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  • Ukraine wants Russia to recognise genocide

    Radio Netherlands, Netherlands
    Dec 22 2006

    Ukraine wants Russia to recognise genocide

    Thijs Papôt*

    22-12-2006

    Between five and seven million Ukrainians died from starvation in the
    winter of 1932-1933. The Ukrainian parliament maintains this was a
    deliberate attempt by the Soviet Union's then leader, Joseph Stalin,
    to exterminate the Ukrainian people. As such, this would make the
    famine equal to genocide.

    A monument to the genocide in Kiev

    The recent decision by parliament in Kiev - declaring that the famine
    was indeed genocide - would therefore seem to be a political move on
    the part of Ukrainian President Viktor Yuschenko to put pressure on
    the fragile relationship with Russia.

    "My mother tried to flee to Russia with her children, but I was too
    weakened by hunger, so she left me behind in a hospital,"

    says Kateryna Kholovan, who survived the famine at the age of four
    but never saw her family again.

    "The winter of famine left its mark on my body. I never grew fully,
    and I've often been ill throughout my life."

    At just 1.30 metres, Kateryna is indeed very small.

    Famine
    During the 'Holodomor' (death by starvation), as the Ukrainians refer
    to the great famine, an estimated five to seven million people lost
    their lives.

    "I remember how brigades stormed into our village and literally took
    away everything that was edible or growing in the gardens."

    How could it be that Ukraine, the grain store of the Soviet Union,
    with its fertile black soil, suddenly found itself without food? It's
    said that it was all a deliberate attempt by Joseph Stalin and the
    Communist Party in Ukraine to force Ukraine's obstinate farming
    community to accept the Soviet collectivisation of agriculture.

    Starvation as a means of repression. Historian Vasyl Marochka, who
    has studied the famine, says the evidence is conclusive:

    "The harvest was made more difficult because the farmers' cattle was
    confiscated. The harvest itself was exported to Europe and the United
    States, and Ukrainians who tried to flee were stopped at the border
    or had their passports removed."

    Material from the archives of the KGB, the one-time secret service
    of the Soviet Union, allegedly shows that Stalin himself gave the
    order that anyone who tried to steal food should be shot.

    Extermination
    However, the decision to officially describe the famine as genocide -
    which implies a targeted attempt to exterminate the Ukrainian people
    - is a controversial one.

    "Yes, mistakes were made,"
    says Sergei Gmyrya, a historian of the Communist Party in Ukraine,
    "But there was also a failed harvest, problems with collectivisation,
    and there was hunger in all parts of Europe."

    He would rather describe the famine as a 'tragedy.' However, the new
    genocide law makes that a punishable defence,
    "Because I am now, in fact, a genocide denier."

    Majority
    Ukraine's President Victor Yuschenko managed to get the law through
    parliament with a narrow majority, much to the dismay of his
    political rival, pro-Russian Prime Minister Victor Yanukovitch, who
    doesn't want to strain ties with Moscow with this painful issue from
    the Soviet era. Messrs Yuschenko and Yanukovitch are caught up in a
    fierce battle for power over the issue of whether Ukraine should
    align itself with Moscow - as Mr Yanukovitch would like - or turn
    more towards the West, as Mr Yuschenko would prefer.

    It would, therefore, seem to be no coincidence that the question of
    the famine has now ended up on the political agenda. Sergei Gmyrya
    believes that President Yuschenko is deliberately politicising the
    genocide issue for his own anti-Russian purposes.

    "Yuschenko is fanning anti-Communist hysteria and anti-Russian
    feelings in society. This weakens our relationship with Russia."

    Embargo
    In Poland too, where incomprehension at, among other things, the
    Russian embargo on Polish food products recently led to a significant
    cooling of the relationship with Moscow, the parliament has -
    unanimously - declared that the Ukrainian famine was genocide.

    Meanwhile, Mr Yuschenko is trying to get official recognition of the
    genocide from the United Nations.

    Just as the European Union has confronted Turkey with the genocide in
    Armenia, Ukraine is now calling for Moscow to acknowledge the
    genocide it suffered. With Russian President Vladimir Putin visiting
    Ukraine this weekend, this could be an opportunity to find out how
    far the Kremlin is prepared to meet that wish.

    "The question will certainly be raised at some point,"
    ays Vasyl Marochka, who has little hope of any gesture of
    recognition being forthcoming. "I was shocked recently when Russian
    Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov spoke of a 'so-called' famine. But if
    Russia wants to have moral and political authority as part of the
    international community, it has to be capable of recognising the
    mistakes of the past."

    --Boundary_(ID_h8yRCzY8eKFYdkMOybFHqQ )--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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