Latvia’s population is 30% smaller than it was in 1990 and by 2050 numbers will be in decline in over half of Europe’s 52 countries

When Margarita Skangale was a teenager in the late 1970s, there were 1,200 pupils in Viļāni high school. When her son was young, the queue outside the children’s clothes shop – assuming, this being the Soviet era, it had any stock – stretched down the street.

Today, there are 400 pupils in the school and of her now 35-year-old son’s class of 26, just four still live in this small town in Latvia’s eastern Latgale region, three hours’ drive from the capital, Riga, and a little over an hour from the Russian border.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Life, death and gabagool: how The Sopranos explains everything

Ahead of the release of prequel The Many Saints of Newark, a…

The Voice 2020 winner

who won the voice 2020

All but one of Scotland’s cabinet ministers have been white – this SNP leadership race could be a turning point | Nasar Meer

Humza Yousaf, the frontrunner, is both antiracist and a nationalist. In Scotland,…

Sunak says he will cut taxes ‘over time’ as he reveals new economic priorities

PM signals that business tax cuts more likely than personal ones as…