Skrunda
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Skrunda | |
City rights | 1996 |
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Location of Skrunda within Latvia | |
Location | |
Other names | Schrunden |
Mayor | Nellija Kleinberga |
Number of city council members | 9 |
District | Kuldīga District |
Area | 7.912 km² (3 sq mi) |
Rural territory | 257.908 km² (100 sq mi) |
Elevation | 50 m (164 ft) |
Population | 2,637 |
Density | 333 /km² (862 /sq mi) |
Postal code | LV-3326 |
Calling code | +371 33 |
Time zone | EET (UTC+2) |
Summer (DST) | EEST (UTC+3) |
Homepage of Skrunda |
Skrunda (pronunciation ) is a city in Latvia.
[edit] Soviet Military Complex
The small town of Skrunda, 150 km from Riga in Latvia, was the site of two Hen House radars built in the 1960s. The 60-meter structure was to have been one of the most important Soviet stations for listening to objects in space; Soviet early warning radars.
Pursuant to an agreement “On the Legal Status of the Skrunda Radar Station During its temporary Operation and Dismantling”, signed by Latvia and the Russian Federation on 30 April 1994, the Russian Federation had been allowed to run the Hen House station for four years, after which it was obliged to dismantle the station within eighteen months. The deadline for dismantling was 29 February 2000. Russia asked Latvia to extend the lease on the Dnepr station at Skrunda for at least two years, until the new Daryal station under construction near Baranovichi became operational. Riga rejected these requests, and the radar was closed on 04 September 1998.
In a joint New year statement, the presidents of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania urged Russian President Boris Yeltsin to complete the pullout of all Russian troops from the region, as promised, in 1994.
All materials of value where stripped from the site, leaving the concrete remains of the 60 buildings that comprised the former complex. The area is now a nature reserve.
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