Latvians asked to turn basements into air-raid shelters

Latvians asked to turn basements into air-raid shelters

/ 01:01 PM April 28, 2024

Latvians asked to turn basements into air-raid shelters

Volunteers gather rubish at Strazdumuizas park in Riga, Latvia on April 27, 2024 during the annual Great Cleanup Gathering. Authorities in Latvia called on residents to use Saturday’s annual “Big Clean-up Day” to turn basements into air-raid shelters, with many in the Baltic country concerned they could be Russia’s next target. AFP

RIGA, Latvia — Authorities in Latvia called on residents to use Saturday’s annual “Big Clean-up Day” to turn basements into air-raid shelters, with many in the Baltic country concerned they could be Russia’s next target.

The former Soviet republic, now a member of NATO and the European Union, has a 214-kilometer (133-mile) border with Russia, and has been one of Ukraine’s most reliable supporters since Russia’s invasion.

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“We call on everyone during the big clean-up, but also afterwards, to ensure that your cellars and your basements can be used as shelters in case of emergencies,” said Vilnis Kirsis, mayor of the capital Riga.

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He said in a communique that municipal employees would do the same for buildings belonging to the city.

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Gints Reinsons, head of a Riga civil defense commission, said “the basements of public buildings, schools, retirement homes, hospitals, and town halls will be inspected by the authorities who will prepare them to serve as hiding places in the event of an attack.”

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He told the TV24 station that the goal was to prepare a hundred anti-bomb shelters a month through the end of the year.

In March, Latvian Prime Minister Evika Silina compared Russia to an unpredictable drunk.

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“We live next to a neighbor who, shall we say, is like an alcoholic or drug addict whose actions we cannot predict,” she told public radio.

Since 2008, thousands of Latvians have gathered each spring to participate in a national clean-up day, a tradition that has now been followed by Baltic neighbors Lithuania and Estonia.

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Besides collecting trash, Latvians also use the day to plant trees and fix up parks and public spaces.

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