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Ukraine Orders Probe On 1944 Deportation Of Crimean Tatars

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  • Ukraine Orders Probe On 1944 Deportation Of Crimean Tatars

    UKRAINE ORDERS PROBE ON 1944 DEPORTATION OF CRIMEAN TATARS

    WorldBulletin
    Friday, 03 July 2009 11:32

    Ukraine's President ordered Ukrainian Intelligence Service and
    Prosecutor to probe mass deportation of Crimean Tatar Muslims in 1944.

    Ukraine's President Viktor Yushchenko ordered Ukrainian Intelligence
    Service (SBU) and Prosecutor Aleksandr Medvedko to open an
    investigation on mass deportation of Crimean Tatar Muslims in 1944
    Soviet era, Crimean News agency (QHA) said on Thursday.

    The announcement came just one day before Yushchenko's two-days visit
    to Crimea between 3-5 July.

    The State Security Service of Ukraine established on May a special
    unit to investigate Stalin-era crimes against Crimean Tatars, who
    are commemorating the 65th anniversary of their mass deportation
    from Crimea.

    The investigation is expected to look into the forced deportation of
    other ethnic groups from the peninsula during World War II.

    The head of the Ukrainian State Security Service, Valentyn
    Nalyvaichenko, announced the creation of the special investigative
    unit in the Crimean capital, Aqmescit (Simferopol). Nalyvaichenko said
    Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko ordered the creation of the
    unit to investigate crimes involving the repression and destruction
    of Crimean Tatars under the Soviet Union.

    "The president thinks that the illegal and forcible mass deportation
    of Crimean Tatars in 1944 was an irrefutable fact. Also, it is another
    fact that other nationals living Crimea such as Bulgarians, Armenians
    and Greek were exiled too," QHA quoted A spokeswoman for president
    Irina Vannikova as saying.

    The Crimean Tatars are Turkic people who inhabited the Crimean
    peninsula, now a part of Ukraine, for over seven centuries.

    During World War II, the entire Tatar population in Crimea fell
    victims to Stalin's policies. In 1944 they were unjustly accused of
    being "Nazi collaborators" and deported en masse to Central Asia and
    other lands of the Soviet Union. Many died of disease and malnutrition.

    Although a 1967 Soviet decree removed the charges against Crimean
    Tatars, the Soviet government did nothing to facilitate their
    resettlement in Crimea and to make reparations for lost lives and
    confiscated property.

    More than 250,000 Crimean Tatars are back in their homeland, struggling
    to reestablish their lives and reclaim their national and cultural
    rights against many social and economic obstacles.
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