THE VOICE OF INTERNATIONAL LITHUANIA
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Klaipeda city and Lithuania's coastline made the summer's top stories in VilNews. Through more than a week we put the spotlight on good and less good aspects of what is happening out there on the Baltic Sea shore. Now, in the autumn, Kaunas and Vilnius will have our attention in a similar way, and we ask you all to come up with ideas and suggestions having to do with past and present of Lithuania’s two largest cities!
We know that many of our readers were on vacation when Klaipeda was treated in our columns. A summary of the articles follows, therefore, below.
Sunday 17 July |
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KLAIPĖDA – the jewel in the amber crown |
Friedricho Pasažas – the new wonder of Klaipėda |
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History of Klaipėda
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Mare Suebicum |
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Monday 18 July |
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KLAIPĖDA MAYOR:
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Radisson Blu Hotel, Klaipėda:
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Tuesday 19 July |
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Western Shipyard – from Soviet colossus to European greatness
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Lido Marine – a Norwegian success story in Klaipėda
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Wednesday 20 July |
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KLAIPĖDA FREE ECONOMIC ZONE:
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Next time you eat bacalao* in Spain or Italy |
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Thursday 21 July |
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Klaipedos Nafta has one of the most up-to-date oil terminals in Europe
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The port of Klaipeda
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WITH BOTH OIL AND LNG IN KLAIPĖDA:
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Friday 22 July |
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MEMEL CITY – A NEW 'CITY' AT KLAIPEDA'S SEA FRONT
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4 trucks full of books every week
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Saturday 23 July |
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JAMES ANDREW CLARKE:
Click here to read the article
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KLAIPĖDA SCIENCE And TECHNOLOGY PARK:
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Sunday 24 July |
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From Suriname to Klaipėda International Business Club
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Klaipėda – a pioneer municipality in combating violence against women
Click here to read the article
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To read all articles, go to our SECTION 9 – LITHUANIA TODAY.
General Director Reidar Inselseth at the Espersen Fish Factory in Klaipeda
I sit with the director of the Espersen plant in Klaipeda, Norwegian Reidar Inselseth, in the new office building his firm has just built. The building is designed as the wheelhouse of a ship, with a shiny blue glass surface, and the 'bow, roof top and masts' in stainless steel.
Reidar has been director of this facility for four years now, and among other things, been responsible for extensive new investments and developments of the company. My first question to him is what he finds hardest by being entrepreneur and company leader in Lithuania.
"The lack of predictability," he replies immediately. "Unfortunately, that is something that to a far too high degree characterizes this country. For my company this is so serious that we hardly had chosen Lithuania for our production if we eight-nine years ago had known what we now know."
"This country is steeped in corruption, which we feel very directly when we often are subjected to strange inspections etc. from the authorities; something we do not see anything like in any of the other countries where we have fish processing plants. We are, for example, constantly subjected to unreasonable disclosure requirements and controls, even if we always follow highly acclaimed and transparent international principles of production, environmental control, bookkeeping and treatment of employees. It feels as if here in Lithuania companies like ours still have to prove their innocence instead of being greeted with open arms and cooperative attitudes."
Aage Myhre
The Chronicle you wrote is excellent. You have done a great job and should be proud of it.
Jonas Kronkaitis,
Brigadier General, former Commander of Lithuania’s Armed Forces
Your ‘Chronicle of Lithuania’ is interesting as it details events that sometimes are lost and are shown with different point of view.
Romas,
Australia
We, Lithuanians in diaspora or in Lithuania itself, should be very grateful and obliged to Great Friends of Lithuania like you!
Valdas Samonis, PhD, CPC (Canadian – Lithuanian)
The Web Professor of Global Management(SM)
I am Isolde Ira Pozelaite – Davis AM, a grandmother of three beautiful grandchildren.
A lady who lives in the Lithuanian retirement Village where I live as well, has given me to read a photocopied pamphlet LITHUANIA IN A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE.
I would like to buy, If this is possible, 3 copies of this excellent publication. My grandchildren are 7, 12, 14 years old. I would read with them your well illustrated publication and encourage them to ask questions.
This would lead to a discussion and explanations. Have been a High School teacher for 38 years teaching French and German and 20 years Lithuanian in Australia. As you see old habits are difficult to forget. Will be 87 years in May, 2010.
Isolde Ira Poželaitė – Davis AM
Australian-Lithuanian
Plans to do business in Lithuania? It's like navigating
a boat in shallow water full of reefs.
"What you, who are born in the West, see when you come to Lithuania, are people who look like you, talk like you (those who speak Western languages) and are quite much alike you in many other aspects. But the reality is that we who have grown up in the Soviet Union or Eastern Europe have a totally different mentality than you. Even those Lithuanians who fled to the West during the war do not understand what the Soviet era has done with the mindset of us who were forced to grow up under the yoke of communism."
A Lithuanian friend told me this a few days ago. The talk began after he had expressed some surprise at how naive and gullible we from the West are when we come to Lithuania.
"You think that a word is a word, that a deal is a deal. You think that things here are going straight as in the West. You believe that what you hear is what is said, and you trust that people you meet really want and mean to do what is good, honest and correct.”
“Therefore, it doesn’t take much before you open up your cards and often reveal business secrets and other things that you should never have disclosed without first having secured your situation with contracts and local supporters, i.e. lawyers. We Lithuanians are experts in taking advantage of such situations, and we never cease to wonder how gullible people from the West often are. Even within international companies and organisations I am sometimes surprised to see how unaware western professionals are about what goes on behind their backs when they come here," said my friend.
I asked him if this mentality also means that people here do not care much about their own country, doing good for the society in addition to earning a living for themselves. "Only to a small degree," replied my friend. "It is such a difficult situation for most here that there is no additional capacity or desire to also care about the nation. Even our leading politicians do not. Most of them are much more concerned with their own interests than of the nation, and they are normally bad role models for the rest of us. So why should we do more than them?"
"I was born in this country. I fought for this country. I gave everything I
could, both while I lived here and after I was forced to flee to the United
States. I moved back here when Lithuania was again free, and have since
continued to do my best for this country, including through my years as
President. Yet I must admit that I feel like an outsider in my own country."
The sadness in the voice of former President Valdas Adamkus was
unmistakable as he stood and looked towards the Vilnius city through
the windows of his Presidential Palace.
I cannot fully agree with my friend. Yes, there are differences, but also so many similarities and common grounds to build on. But his statements made me think about a conversation I had with the former Lithuanian President, Valdas Adamkus, a few years ago. He was then well into his second and last presidential term, and we had a long and good conversation at his office in the Presidential Palace in Vilnius. When the conversation was over we went together out into the corridor outside his office, where the windows are facing the Cathedral and the central area of Vilnius.
My last question to the President, in that corridor, was about how close he felt he had come to the Lithuanian people after he returned from the United States in the early 1990s. This is what he answered:
"You know, Aage, I was born in this country. I fought for this country. I gave everything I could, both while I lived here and after I was forced to flee to the United States at the end of World War II. I moved back here when Lithuania again was free, and I have since continued to do my best for this nation, including through my years as President. Yet I must admit that I feel like an outsider in my own country."
The sadness in the voice of former President Valdas Adamkus was unmistakable as he stood and looked towards the Vilnius city centre through the windows of his Presidential Palace.
Aage Myhre, Editor-in-Chief
aage.myhre@VilNews.com
Dr. Stan Backaitis
Several months ago I had arranged a visit between the minister of energy and a CEO of an important nuclear reactor manufacturer. The meeting was supposed to be for the benefit of the minister on information of what is forthcoming in the future, particularly in small reactors and the possibility of establishing a European affiliate of the company in Lithuania.
The minister graciously extended an invitation to the CEO, but the minister's secretariat refused to extend even the slightest courtesy to this visit, such as picking up the visitor from the airport and transporting him to the meeting, setting up a meeting agenda, or even providing to the visitor's office the address of the ministry. They claimed that this was just another sales visit, and the visitor should take care of everything on his own. As a result the CEO canceled the meeting and eventually went to London. The European affiliate was established in the UK. Thus through such arrogance another opportunity was lost.
There is a lot truth in the German proverb "Dummheit und Stolz wachsen auf einem Holz".
Stan Backaitis
Washington, USA
VilNews e-magazine is published in Vilnius, Lithuania. Editor-in-Chief: Mr. Aage Myhre. Inquires to the editors: editor@VilNews.com.
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