P o l s k i e W i e ś c i
Showing posts with label Katyn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Katyn. Show all posts

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Poland: six years since Smolensk crash

Poles commemorate today the 6th anniversary of the 2010 Smolensk plane crash that killed 96, including the President.


Poland: six years since Smolensk crash Read more>>>http://eurone.ws/10v6D2
Posted by euronews on Sunday, April 10, 2016




Lech Kaczynski and his wife were part of a high-profile delegation of 96 who died when their plane crashed on landing in Smolensk in April 2010.


They were travelling to the area to commemorate the Katyn massacre of Polish nationals during the Second World War.

The wreckage of the plane and its black boxes are stiil in Russia, where they were sent for examination.



A delegation of almost 200 people including victims' families and Polish officials attended memorial services held at the crash site in Smolensk, western Russia.

In Warsaw, the commemorative events were held from 6 a.m. to midnight. Prime Minister Beata Szydło and PiS leader Jarosław Kaczyński, the dead president’s twin brother, attended a memorial ceremony at the Powazki military cemetery. Observances were also held in front of the Presidential Palace, where Kaczynski laid a wreath 
and unveiled a memoral plaque to his late brother.

Commemorations gathered crowds on the streets of Warsaw. According to Warsaw authorities, events attracted 22,000 people. 

In the southern city of Cracow, President Andrzej Duda, a former aide to the late president, and the late president's daughter, Marta Kaczynska placed flowers at the tomb of Lech Kaczyński and his wife, Maria, in a crypt Wawel Cathedral.

President Duda called on for mutual forgiveness over all things that were said in the context of the Smolensk tragedy. He stressed that unity is what Poland currently needs.

Law and Justice party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski unveils a plaque commemorating his twin brother, former Polish President Lech Kaczynski, as part of ceremonies marking the sixth anniversary of the Polish presidential plane crash in Smolensk, Russia.

However, Kaczynski, in a speech concluding Sunday commemorations in Warsaw, said that forgiveness is needed but should be preceded by confession and punishment. Kaczynski blamed the former government of Donald Tusk for going at great lengths to erase the Smolensk tragedy from memories of Poles. 

He said that there will soon be set up a special committee charged with a task of building a monument to Smolensk crash victims in Krakowskie Przedmiescie street, in the historic heart of Warsaw.

He also said that Poland needed to “establish the truth” about what happened six years ago referring to the recent decision of the PiS government to reopen investigation into Smolensk plane crash. Defense Minister Antoni Macierewicz has appointed a new commission for the probe. 

Macierewicz has been one of the most prominent defenders of a conspiracy theory that the plane crash was a political assassination of the Polish president orchestrated by Russia, with the involvement of Germany and Polish moderates and that an explosive device was planted in the plane to bring it down. He has said that the three previous investigations - two Polish and one Russian, that blamed human error and bad weather were riddled with "mistakes" and "abnormalities”.

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Ruling on Katyn Killings Highlights Russia-Poland Rift

from the NY Times, Oct 21, 2013

Ruling on Katyn Killings Highlights Russia-Poland Rift


LONDON — In the long-simmering and emotional debate over a notorious mass killing during World War II, the European Court of Human Rightsruled Monday that Russia had failed to comply with its obligations to adequately investigate the massacre of more than 20,000 Polish prisoners of war by the Soviet secret police in 1940.
But the court said it had no jurisdiction over the massacre itself or the subsequent treatment of the relatives of the dead, prompting an outcry in Poland and expressions of satisfaction among officials in Moscow, underscoring the deep and lingering divisions inspired by the mass killing in the Katyn Forest near Smolensk.
“We are rather disappointed by this verdict,” said Poland’s deputy foreign minister, Artur Nowak-Far, according to Agence France-Presse. “The ruling does not take into account all the arguments of the Polish side that have here a great moral and historic right.”
Andrzej Melak, president of the Association of the Families of Katyn Victims, called the judgment “scandalous,” adding that it was “inadmissible and incomprehensible.”
“The failure to condemn this genocide and the impunity of its perpetrators led to it being repeated in Rwanda, the Balkans, and it will be repeated again,” he said. “Poles will not accept a ruling like this.”
But in Moscow, Georgy Matyushkin, the deputy minister of justice and Russia’s envoy to the European Court of Human Rights, told the Interfax news agency that the ruling showed that “the court does not have the conventional duty to investigate the events at Katyn” and that it would thus be “illogical” for it to address allegations of improper treatment of the victims’ relatives.
“The Russian authorities from the very beginning said that these events are located outside of the frame of the jurisdiction of the European court from the point of view of the time frame,” Mr. Matyushkin said. “And this point of view was accepted by the European court.”
The Polish prisoners, including nearly 5,000 senior Polish Army officers, disappeared in late 1939 and early 1940 during a period of German-Soviet cooperation, when Soviet forces occupied eastern Poland. In April and May 1940, they were taken to the Katyn woods, near Smolensk, west of Moscow, where they were executed and then buried in mass graves there and in two other villages.
After decades of denial, Russia admitted responsibility for the massacre in 1990 and opened a criminal investigation. The investigation was closed 14 years later, but much of its findings were classified and no one was publicly held responsible.
Relatives of the victims complained to the court in 2007 that the Russian inquiry had been ineffective and that the Russian authorities had displayed a dismissive attitude to requests for information about the event. The case was brought by 15 Polish citizens who are relatives of 12 victims of the massacre — police and army officers, an army doctor and a primary school headmaster — according to court filings.
The court’s highest panel, the Grand Chamber, ruled unanimously that “Russia had failed to comply with its obligation” under the European Convention on Human Rights to “furnish necessary facilities for examination of the case,” according to a statement from the court in Strasbourg, France.
But the ruling said the court had no jurisdiction to examine complaints over the killings themselves because the massacre took place a decade before the rights convention became international law and 58 years before Russia acceded to it, in 1998.
That period was too long for a “genuine connection” to be established between the killings and Russia’s accession to the convention, the ruling said. The court rejected an application for awarding damages.
The court also ruled that there had been no violation of the convention’s provision prohibiting inhuman or degrading treatment as it relates to the suffering of families of “disappeared” people. That part of the ruling overturned a lower court’s ruling in 2012, which found that that provision had been violated in the cases of 10 of the 15 Polish family members.
In its ruling, the Grand Chamber said Russia had not offered a “substantive analysis” for keeping the decision to close its investigation classified. “The court was unable to accept that the submission of a copy of the September 2004 decision could have affected Russia’s national security,” the ruling said.
Nikita V. Petrov, a historian for the Memorial human rights group, which has sought to declassify the decision, called the ruling a “light reprimand” that would do nothing to further the investigation.
“It’s like telling a criminal, ‘You haven’t behaved yourself very well,’ ” he said. “But it does not say that a crime is still taking place, because the government is hiding information about past criminal activities like the Katyn case.”
The massacre has continued to haunt Russian-Polish relations.
In April 2010, a plane carrying the Polish president and 95 other members of Poland’s political and military elite to a commemoration of the massacrecrashed over Smolensk, killing everyone on board. The crash led to mutual recriminations over an event intended to help heal the wound.
In November 2010, the Russian Parliament approved a statement holding Stalin and other Soviet leaders responsible for the Katyn killings.
Despite protests from Communist Parliament members, the State Duma acknowledged that archival material “not only unveils the scale of his horrific tragedy but also provides evidence that the Katyn crime was committed on direct orders from Stalin and other Soviet leaders.”
Alan Cowell reported from London, and Andrew Roth from Moscow.