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Polish FM: Russia 'distorting' truth about removal of Soviet monuments

PR dla Zagranicy
Nick Hodge 06.04.2016 09:10
Poland's foreign ministry has stated that Russian claims about the dismantling of Soviet monuments in Poland are a “distortion” of the truth.
'The Statue of Gratefulness to the Red Army' in Mielec, southern Poland. prior to its removal in November 2015. Photo: wikimedia commons/kroton'The Statue of Gratefulness to the Red Army' in Mielec, southern Poland. prior to its removal in November 2015. Photo: wikimedia commons/kroton

Foreign Minister of Russia Sergei Lavrov said at the Kremlin on Tuesday that Poland is “leading the race” in Europe “in an attack on monuments [commemorating] Soviet citizens who died in the fight against Nazism.”

Lavrov stated that over the past twelve months, Poland “has profaned or illegally dismantled 30 monuments that symbolize not only the liberating mission of the Red Army, but also Soviet-Polish brotherhood.”

He made the comments during a session of a committee marking the 71st anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany, a meeting attended by President of Russia Vladimir Putin.

However, in a subsequent statement, Poland's foreign ministry argued that local authorities have every right to dismantle the types of monuments that have been removed thus far.

The ministry noted that a February 1994 Polish-Russian agreement “regarding burial and memorial grounds concerns exclusively war cemeteries,” and that such sites have not been altered.

In Poland there are 1,875 cemeteries and cemetery sections where Russian and Soviet soldiers are buried.

All of them are under the protection and care of state authorities and are being maintained and repaired by the Polish state.

In recent years Poland has allocated close to PLN 14 million for this purpose.”

However, the ministry stressed that “the aforementioned agreement does not, however, apply to the so-called symbolic monuments, which are solely manifestations of communist domination of Polish territory in the years 1945-1989.”

The ministry noted that such monuments, several hundred of which exist in Poland, are under the administation of local authorities, which are entitled to remove them if they see fit.

In this regard, the ministry argued, Lavrov's comments send a “dishonest message concerning this issue... based on a distortion” of the legal realities.

Soviet memorials on Polish soil remain controversial as the liberation of Nazi-occupied Poland by the Red Army towards the end of World War II led to the installation of a Moscow-backed communist regime in Warsaw that endured until 1989. (nh/pk)

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