Baltic Assembly

Member states of the Baltic Assembly (green).
Member states of the Baltic Assembly (green).
HeadquarterLatvia Riga, Latvia
Working languages
Type Intergovernmental organization
Membership
Leaders
   President Laine Randjärv[1]
Establishment
   Baltic Assembly 1991 
32nd session of the Baltic Assembly meeting in Riga
30th session of the Baltic Assembly meeting in Tallinn in 2011

The Baltic Assembly (BA) is a cooperation between the parliaments of the Baltic republics of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. It attempts to find a common position in relation to many international issues, including economic, political and cultural issues. The decisions of the assembly are advisory.

The budget of the BA is funded by the three member governments. The official languages of the Baltic Assembly are Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian. The headquarters and secretariat of the organization are located in Riga, Latvia.

History

Formation

The organization was formed after a decision to establish it was made in Vilnius on 1 December 1990. It works under regulations approved on 8 November 1991 in Tallinn.[2] On 13 June 1994 the three nations agreed to the structure and rules of the organization.[3]

Achievements

Council of Europe Schengen Area European Free Trade Association European Economic Area Eurozone European Union European Union Customs Union Agreement with EU to mint euros GUAM Central European Free Trade Agreement Nordic Council Baltic Assembly Benelux Visegrád Group Common Travel Area Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Union State Switzerland Iceland Norway Liechtenstein Sweden Denmark Finland Poland Czech Republic Hungary Slovakia Greece Estonia Latvia Lithuania Belgium Netherlands Luxembourg Italy France Spain Austria Germany Portugal Slovenia Malta Cyprus Ireland United Kingdom Croatia Romania Bulgaria Turkey Monaco Andorra San Marino Vatican City Georgia Ukraine Azerbaijan Moldova Armenia Russia Belarus Serbia Albania Montenegro Macedonia Bosnia and Herzegovina Kosovo (UNMIK) Kazakhstan
A clickable Euler diagram showing the relationships between various multinational European organisations and agreements.

The BA claims the following as its achievements between 1991 and 2003:[4]

Sessions

There are ordinary and extraordinary Sessions. The ordinary Session is convened once a year, as a concluding forum of a country's presidency, which proceeds according to a yearly rotation principle in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Before 2003 there were two Sessions a year – in spring and autumn, and countries - participants had half a year presidency.

Any national delegation may propose that an extraordinary session is held. On 8-9 February 1998 in Helsinki, Finland, following to the 2nd Joint Meeting of the Nordic Council and the Baltic Assembly, the first Extraordinary Session of the Baltic Assembly took place. The second Extraordinary Session of the Baltic Assembly was held on 27-29 April 2005 in Parnu, Estonia, following to the 5th Joint Meeting of the Baltic Assembly and the Nordic Council. [5]

Composition

The BA comprises sixty members. Each of the parliaments of the three States appoints twenty of its members to the Assembly. Each of the national parliaments appoints two of the members to be head and deputy head of the national delegation. The six head delegates and deputy head delegates form the BA’s Presidium. The Chairman of the Presidium is the head of the national delegation of the country hosting the next session of the BA. The heads of the other two national delegations are Vice Chairmen of the Presidium. The Presidium controls the BA between sessions. The Chairman acts as the coordinator of the work of the BA, is its representative with other bodies and liaises with the three members’ governments.

Committees

The following are the standing committees:

Each member of the BA participates in at least one committee.

Political groupings

The 20 members of the BA from each country are chosen so that their political make-up reflects the proportions within their home parliament. The members may then form cross-national party groupings of at least five members from at least two nations.[6]

As of 2006 the three political groupings are the Conservative-Right Party Group, the Centre Party Group and the Social Democratic Party Group.

Prize in literature

List of literature winners:

Year Author Country or Region
2014 Peeter Sauter  Estonia
2013 Donaldas Kajokas  Lithuania
2012 Aivars Kļavis  Latvia
2011 Arvydas Juozaitis  Lithuania
2010 Ene Mihkelson  Estonia
2009 Inga Ābele  Latvia
2008 Knuts Skujenieks  Latvia
2007 Marcelijus Martinaitis  Lithuania
2006 Nora Ikstena  Latvia
2005 Hasso Krull  Estonia
2004 Pēters Brūveris  Latvia
2003 Vytautas Bubnys  Lithuania
2002 Jaan Tätte  Estonia
2001 Justinas Marcinkevičius  Lithuania
2000 Jānis Rokpelnis  Latvia
1999 Jaan Kross  Estonia
1998 Sigitas Geda  Lithuania
1997 Jaan Kaplinski  Estonia
1996 Judita Vaičiūnaitė  Lithuania
1995 Uldis Bērziņš  Latvia
1994 Tõnu Õnnepalu  Estonia

See also

External links

Notes

  1. http://baltasam.org/en/structure/presidium/president
  2. http://baltasam.org/en/history/pre-history
  3. http://baltasam.org/en/history/international-inclusion
  4. http://baltasam.org/en/history
  5. http://baltasam.org/en/structure/session
  6. http://baltasam.org/en/structure/national-delegations
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