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Polish deputy PM vows protest over commemorative plaques in Russia

08.05.2020 13:30
A Polish deputy prime minister said on Friday his country would strongly protest amid reports that plaques commemorating Poles murdered by the Soviet-era NKVD secret police have been dismantled in a Russian town.
Polish Deputy Prime Minister and Culture Minister Piotr Gliński.
Polish Deputy Prime Minister and Culture Minister Piotr Gliński.Photo: PAP/Andrzej Lange

Two plaques commemorating the victims of the 1940 Katyn Massacre of Poles by the Soviets have been removed from the NKVD’s former regional headquarters in the town of Tver, 180 km north-west of Moscow, Ukrainian broadcaster Radio Svoboda reported on Thursday.

Polish Deputy Prime Minister and Culture Minister Piotr Gliński said in a media interview on Friday that the incident was a "very sad development" in Polish-Russian relations.

"This is sad, and we will certainly protest strongly," he added.

One of the plaques bore a bilingual, Russian and Polish, inscription, reading: “In memory of the POWs from the Ostashkov camp killed by the NKVD in Kalinin [now Tver]. A warning to the world,” according to public broadcaster Polish Radio’s IAR news agency.

Gliński told Polish Radio on Friday that the memorial disappeared following “pressure” in Russia “to dismantle the plaque, which speaks the truth about obvious and actual facts and is dedicated to the memory of the murdered Poles.”

Earlier, Poland’s Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) lambasted what it described as “a new wave of efforts to cover up the traces of the Katyn crime by the authorities of present-day Russia.”

The head of the Institute of National Remembrance, Jarosław Szarek, told Polish Radio on Thursday that the removal of the plaques was part of “a new form of Russia’s historical policy.”

He added that, in presenting the history of World War II, “the Russian authorities are returning to the communist, Soviet-era narrative.”

Three American senators last month announced a resolution commemorating the 80th anniversary of the Katyn Massacre of Polish officers and civilians in Soviet Russia during World War II.

The resolution, spearheaded by Republican Senator Jim Risch and Democrats Bob Menendez and Dick Durbin, honours the lives and legacy of the victims of the murder.

It also recognises those who fought to tell the truth of the massacre despite a Soviet cover-up campaign, and condemns efforts by the present-day Russian government to spread disinformation about the history of World War II.

Some 22,000 Polish prisoners of war and intellectuals were killed in the spring of 1940 on orders from top Soviet authorities in what is known as the Katyn Massacre.

Following the Soviet invasion of Poland in September 1939, thousands of Polish officers were deported to camps in the Soviet Union.

POWs from camps in Kozelsk, Starobelsk and Ostashkov as well as Poles held in prisons run by the Soviet Union's NKVD secret police were among those murdered in April 1940.

(gs/pk)

Source: IAR