NATO PA 2010 Spring Session of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly LR Saeimas mājas lapa
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Press releases
Former Latvian president urges NATO Allies to “sing the same tune” on energy security (01.06.2010) Print


NATO Allies should coordinate their energy sourcing policies more closely, former Latvian president Vaira Vike-Freiberga said Saturday, given the important security and diplomatic dimensions of energy supply. 
Speaking to the Spring Assembly of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly in Riga, Ms Vike-Freiberga pointed out that the wide range of energy situations of the different Allies was a reason for more solidarity, not less. 
Some may be self-sufficient, but others rely on a single supplier for their energy needs, she said.  Members should not let their different energy situations obscure the common values and principles that should bind the Alliance.

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Public Discussion „NATO’s Future: A Baltic View” Print

Programme.

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Last day of reinstated border checks on internal borders (01.06.2010) Print


Today till 18:00, border guards at the internal borders will continue checking persons entering Latvia. 

During the past 24 hours, 14, 830 persons entering Latvia were checked at border-crossing points: 10,490 persons were checked on highways, and 4, 340 persons at Riga International Airport and the Riga Port. Among the checked persons, 905 were third-country nationals. A total of 4, 825 cars were also checked.

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NATO Parliamentary Assembly calls for “resources, resolve and patience" in Afghanistan (01.06.2010) Print


Afghanistan is at a critical point, according to two draft reports by the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, which explain that any slackening in the international community’s resolve in the months to come could jeopardize recent progress.
“Patience, resolve and our shared commitment to the future of Afghanistan is what will help us and our Afghan friends make 2010 a decisive year,” Vitalino Canas told the delegates on Sunday at the Assembly’s Spring Session in Riga.
Recent security improvements have created a “genuine opportunity for decisive progress on the governance front”, he told the Assembly’s Civil Dimension of Security Committee as he presented his draft report, titled Governance Challenges in Afghanistan [link http://www.nato-pa.int/Default.asp?SHORTCUT=2085 ].  Both the national army and police are enjoying higher levels of public approval, the Assembly heard.

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Afghanistan should be left to set own “red lines,” (01.06.2010) Print


The international community should not impose its own standards on the fledgling Afghan democracy, in particular when it comes to reintegrating elements of the Taliban, a NATO expert told a gathering of Allied parliamentarians Sunday in Riga.
“We must stop drawing ‘red lines’ for these negotiations,” said Jack Segal, chief political advisor to the Commander of NATO Joint Force Command Headquarters at Brunssum, speaking at the Spring Session of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly. 
He was referring to pressure some Allied nations are putting on Kabul to hold talks with the Taliban only under certain conditions. “The political strategy calls for the reconciliation and reintegration of what President Karzai calls “our upset brothers”,” Segal said, “again, we need to listen to him.” 

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