The research center SKDS has established public trust indices and ratings for various institutions in Latvia, including non-governmental (public) organizations, which are various associations and foundations. The study found that in the category "All citizens", non-governmental organizations have a negative rating of minus 4.4. In 2021 and 2020, 40% of respondents have expressed that they do not trust them. But there was a time when the level of trust in them was noticeably higher - in 2010, 31% did not trust them.
A conversation with Normunds Vilnītis, member of the party For a Humane Latvia (Par cilvēcīgu Latviju, PCL), former head of the Corruption Prevention and Combating Bureau.
On January 20, a monument to the Latvian freedom fighter and Soviet-era dissident Gunārs Astra, by sculptor Gļebs Panteļejevs, was unveiled in Baumanis Square in front of the Riga Regional Court.
Pētījumu centrs SKDS pēc Neatkarīgās pasūtījuma ir veicis apjomīgu sabiedriskās domas izpēti, tostarp izmērījis arī uzticēšanos Latvijas valdības ministriem pērnajā gadā. Jāsecina, ka starp viņiem vismazāko ļaužu uzticību bauda veselības ministrs Daniels Pavļuts (“Attīstībai/Par!” (AP)).
Yesterday, on January 12, 2022, President of Latvia Egils Levits met with Prime Minister Krišjānis Kariņš. The meeting is captured in the photos. Except that both President Egils Levits and Prime Minister Krišjānis Kariņš, even when posing for photographers, did not wear the white FFP2 respirators sold in pharmacies, but used "black masks".
Jānis Urbanovičs, the leader of the Harmony (Saskaņa) party, expressed the following opinion in Neatkarīgā on January 8: "I have always shied away from criticizing the President of the Republic. Regardless of the personalities who hold the office, it is a symbol of Latvia, like the flag or the anthem. But we are living in such difficult times that we need not only a symbol but also a leader.
Instead of defending its honor and dignity with all its might against the large and influential newspaper Bild in Germany, the New Conservative Party (Jaunā konservatīvā partija, JKP) has announced that it will turn to the police against Neatkarīgā Rīta Avīze, which published a story about the German publication.
The year 1991 is remembered in world history as a time of dramatic geopolitical change - several former Soviet republics declared independence and this year have already celebrated 30 years since their liberation. Latvia as well.
In Germany, after long negotiations, a government coalition was formed in early December by the Social Democrats, the Greens and the liberal Free Democratic Party; in Sweden, a coalition broke up and the government fell in June due to bitter internal political squabbles; in Finland, a coalition is formed by two big parties and a number of small ones; in Spain, the second government of Pedro Sánchez is a minority government formed by left-wing parties together with the Catalan nationalist party.
The German newspaper Bild has published an article damaging Latvia's reputation. North Korean billions are being laundered through our banks, the supervisory authorities are covering up a flood of dirty money from Russia, and the Minister of Justice and the head of the Legal Affairs Committee have both been paid a 500,000 euros bribe to allow the PNB Bank to be robbed.
Aivars Lembergs has gotten infected with Covid-19 in the Central Prison and has been transferred to the Prison Hospital in Olaine. Although he had regularly asked for a booster vaccine for several months, and his lawyers had submitted a request to the Riga Central Prison, these requests have simply been ignored.
The Ministry of Health recommends introducing twice-weekly testing for all face-to-face workers from December 6. Antigen self-tests might be available en masse in Latvia around December 6 which will be provided to the public sector, including schools and special interest education. All workers, vaccinated and unvaccinated, will be tested, excluding those who do not work with other people and are in isolated environments and those who work remotely. Thank you for at least not thinking that the virus can be spread via the internet!