Berliner Boersenzeitung - Estonian MPs pass bill to limit voting rights for Russian minority

EUR -
AED 4.080431
AFN 77.667352
ALL 98.296207
AMD 430.895007
ANG 1.988388
AOA 1018.165972
ARS 1255.920148
AUD 1.73396
AWG 2.002455
AZN 1.869042
BAM 1.955769
BBD 2.242094
BDT 134.917829
BGN 1.956518
BHD 0.41872
BIF 3303.861718
BMD 1.110932
BND 1.449396
BOB 7.67298
BRL 6.2981
BSD 1.110497
BTN 94.720755
BWP 15.159483
BYN 3.634091
BYR 21774.269701
BZD 2.230574
CAD 1.554616
CDF 3188.375312
CHF 0.935555
CLF 0.027305
CLP 1047.797602
CNY 8.002379
CNH 7.999112
COP 4694.532548
CRC 564.298541
CUC 1.110932
CUP 29.439701
CVE 110.264715
CZK 24.945926
DJF 197.743259
DKK 7.459298
DOP 65.239831
DZD 148.641623
EGP 56.005979
ERN 16.663982
ETB 147.655566
FJD 2.526648
FKP 0.842216
GBP 0.840487
GEL 3.049518
GGP 0.842216
GHS 14.135963
GIP 0.842216
GMD 79.439445
GNF 9614.845319
GTQ 8.537863
GYD 232.32208
HKD 8.660216
HNL 28.875925
HRK 7.536125
HTG 145.189625
HUF 404.909761
IDR 18508.740259
ILS 3.975682
IMP 0.842216
INR 94.788508
IQD 1454.696239
IRR 46770.242887
ISK 146.687265
JEP 0.842216
JMD 176.907154
JOD 0.788096
JPY 164.569081
KES 143.332019
KGS 97.15113
KHR 4443.848506
KMF 484.92203
KPW 999.833915
KRW 1582.22301
KWD 0.341678
KYD 0.925368
KZT 564.448217
LAK 24016.721718
LBP 99497.142743
LKR 331.854661
LRD 222.087427
LSL 20.349573
LTL 3.280294
LVL 0.671991
LYD 6.098902
MAD 10.358733
MDL 19.410338
MGA 5019.941834
MKD 61.542014
MMK 2332.384765
MNT 3970.358091
MOP 8.913797
MRU 44.007292
MUR 51.580479
MVR 17.103162
MWK 1925.695021
MXN 21.751007
MYR 4.802007
MZN 70.984805
NAD 20.349847
NGN 1779.646527
NIO 40.859343
NOK 11.564281
NPR 151.548152
NZD 1.885635
OMR 0.427702
PAB 1.110462
PEN 4.059835
PGK 4.611926
PHP 62.015006
PKR 312.701169
PLN 4.25175
PYG 8867.977071
QAR 4.04759
RON 5.102737
RSD 117.219697
RUB 89.260155
RWF 1590.145791
SAR 4.166889
SBD 9.277226
SCR 15.788365
SDG 667.118952
SEK 10.81868
SGD 1.449905
SHP 0.873018
SLE 25.274092
SLL 23295.673461
SOS 634.575511
SRD 40.215188
STD 22994.052078
SVC 9.716975
SYP 14445.799176
SZL 20.343764
THB 36.937933
TJS 11.515107
TMT 3.888262
TND 3.372246
TOP 2.601915
TRY 43.079081
TTD 7.535913
TWD 33.850656
TZS 2985.62872
UAH 46.149281
UGX 4063.989492
USD 1.110932
UYU 46.379254
UZS 14319.769627
VES 103.000061
VND 28841.464431
VUV 133.28206
WST 3.086775
XAF 655.934639
XAG 0.033892
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.00235
XDR 0.816132
XOF 655.955304
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.567127
ZAR 20.43208
ZMK 9999.719498
ZMW 29.426924
ZWL 357.719692
  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.08

    +0.09%

  • BCE

    -0.1500

    22.56

    -0.66%

  • SCS

    0.3600

    10.82

    +3.33%

  • BCC

    4.4800

    93.1

    +4.81%

  • NGG

    -3.1600

    67.53

    -4.68%

  • GSK

    0.7500

    37.37

    +2.01%

  • RBGPF

    2.2700

    65.27

    +3.48%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.01

    +0.23%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.3

    -0.18%

  • RIO

    1.4300

    61.41

    +2.33%

  • AZN

    1.3800

    68.95

    +2%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    10.38

    -1.16%

  • BTI

    -0.6600

    40.98

    -1.61%

  • BP

    0.4200

    30.19

    +1.39%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    9.07

    -2.54%

  • RELX

    -2.0200

    51.83

    -3.9%

Estonian MPs pass bill to limit voting rights for Russian minority
Estonian MPs pass bill to limit voting rights for Russian minority / Photo: Antti Aimo-Koivisto - Lehtikuva/AFP/File

Estonian MPs pass bill to limit voting rights for Russian minority

Estonian lawmakers voted Wednesday to ban the country's large Russian minority and other non-EU residents from voting in local elections, as the Baltic state warily eyes Moscow.

Text size:

The amendment was proposed in response to security concerns over Russia's war in Ukraine. Estonia has been a steadfast supporter of Kyiv since the invasion in February 2022.

In the vote on Wednesday, 93 lawmakers in the 101-seat chamber backed a constitutional amendment to impose the restrictions, a result that was met with applause from MPs.

Estonian Prime Minister Kristen Michal hailed the outcome as "a victory for all", adding on X: "The decisions in our local life won't be made by the citizens of the aggressor states, but we'll decide by ourselves."

Nearly 80,000 Russian citizens hold a residence permit in the former Soviet republic of 1.3 million people, which regained its independence in 1991.

There are also nearly 60,000 people left stateless after the fall of the Soviet Union.

The restrictions, if signed into law by Estonia's president, would ban non-EU citizens from voting and allow the stateless residents to go to polls one last time in local elections in October.

"If Russia had been, from our point of view, sensible, no one would have initiated this," said Rein Toomla, a political expert from the Johan Skytte Institute.

"It's very clearly against Russia and... Russian citizens living in Estonia have fallen victim to this because Russia has acted this way, not them," he told AFP.

Permanent residents of Estonia currently have a constitutional right to vote in local elections, but not general elections.

- 'Imperialistic ambitions' -

Relations between Moscow and the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have soured over the years.

Both Estonia and Latvia have sizeable Russian-speaking minorities that are sometimes at odds with the national governments.

There have been concerns that Moscow could seek to exploit these differences to destabilise the countries, which are both EU and NATO members.

Citing the threat from Russia, Estonia plans to raise defence spending next year to at least five percent of GDP.

"Russia has not changed its goals and imperialistic ambitions. This is a real threat to both Europe and NATO," Michal said last week.

He had already told public broadcaster ERR in January that "If a person wants to be a citizen of Russia... they shouldn't expect to be part of the discussion about Estonia".

Voting rights are just the latest symbolic act of cutting ties with Russia.

The Baltic states began removing and demolishing some of their Soviet-era war memorials in response to Russia's Ukraine invasion.

This prompted outrage in Moscow, which declared former Estonian leader Kaja Kallas -- now the EU foreign policy chief -- and several other European officials as "wanted" over their alleged involvement in the destruction of the memorials.

- Security threat -

Estonia's 101 lawmakers examined two slightly different versions of the voting amendment.

One was to ban third-country nationals -- who are neither citizens of the European Union nor the visa-free Schengen travel zone -- and stateless individuals from voting in local elections, including the ones in October.

The other proposal was to allow stateless individuals to vote one last time in the coming election, but third-country nationals would be banned.

The prime minister backed the less restrictive version, as did a larger number of MPs.

Supporters say it would give stateless individuals enough time to apply for Estonian citizenship.

When Estonia gained independence from the Soviet Union, around a third of the people living on its territory were from Russian-speaking minorities whose families had immigrated from other Soviet republics.

They did not qualify for citizenship because of a lack of blood ties to Estonia. Citizenship also requires applicants to pass an Estonian language test.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)