INTERLNG Archives

Discussiones in Interlingua

INTERLNG@LISTSERV.ICORS.ORG

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
"Peter Kovacs (pron.: Kovaatch)" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
INTERLNG: Discussiones in Interlingua
Date:
Sun, 19 Jun 2005 07:44:03 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (145 lines)
Io demanda, esque iste littera ha ulle relation con interlingua?!

Illo es plenmente in anglese! Mesmo le thema non se concerne ad interlingua...

Si illo esseva o in interlingua, o in le thema de interlingua, alora al
minus un connection haberea le email con interlingua...

P.K.


On Fri, 6 May 2005 09:42:40 +0300, Allan Kiviaho <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

>http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4517683.stm
>
>BBC News
>Last Updated: Thursday, 5 May, 2005, 15:26 GMT 16:26 UK
>
>Russia denies Baltic 'occupation'
>
>An artist carries a canvas in front of a police line near the
>Monument of freedom during the 15th anniversary of the proclamation
>of the country's independence in Riga, Latvia
>The Baltic-Russian row has escalated ahead of VE Day
>Russia has denied it illegally annexed the Baltic republics of
>Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia in 1940.
>
>It has also rejected demands to admit illegally occupying the three
>countries at the end of World War II.
>
>A Kremlin spokesman said Soviet troops were deployed with the
>agreement of the Baltic governments of the time.
>
>Correspondents say the annexation issue has provoked a major
>diplomatic row as Russia prepares to host celebrations to mark the
>end of World War II in Europe.
>
>Soviet authority was established in the Baltics in 1940.
>
>German forces then held the states from 1941 until the Soviet army
>returned in 1945.
>
>EU and US pressure
>
>Russia has made defiant remarks on the issue of the occupation.
>
>"There was no occupation. There were agreements at the time with
>the legitimately elected authorities in the Baltic countries,"
>the Kremlin's European affairs chief Sergei Yastrzhembsky said
>on Thursday.
>
>The EU - which now includes the three Baltic republics - and the
>US want Moscow to recognise that the Red Army occupied large parts
>of Eastern Europe after the retreat of the Nazis at the end of
>World War II.
>
>European Commission Vice-President Guenter Verheugen urged Moscow
>earlier this week to admit the illegality of Soviet rule in the
>Baltics.
>
>US President George Bush said in a TV interview to be broadcast on
>Thursday that he would remind Russian President Vladimir Putin
>about the Soviet occupation of the Baltics when they met in
>oscow next week for VE Day celebrations.
>
>The heads of two of the three Baltic states, Estonia and Lithuania,
>are boycotting the events in Moscow, but Latvian leaders have said
>they will attend.
>
>On Wednesday, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov suggested the
>defeat of Hitler far outweighed the USSR's long occupation of
>Eastern Europe after World War II.
>
>/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /
>
> Estonia seeks occupation payment
>Estonia plans to press Russia for compensation for damage it says
>was caused during decades of Soviet rule.
>
>The process began as the Baltic state's special commission presented
>parliament with the so-called "White Book" detailing the damage.
>
>The document says Estonia lost 180,000 people during the Soviet
>occupation in 1940-41 and then again in 1944-91 after four years
>of Nazi rule.
>
>It says the presence of the Soviet army alone cost Estonia $4bn.
>
>However, Estonian lawmakers - who were given the document earlier
>this week - admit that the process is likely to be lengthy and
>will anger Russia, the main successor to the Soviet Union.
>
>Leonid Slutsky, deputy head of Russian parliament's committee
>on external affairs, has already told Moscow's Echo Moskvy
>radio that Estonia's plans amount to "anti-Russian gibberish".
>
>'Another 10 years'
>
>A draft resolution by Estonia's parliament urged the government
>to submit a report by 1 January 2005, detailing the feasibility
>of any legal action against Moscow.
>
>
>ESTONIA'S FOREIGN MASTERS
>  Russia takes control of Estonia in the 1700s from Sweden
>Germany invades in 1918; takes formal control in peace treaty
>with Russia's new Soviet rulers
>  Estonia declares independence in 1918
>  Soviet troops invade Estonia in 1940 allowed in Hitler-Stalin
>pact 60,000 Estonians die or are deported in first month of
>occupation Hitler invades in 1941, backed by Estonian fighters
>The Red Army returns in 1944, remains until early 1990s
>  "We would first like to see that the government makes a
>realistic
>prognosis based on international laws," parliamentary
>constitutional commission chairman Urmas Reinsalu told BBC News
>Online.
>  Mr Reinsalu also said lawmakers wanted to have further debates
>on the findings of the book, which took the special commission
>investigating the Nazi and Soviet occupation 12 years to compile.
>  Earlier, the head of the commission, Vello Sallo, told Russia's
>Interfax news agency that "scientists will have to work for at
>least another 10 years" to get more detailed data.
>  Mr Salo also explained that the document "mostly centred on the
>Soviet period" because "the German occupation continued for a
>relatively short period of time".
>Story from BBC NEWS:
>http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/europe/3708153.stm
>Published: 2004/05/12 19:40:47 GMT

======================================================
Pro disabonar te del lista, invia un message a
[log in to unmask] con le texto:

  UNSUBSCRIBE INTERLNG

o visita le sito del lista:

  http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/interlng.html
======================================================
Visita le sito official del Union Mundial pro
Interlingua:

  http://www.interlingua.com/
======================================================

ATOM RSS1 RSS2