His remarks came after the naming of a Ukrainian Special Operations Forces unit after "Heroes of the UPA" and President Volodymyr Zelensky's participation in the reburial ceremony of OUN leader Andriy Melnyk drew sharp reactions in Poland.
Mahda said the naming of the military unit was a grassroots initiative, not a top-down directive. "This was an initiative of that Special Operations Forces subunit, not a decision made at the top. It is a way of honoring those who fought for Ukrainian independence", he said.
For many Ukrainians, he argued, the UPA functions primarily as a symbol of statehood, not of ethnic violence. "Members of the UPA also fought against Nazism, and against Communism", he said.
Mahda attributed Polish political reactions partly to domestic electoral dynamics. "Ukrainians will be the scapegoat of this campaign — for the right, which is quite natural, but also for [ruling centrist] Civic Coalition", he said, noting Poland's parliamentary campaign had effectively already begun.
Poland and Ukraine have long disagreed over the legacy of the OUN and UPA. Polish historians designate the 1943 massacres of Poles in Volhynia as genocide; Ukrainian accounts more commonly frame the events as a mutual armed conflict.
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Source: PAP