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    Important
    Baltic Drug Couriers
    Dirty Money
    China's influence
    Energetics
    Fake News
    Health in Latvia
    I Spy
    Imprisoned in the Baltics
    Latvia's ageing dilemma
    Latvia's Golden Visas
    Money from Russia
    Press Intimidation in the Baltic States
    Russia and Family Values
    Small Wages
    The Baltic Media After the Crisis
    The Other Side of Latvia’s ‘Success’ Story
    Unequal Education
    Uzbeks in Latvia
    #Vēlēšanas2018
About us
Support us
Re:Baltica - The Baltic Center for Investigative Journalism
  • Home
  • Archive
    • Important
    • Baltic Drug Couriers
    • Dirty Money
    • China’s influence
    • Energetics
    • Fake News
    • Health in Latvia
    • I Spy
    • Imprisoned in the Baltics
    • Latvia’s ageing dilemma
    • Latvia’s Golden Visas
    • Money from Russia
    • Press Intimidation in the Baltic States
    • Russia and Family Values
    • Small Wages
    • The Baltic Media After the Crisis
    • The Other Side of Latvia’s ‘Success’ Story
    • Unequal Education
    • Uzbeks in Latvia
    • #Vēlēšanas2018
  • About us
  • Support us
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Dirty Money

Ukraine’s murky Black Sea tenders cast shadow over Norway

22. April, 2012Graham Stack

Interviews with Norwegian executives shed new light on murky Ukrainian deals in 2011, where rigs sold by Norwegian companies to unknown parties were resold to a Ukrainian state oil company in apparently fixed tenders for enormous mark-ups.

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INDEPENDENT JOURNALISM NEEDS INDEPENDENT FINANCING

Investigative journalism is not an expensive hobby. It is a trade: often lonely, sometimes brave, full-time job which requires both time and money. It is expensive and thus become the first victim when traditional media face crisis. But without it we cannot understand the world around us and held the powers responsible.

We do it as a non-profit organisation which raises money itself and gives investigations to traditional media and publishes them online for free access.

We as editors are the only ones who decide what we are going to investigate because we - and not the advertisers or owners - think it is important topic for the Baltic societies. Thus we can investigate social inequality, corruption, abuses of power or money laundering.

We look for grants and earn ourselves via teaching, moderating events and researching scripts for films. But it takes away time we need for doing journalism.
Therefore we need you to donate and become part of Re:Baltica's community!

Now you can also donate through Mobilly!

Money from Russia

Russkiy Mir

11. April, 2012Re:Baltica

In 2007, President Vladimir Putin established the Russkiy Mir foundation. Designed to promote Russian culture abroad, the foundation prides itself on being open. But Re:Baltica found consistent lack of transparency in the foundation’s activities in the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia. Russkiy Mir doesn’t disclose all organizations it funds and what amounts were granted to which organizations. Who got this funding and how was it used? Explore this first cross-border investigation in the Baltics to find out.

This interactive explainer shows the key findings of the investigation done by the three journalists in the Baltic States. You can read all stories in English or each story in the native language of the journalist (Latvian, Lithuanian, Estonian).

Who owns the biggest Russian media holding in the Baltic States?

The long arm of Moscow or just a business? The First Baltic Channel (PBK) is the most popular Russian television channel among the Baltic Russians. At the start of the year, the channel’s total audience in the Baltics exceeded four million viewers. Currently the goal of PBK’s parent company Baltic Media Alliance (BMA) is to become the leading media holding company in the Baltics, and it’s a very realizable goal. It’s not only because the PBK is re-telecasting popular Russia’s TV channels. It’s also because PBK is ready to serve the needs of leading politicians to fill its coffers.

Re:Baltica undertook an investigation, in Latvia and Estonia, find out who owns the influential media concern and what is the secret of the company’s success.

Money from Russia

Who is the puppet and who is the master?

11. April, 2012Mikk Salu, Inga Spriņģe, Re:Baltica

“I talk and negotiate with Riga, with Oleg Solodov and others. Even the money that we [the City of Tallinn] pay goes to Riga, not to Tallinn”, says Lev Vaino, referring to the 425,000 euro contract for the production and transmission of three different shows on Pervõi Baltiiski Kanal – “Our capital” (“Наша столица”), “Good morning Tallinn” (“Доброе утро, Таллинн!”) and “Russian question” (Русский вопрос”). The City of Tallinn is a trusted client of PBK and almost the same amount of money (425,382 euro) was paid again in 2012 for PBK to continue producing the same programmes.

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INVESTIGATIONS

#Vēlēšanas2018 Baltic Drug Couriers Belarus sanctions China's influence Covid-19 Dirty Money Disinformation Domestic Violence Energetics Fake News Health in Latvia Important Imprisoned in the Baltics I Spy Latvia's ageing dilemma Latvia's Golden Visas Money from Russia Press Intimidation in the Baltic States Re:Check Russia and Family Values Sanctions Small Wages The Baltic Media After the Crisis The Other Side of Latvia’s ‘Success’ Story Unequal Education Uzbeks in Latvia

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