strategic location has
instigated many wars between rival powers on its
territory. As recently as 1944, the U.S.S.R.
granted Russia the Abrene region on the Livonian
frontier.
PEOPLE
Latvians occasionally refer to themselves by the
ancient name of "Latvji," which may have
originated from a "Latve" river that presumably
flowed through what is now eastern Latvia. A
small Finno-Ugric tribe known as the Livs
settled among the Latvians and modulated the
name to "Latvis," meaning "forest-clearers,"
which is how medieval German settlers also
referred to these peoples. The German colonizers
changed this name to "Lette" and called their
initially small colony "Livland." The Latin
form, "Livonia," gradually referred to the whole
of modern-day Latvia as well as southern
Estonia, which had fallen under German dominion.
Latvians and Lithuanians are the only directly
surviving members of the Baltic peoples and
languages of the Indo-European family.
Latvians look like and consider themselves
Nordics, evidenced through the strong cultural
and religious influences gained over centuries
during Germanic and Scandinavian colonization
and settlement. Eastern Latvia (Latgale),
however, retains a strong Polish and Russian
cultural and linguistic influence. This highly
literate society places strong emphasis upon
education, which is free and compulsory until
age 16. Most Latvians belong to the Evangelical
Lutheran Church; a sizable minority are Russian
Orthodox, and Eastern Latvia is predominantly
Roman Catholic.
Historically, Latvia always has had a fairly
large Russian, Jewish, German, and Polish
minority, but postwar emigration, deportations,
and Soviet Russification policies from 1939-89
dropped the percentage of ethnic Latvians in
Latvia from 73% to 52%. In an attempt to
preserve the Latvian language and avoid ethnic
Latvians becoming a minority in their own
country, Latvia's language law, education law,
and citizenship law have caused many noncitizen
resident Russians concern over their ability to
assimilate, despite Latvian legal guarantees of
universal human and civil rights regardless of
citizenship.
Written with the Latin alphabet, Latvian is
the language of the Latvian people and the
official language of the country. It is an
inflective language with several analytical
forms, three dialects, and German syntactical
influence. The oldest known examples of written
Latvian are from a 1585 catechism. The Soviets
imposed the official use of Russian, so most
Latvians speak Russian as a second or first
language while the resident Slavic populace
generally speaks Russian as a first language.
HISTORY
Since 9,000 BC ancient peoples of unknown origin
had inhabited Latvia, but by 3,000 BC the
ancestors of the Finns had settled the region. A
millennium later, pre-Baltic tribes had arrived
and within time evolved into the Baltic
Couranian, Latgallian, Selonian, and Semigallian
groups. These tribes eventually formed local
governments independently from the Finno-Ugric
Livian tribe until the 13th century when they
were conquered by the Germans, who renamed the
territory Livonia.
German sailors shipwrecked on the Daugava
River in 1054 had inhabited the area, which led
to increasing German influence. Founded by the
Germanic Bishop Alberth of Livonia in 1201, Riga
joined the Hanseatic League in 1285 and shared
important cultural and economic ties to the rest
of Europe. However, the new German nobility
enserfed the peasantry and accorded non-Germanic
peoples only limited trading and property
rights.
Subsequent wars and treaties ensured
Livonia's partition and colonization for
centuries. The Commonwealth's successes during
the Livonian Wars (1558-83) united the
Latvian-populated duchies of Pardaugava, Kurzeme,
and Zemgale, but the Polish-Swedish War
(1600-29) granted Sweden acquisition of Riga and
the Duchy of Pardaugava, minus Latgale, leaving
Latvia again split ethnically. In turn, victory
over Sweden in the Great Northern War (1700-21)
gave Russia control over the Latvian
territories. From 1804 onward, a series of local
decrees gradually weakened the grip of German
nobility over peasant society, and in 1849 a law
granted a legal basis for the creation of
peasant-owned farms.
Until the 1860s, there still was little sense
of a Latvian national identity, as both serfdom
and institutional controls to migration and
social mobility limited the boundaries of the
peasants' intellectual and social geography. The
large baronic estates caused a lack of available
farmland for an increasing population, creating
a large landless, urban class comprising about
60% of the population. Also in the face of
stricter Russification policies, the Baltic
German clergy and literati began to take a more
benevolent interest in the distinctive language
and culture of the Latvian peasantry. These
patrons--with such Lettish names as Alunans,
Barons, Krastins, Kronvalds, Tomsons, and
Valdemars--soon formed the Young Latvian
Movement, whose aim was to promote the
indigenous language and to publicize and
counteract the socioeconomic oppression of
Latvians.
By 1901, "Jauna Strava" had evolved into the
Latvian Social Democratic Party. Following the
lead of the Austrian Marxists, the LSDP
advocated the transformation of the Russian
Empire into a federation of democratic states
(to include Latvia) and the adoption of cultural
autonomy policy for extraterritorial ethnic
communities. In 1903, the LSDP split into the
more radically internationalist Latvian Social
Democratic Worker's Party and the more
influential Latvian Social Democratic Union (LSDU),
which continued to champion national interests
and Latvia's national self-determination,
especially during the failed 1905 Revolution in
Russia.
The onset of WWI brought German occupation of
the western coastal province of Kurzeme, and
Latvians heroically countered the invasion with
the establishment of several regiments of
riflemen commanded by Czarist generals. As a
defensive measure, Russia dismantled more than
500 local Latvian industries, along with
technological equipment, and relocated them to
central Russia. The sagging military campaign
generally increased Latvian and LSDU support for
the Bolsheviks' successful October Revolution in
1917, in the hopes of a "free Latvia within free
Russia." These circumstances led to the
formation of the Soviet "Iskolat Republic" in
the unoccupied section of Latvia. In opposition
to this government and to the landed barons'
German sympathies stood primarily the Latvian
Provisional National Council and the Riga
Democratic Bloc. These and other political
parties formed the Latvian People's Council
which on November 18, 1918 declared Latvia's
independence and formed an army.
The new Latvian Army faced rogue elements of
the retreating German Army and squared off in
civil war against the Soviet Red Army, comprised
greatly of the former Latvian Riflemen. Soviet
power resumed in Latvia one month later on
December 17 by order of the Latvian SSR, which
forcefully collectivized all land and
nationalized all industries and property. By May
22, 1919, the resurgent German Army occupied and
devastated Riga for several days. In response,
the Latvian Army managed to win a decisive
battle over the combined German-Red Army forces
and thereafter consolidated its success on the
eastern Latgale front. These developments led to
the dissolution of the Soviet Latvian government
on January 13, 1920, and to a peace treaty
between Latvia and Soviet Russia on August 11
later that year. By September 22, 1921, Latvia
was admitted to the League of Nations.
Having obtained independent statehood in
which Latvians were an absolute majority, the
government headed by Prime Minister Ulmanis
declared a democratic, parliamentary republic.
It recognized Latvian as the official language,
granted cultural autonomy to the country's
sizeable minorities, and introduced an electoral
system into the Latvian constitution, which was
adopted in 1922. The decade witnessed sweeping
economic reform, as war had devastated Latvian
agriculture, and most Russian factories had been
evacuated to Russia. Economic depression
heightened political turmoil, and on May 15,
1934, Prime Minister Ulmanis dismissed the
parliament, banned outspoken and left-wing
political parties, and tightened authoritarian
state control over Latvian social life and the
economy.
The effects of the infamous
Molotov-Ribbentrop agreement of 1939 steadily
forced Latvia under Soviet influence until
August 5, 1940, when the Soviet Union finally
annexed Latvia. On June 14 of the following
year, 15,000 Latvian citizens were forcibly
deported and a large number of army officers
shot. The subsequent German occupation witnessed
the mobilization of many Latvians into Waffen SS
legions, while some Latvians joined the Red Army
and formed resistance groups; others fled to the
West and East. By 1945, Latvia's population
dropped by one-third.
After the war, the U.S.S.R. subjected the
Latvian republic to a scale of social and
economic reorganization which rapidly
transformed the rural economy to heavy industry,
the strongly ethnically Latvian population into
a more multiethnic structure, and the
predominantly peasant class into a fully
urbanized industrial worker class. As part of
the goal to more fully integrate Latvia into the
Soviet Union, on March 25, 1949, Stalin again
deported another 42,000 Latvians and continued
to promote the policy of encouraging Soviet
immigration to Latvia. The brief "Krushchev
thaw" of the 1950s ended in 1959, when the
Soviets dismissed Latvian Communist Party and
government leaders on charges of "bourgeois
nationalism" and replaced them with more
aggressive hardliners, mostly from Russia.
"Perestroika" enabled Latvians to pursue a
bolder nationalistic program, particularly
through such general issues as environmental
protection. In July 1989, the Latvian Supreme
Soviet adopted a "Declaration of Sovereignty"
and amended the Constitution to assert the
supremacy of its laws over those of the U.S.S.R.
Pro-independence Latvian Popular Front
candidates gained a two-thirds majority in the
Supreme Council in the March 1990 democratic
elections. On May 4, the Council declared its
intention to restore full Latvian independence
after a "transitional" period; 3 days later,
Ivars Godmanis was chosen Council of Ministers
Chairman, or Prime Minister.
In January 1991, Soviet political and
military forces tried unsuccessfully to
overthrow the legitimate Latvian authorities by
occupying the central publishing house in Riga
and establishing a "Committee of National
Salvation" to usurp governmental functions.
Seventy-three percent of all Latvian residents
confirmed their strong support for independence
March 3 in a nonbinding "advisory" referendum. A
large number of ethnic Russians also voted for
the proposition.
Latvia claimed de facto independence on
August 21, 1991 in the aftermath of the failed
Soviet coup attempt. International recognition,
including the U.S.S.R., followed. The United
States, which had never recognized Latvia's
forcible annexation by the U.S.S.R., resumed
full diplomatic relations with Latvia on
September 2.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The Saeima, a unicameral legislative body, now
is the highest organ of state authority. It
initiates and approves legislation sponsored by
the Prime Minister. The prime minister has full
responsibility and control over his cabinet, and
the president holds a primarily ceremonial role
as head of state.
In autumn 1991 Latvia reimplemented
significant portions of its 1922 constitution,
and in spring 1993 the government took a census
to determine eligibility for citizenship. After
almost 3 years of deliberations, Latvia
finalized a citizenship and naturalization law
in summer 1994, which was further liberalized in
1998. By law, those who were Latvian citizens in
1940, and their descendants (regardless of
ethnicity), could claim citizenship. Forty-one
percent of Latvia's population is ethnically
non-Latvian, yet almost three-fourths of all
residents are citizens of Latvia Naturalization
criteria include a conversational knowledge of
Latvian, a loyalty oath, renunciation of former
citizenship, a 5-year residency requirement, and
a basic knowledge of the Latvian history. Dual
citizenship is allowed for those who were forced
to leave Latvia during the Soviet occupation and
adopted another citizenship. Convicted
criminals, agents of Soviet intelligence
services, and certain other groups also are
excluded from becoming citizens.
On March 19, 1991 the Supreme Council passed
a law explicitly guaranteeing "equal rights to
all nationalities and ethnic groups" and
"guarantees to all permanent residents in the
Republic regardless of their nationality, equal
rights to work and wages." The law also
prohibits "any activity directed toward
nationality discrimination or the promotion of
national superiority or hatred."
In the June 5-6, 1993 elections wherein more
than 90% of the electorate participated, eight
of Latvia's 23 registered political parties
passed the 5% threshold to enter parliament. The
Popular Front, which spearheaded the drive for
independence with a 75% majority in the
parliamentary elections in 1990, did not qualify
for representation. The centrist "Latvia's Way"
party received a 33% plurality of votes and
joined with the Farmer's Union to head a
center-right wing coalition government.
Through a U.S. initiative, on April 30, 1994
Latvia and Russia signed a troop withdrawal
agreement. Russia withdrew its troops by August
31, 1994, and maintained several hundred
technical specialists to staff an OSCE-monitored
phased-array ABM radar station at Skrunda until
the facility was destroyed in 1995.
The September 30-October 1, 1995 elections
brought forth a deeply fragmented parliament
with nine parties represented and the largest
party commanding only 18 of 100 seats. Attempts
to form right-of-center and leftist governments
failed; 7 weeks after the election, a broad but
fractious coalition government of six of the
nine parties was voted into office under Prime
Minister Andris Skele, a widely popular,
nonpartisan businessman.
In the 1998 elections, the Latvian party
structure began to consolidate with only six
parties obtaining seats in the Saeima. Andris
Skele's newly formed People's Party garnered a
plurality with 24 seats. Though the election
represented a victory for the center-right,
personality conflicts and scandals within the
two largest right of center parties--Latvia's
Way and the People's Party--prevented stable
coalitions from forming. Two shaky governments
under Vilis Kristopans and Andris Skele quickly
collapsed in less than a year. In May 2000, a
compromise candidate was found in the form of
Andris Berzins, the then Latvia's Way mayor of
Riga. His four-party coalition lasted until
parliamentary elections in October 2002. Those
elections left Latvia's Way, for the first time
since 1993, with no seats in parliament. Einars
Repse's New Era Party, which ran on an
anti-corruption platform, gained the most seats,
and Repse headed a four-party coalition
government until his abrupt resignation in
February 2004 over issues relating to
personalities and management of the ruling
coalition.
A minority government led by Greens and
Farmers Union leader Indulis Emsis, including
the People's Party and the First Party and with
the tacit support of leftist parties, took
office on March 9, 2004. The new government was
focused on smoothing Latvia's entry into NATO
and the European Union. Latvia officially became
a member of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization on March 29, 2004 after depositing
its instruments of treaty ratification in
Washington, DC. Latvia joined the European Union
on May 1, 2004. Prime Minister Emsis's
government collapsed on October 28, 2004 after
parliament voted against the 2005 budget. A new
coalition government, led Prime Minister Aigars
Kalvitis, took office on December 2, 2004.
In 1999, the Saeima elected Vaira
Vike-Freiberga, a compromise candidate with no
party affiliation, to the presidency. Though
born in Riga in 1937, she settled in Canada
during the years of the Soviet occupation,
becoming a well-respected academic in the
subject of Latvian culture and psychology. Since
her election, she has become one of the most
popular political figures in Latvia. She was
overwhelming re-elected by parliament for
another 4-year term in June 2003.
Latvia's flag consists of two horizontal,
maroon bands of equal width, divided by a white
stripe one-half the width. The national holiday
is November 18, Independence Day.
Principal Government Officials
President--Vaira Vike-Freiberga
Prime Minister--Aigars Kalvitis, People's Party
Minister of Defense--Atis Slakteris, People's
Party
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Artis Pabriks,
People's Party
Minister of Economy--Aigars Stokenbergs,
People's Party
Minister of Interior-- Dzintars Jaundzeikars,
Latvia's First Party
Minister of Education and Science--Baiba Rivza,
Greens and Farmers Union
Minister of Agriculture--Martins Roze, Greens
and Farmers Union
Minister of Welfare--Dagnija Stake, Greens and
Farmers Union
Minister of Justice--Guntars Grinvalds, Latvia's
First Party
Minister of Culture--Helena Demakova, People's
Party
Minister of Finance--Oskars Spurdzins, People's
Party
Minister of Environment--Raimonds Vejonis,
Greens and Farmers Union
Minister of Health--Gundars Berzins, People's
Party
Minister of Transport--Krisjanis Peters,
Latvia's First Party
Minister of Children and Family Affairs--Ainars
Bastiks, Latvia's First Party
Minister of e-Affairs--Ina Gudele
Minister for Regional Development and Local
Governments--Maris Kucinskis, People's Party
Special Task Minister for Children and Family
Affairs--Ainars Bastiks, Latvia's First Party
Special Task Minister for Society Integration
Affairs--Karina Petersone, Latvia's Way
Ambassador to the United States--Maris Riekstins
Latvia maintains an
embassy
in the United States at 2306 Massachusetts Ave
NW, Washington DC 20008 [tel: (202) 328-2840].
ECONOMY
For centuries under Hanseatic and German
influence and then during its inter-war
independence, Latvia used its geographic
location as an important East-West commercial
and trading center. Industry served local
markets, while timber, paper, and agricultural
products supplied Latvia's main exports.
Conversely, the years of Russian and Soviet
occupation tended to integrate Latvia's economy
to serve those empires' large internal
industrial needs. Since reestablishing its
independence, Latvia has proceeded with
market-oriented reforms. Its freely traded
currency, the Lat, was introduced in 1993 and
has held steady, or appreciated, against major
world currencies. The International Monetary
Fund (IMF) has noted that Latvia's economic
performance the past several years had been
among the best of the European Union (EU)
accession countries. Real per capita GDP has
grown by more than 50% compared to its 1995
level, while inflation has remained close to or
below 3% since 1998. The government expects
annual growth rates of about 6% in medium term.
At the same time, current account deficit
(ranging from 7% to 10% in the past 3 years)
remains one of the key vulnerabilities of the
Latvian economy. In addition, Latvian fiscal
discipline deteriorated considerably at the end
of 2002, when budget deficit rose to 2.7% of
GDP, well above the government's target figure.
However, the government's effort to improve tax
administration, to fight gray economy, and to
reintroduce strict budget discipline led to an
improvement in the fiscal situation in the first
9 months of 2003.
Privatization in Latvia is almost complete.
Virtually all of the previously state-owned
small and medium companies have been privatized,
leaving in state hands the electric utility, the
Latvian railway company, and the Latvian postal
system, as well as state shares in several
politically sensitive enterprises. Despite the
lack of transparency of the early stages of the
privatization process, and certain difficulties
in privatization of some of the largest
companies, Latvian privatization efforts have
led to the development of a dynamic and
prosperous private sector, which accounted for
70% of GDP in 2002.
Foreign investment in Latvia remains high, as
both Western and Eastern investors are trying to
establish a foothold in the new EU member state,
as well as to take advantage of Latvia's stable
macroeconomic environment, central location in
the region, and cheap labor. Representing 7.1%
of Latvia's total foreign direct investment, the
U.S. FDI stock in Latvia stood at $184 million
at the end of 2002. In the same year, U.S. goods
and services accounted for 1.6% of Latvia's
total imports, while exports to the United
States accounted for 4.2% of Latvia's total
exports. Latvia is a member of the World Trade
Organization since 1999. Latvia and the United
States have signed treaties on investment,
trade, and intellectual property protection and
avoidance of double taxation.
In the long term, continued high economic
growth in Latvia will depend on further
improvements of the business environment,
particularly successful drive to reduce
corruption and strengthen the rule of law, and
on Latvia's ability to use the opportunities
presented by EU membership.
DEFENSE
Latvia's defense concept is based upon four
basic pillars--collective defense as a member of
NATO, professionalization of the armed forces,
support and coordination with civil society, and
international military cooperation. The armed
forces consist of the land forces brigade with
one deployable battalion, an air force focused
on air surveillance and search and rescue, and
naval forces focused on costal surveillance,
assertion of sovereignty, mine countermeasures,
and search and rescue. The land forces, navy,
and air force comprise approximately 7,000
personnel. The "zemessardze," or home guard, is
an autonomous 13,890-man-strong volunteer
reserve organization which performs traditional
national guard duties such as crisis response
and support to military operations. There is a
mandatory 1-year draft period of active duty,
and alternative conscription for conscientious
objectors is available. The Latvian National
Armed Forces will be fully professional by the
beginning of 2007. Defense spending has risen in
recent years, and the government has committed
2% of its GDP for defense spending through 2008.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Latvia became a member of the United Nations on
September 18, 1991, and is a signatory to a
number of UN organizations and other
international agreements, including COE, IAEA,
CERCO, ICES, ICAO, IAEA, UNESCO, UNICEF, IMF,
and WB/EBRD. It also is a member of the
Organization on Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) and of the North Atlantic
Coordinating Council. Latvia officially became a
member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
on March 29, 2004 after depositing its
instruments of treaty ratification in
Washington, DC. Latvia officially joined the
European Union on May 1, 2004.
Latvia maintains embassies in the United
States, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Canada, the
People's Republic of China, the Czech Republic,
Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany,
Greece, Israel, Italy, Lithuania, Netherlands,
Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, South Africa,
Sweden, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, and
Uzbekistan. It also operates missions to the
United Nations in New York City and Geneva, the
European Council, and non-member representation
to the EU, Chemical Weapons Nonproliferation
Organization, the OSCE, World Trade
Organization, and the UN Council on Food and
Agriculture. It also is represented at NATO.
Latvia has a Consulate General in Russia;
Consulates in Belarus and Russia; Honorary
Consulates General in Australia, Cyprus, India,
Israel, and Norway; and Honorary Consulates in
Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belarus, Brazil,
Canada, Chile, Cyprus, Denmark, Egypt, Finland,
France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Iceland,
Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Luxembourg, Mexico,
Moldova, Netherlands, Norway, Pakistan,
Philippines, Poland, Singapore, South Africa,
South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland,
Thailand, Turkey, and Venezuela.
Russia expresses concern for how Latvia's
language and naturalization laws affect Latvia's
Russian-speaking population. Russians comprised
29% of the population in 2003. In turn, Latvia
is interested in the welfare of ethnic Latvians
still residing in Russia.
U.S.-LATVIAN RELATIONS
The United States established diplomatic
relations with Latvia on July 28, 1922. The U.S.
Legation in Riga officially was established
November 13, 1922, and served as the
headquarters for U.S. representation in the
Baltics during the interwar era. The Soviet
invasion forced the closure of the legation on
September 5, 1940, but Latvian representation in
the United States has continued uninterrupted
for more than 70 years. The United States never
recognized the forcible incorporation of Latvia
into the U.S.S.R. and views the present
Government of Latvia as a legal continuation of
the interwar republic. Latvia has enjoyed
most-favored-nation treatment with the United
States since December 1991.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Catherine
Todd Bailey
Deputy Chief of Mission--Philip Antweiler
Political Officer--Mark Draper, Acting
Economic Officer--Mark Draper
Management Officer--Mary Teirlynck
Consular Officer--Landon Taylor
Public Affairs Officer--Tim Moore
The U.S.
Embassy in Latvia is located at Raina
Boulevard 7, Riga [tel. (371) 703-6200].