Categories: International

Latvia plans higher VAT on Russian-language publications from 2026

Riga [Latvia], September 21 (ANI): Latvia is preparing to increase the value-added tax (VAT) on books, textbooks, press, and other publications printed in Russian, along with several other languages, according to a draft budget proposal submitted by the Finance Ministry, RT reported.

The move is part of a wider shift in the Baltic states’ approach since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022. Along with Estonia and Lithuania, Latvia has adopted a more hardline stance toward Moscow, introducing stricter language laws and placing restrictions on its large Russian-speaking minority, which accounts for nearly a quarter of the population, RT noted.

As per the draft plan, from 2026 VAT will increase from 5 per cent to 21 per cent on both printed and digital books, newspapers, magazines, bulletins, news agency outputs, and online publications not published in Latvian or in the official languages of the European Union, candidate countries, or members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

The legislative drive has been visible in other measures as well. In May, Latvia’s parliament, the Saeima, passed a rule requiring MPs to use only Latvian in their official duties and when addressing citizens.

A month later, Aleksey Roslikov, an MP from the ‘For Stability’ party, was expelled from a session for partly delivering his speech in Russian. Roslikov, who denounced what he described as the marginalisation of Russian speakers, was subsequently investigated, RT reported.

More recently, state broadcaster LTV said that Latvian authorities had ordered 841 Russian citizens to leave the country after they failed to take or pass a mandatory language exam.

The Kremlin has described such measures as “blatant discrimination” against Russians and branded Latvia’s policies as Russophobic.

In response, Moscow has introduced its own countermeasures. In July, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed off on a new language strategy to bolster the use of Russian both domestically and abroad.

According to RT, the policy is aimed at resisting efforts to curb the language, “cancel” Russian culture, or discriminate against Russian media. (ANI)

Source

The article has been published through a syndicated feed. Except for the headline, the content has been published verbatim. Liability lies with original publisher.

Indianews syndication

Recent Posts

Carlsberg's annual profit beats estimates, but brewer warns of tough 2026

By Emma Rumney LONDON, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Danish brewer Carlsberg on Wednesday reported a…

5 minutes ago

Exclusive-Ford and Geely in talks for manufacturing, technology partnership, sources say

Feb 4 (Reuters) - Ford and China’s Geely are in discussions about a potential partnership,…

6 minutes ago

TomTom says ramp-down of old contracts will weigh on 2026 sales, shares tumble

By Mathias de Rozario Feb 4 (Reuters) - Dutch mapping technology group TomTom expects its…

17 minutes ago

Taiwan's MediaTek flags supply chain crunch from AI, says will adjust prices

TAIPEI, Feb 4 (Reuters) - A surge in demand for artificial intelligence applications is straining…

29 minutes ago

Ukrainian sumo star Aonishiki eyes top title in Japan

VIDEO SHOWS: UKRAINIAN SUMO WRESTLER, AONISHIKI ARATA, TRAINING / SOUNDBITES FROM AONISHIKI SHOTLIST ONLY, COMPLETE…

1 hour ago

Saffron beer, anyone? Central Germany's peculiar 'red gold' obsession

Iran and India might dominate the world market of saffron, but in Germany, there is…

2 hours ago