Latvia After the Riots - What Happens Now?

When a Minister publicly accuses a colleague of having been a "bastard" for the organization of an anti-governmental rally, we all realize that there should be something wrong. When it happens after the first nights of riots in the life of independent Latvia, then we all think that something out of proportions is really happening.
“Are you happy now?”
These are the words Latvian Minister of Interior Marek Seglinš wrote on a note he sent to Aigars Shtokenbergs, leader of the anti governmental movement that organized yesterda’y.
A rally that, in few hours, officially killed the Latvian dream.
With 126 people arrested, 28 taken to the hospital, alcohol and tobacco stores looted by rioters and jackals, this has not been an easy morning for the population of the Capital. “There was a nice event and then when it finished people decided to go and express their anger and destroy the parliament and then it all spread through Old Riga,” said Anna Gulbe, 19, referring to the picturesque historic part of the capital city.
“Sadly, we woke up too late. We could see the financial mess
that was an obstacle in our path, but it was too late to avoid it […] It has
been said that Latvia is currently experiencing one of the most dramatic
operations for the rescue of a financial system in the history of modern Europe”,
said the Latvian President to the Member of the European Parliament, finally
admitting the enormous proportions of the financial breakdown the country is
experiencing, but still avoiding to make a clear statement on what some 10,000
people asked him for some hours.
Otherwise said, his head.
Politically speaking, ça va sans dire.
I did not take a position, true, but if anyone would ask me for a sincere guess, I would confess that I would not feel safe on betting on his career right now.
Whether his cabinet is guilty or not, or whether the risky policy some countries adopted since when they decided to lie on the economical bubbles they created finally turned out to be something less smart than what we all thought, Latvia moved from being the enfant prodige of the European growth to a shameful black sheep that other countries would prefer not to see.
And it all happened so rapidly that many people did not manage
to realize it until yesterday, the night when the IMF loan shown its effect on
the feelings of the citizens.
Where will it all end up is hard to foresee.
A bit because the negative escalation of the last months showed us how it is
not the moment for any “creative” forecast anymore, and a lot because the lack
of preparation of some of our highest-level politicians has been so gross that
it even makes feel ashamed for the contribution we gave to all this during the
past elections.
What is possible to foresee, though, is that after the funny hit-and-run scored by Pedro Almunia and Andrus Ansip – which, once more, shown us the consciousness some people have of the whole economical issue and its priorities – is that, as someone once said in Estonia, “Gloomy times are ahead.”

Comments
just come and see what is life in Latvia every day need to wory abaut payments but you don't have normal job but payments are big and to high!!! what to do now?
I can tell you it is the same for the majority of Estonian people: I guess it is finally time for letting politicians understand what citizens want. Even going on the street if needed. But violence will not help anyone to get heard.