Baltic Republican Party

The Baltic Republican Party (Russian: Балтийская республиканская партия, BRP) is a political party in the Russian Federation. It was founded on 1 December 1993 in Kaliningrad Oblast and lost its official status as a political party on 26 March 2003 due to the new Russian Law on political parties which requires that each party should have regional branches at least in half of the Russian Federation constituencies and at least 10,000 members in strength. An appeal was lost in February 2005 before the Constitutional Court of Russia.[2] The main political purpose of the party was the establishment of an autonomous Baltic Republic instead of the Kaliningrad region, possibly total independence. It also wanted the old name Königsberg restored.[3] Its leaders are Sergei Pasko and Rustam Vasiliev.

Baltic Republican Party

Балтийская республиканская партия
FoundedDecember 1, 1993 (1993-12-01)
DissolvedDecember 3, 2003 (2003-12-03)[1]
HeadquartersKaliningrad

In February 2005 the constituent congress of the Kaliningrad Public Movement – Respublika took place in Kaliningrad. It has the same objectives as the BRP, its cochairmen are Sergei Pasko and Vitautas Lopata, an independent deputy of the regional Duma and local chairperson of the opposition Russian People's Democratic Union.[4]

See also

  • Secession in Russia

References

  1. "The constitutional court confirmed the legitimacy of the law on political parties". kommersant. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  2. David Atkinson and Rudolf Bindig, Honouring of obligations and commitments by the Russian Federation, Committee on the Honouring of Obligations and Commitments by Member States of the Council of Europe (Monitoring Committee), Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, 3 June 2005
  3. Fred Weir, A Baltic province's story, in one man's life, The Christian Science Monitor, 25 July 2002
  4. Kaliningrad Flies an Orange Flag, Kommersant, 22 February 2005

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