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Victory Day Parades Held Across Former Soviet Union

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  • Victory Day Parades Held Across Former Soviet Union

    VICTORY DAY PARADES HELD ACROSS FORMER SOVIET UNION

    Monsters and Critics
    http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/europe/news/article_1637917.php/Victory-Day-parades-held-across-former-Soviet-Union
    May 9 2011

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (centre left) and Prime Minister
    Vladimir Putin (centre right) watch the Victory Day parade at the Red
    Square in Moscow, Russia 09 May 2011. Russian people celebrate the
    Victory over Nazi Germany in the WWII on May 09. EPA/MAXIM SHIPENKOV

    Moscow - Russia and other former Soviet republics marked the 66th
    anniversary of World War II victory over Germany with military parades
    and memorial services.

    Soldiers marched across Moscow's Red Square on Monday, following
    a minute of silence for the victims of the war and the sounding of
    bells from the Kremlin's Spassky Tower.

    The hour-long ceremony saw a march past by about 20,000 soldiers and
    flag-bearers in serried ranks, with guests of honour looking on.

    'I congratulate you for our great victory. We are obliged to remember
    the cost at which it was won - health and strength to our veterans,
    who defended our motherland,' said Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
    in a speech.

    More than 100 combat vehicles rumbled across the Red Square's
    cobblestones, most of them top-of-the-line Russian army equipment such
    as T-90 tanks, Buk-M anti-aircraft rockets, Smerch rocket artillery
    and Topol-M intercontinental ballistic missiles.

    The Russian air force successfully employed a Soviet-era tactic to
    guarantee good weather for the parade by sending planes to bomb clouds
    to the north of Moscow with silver pellets and cement powder, which
    caused them to rain and disperse before reaching the Russian capital.

    More than half a dozen bomber aircraft participated in the operation,
    which cost some 4.3 million dollars, according to news reports.

    Smaller victory parades took place in cities across Russia's
    eight times zones from the Pacific Ocean port city Vladivostok to
    Kaliningrad, a Baltic Sea port that was known as the German city
    Koenigsberg until Soviet conquest in 1945.

    Most former Soviet republics, now nations independent of the Kremlin,
    also held memorial services. A parade in the Ukrainian capital Kiev
    featured a mix of marching infantry units and school bands, followed
    by blasts from ceremonial cannon.

    'The victory over Nazism - this is our collective holiday which unites
    the people of Ukraine with all peoples of the world,' said Ukrainian
    President Viktor Yanukovych in a speech. 'For us, May 9 is a holy day.'

    A fistfight broke out in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv when
    about 30 Ukrainian nationalists clashed with pro-Russian marchers
    celebrating the Victory Day. One man was shot in the leg by an air
    pellet pistol, but no arrests were reported.

    In Yerevan, the capital of the Caucasian state Armenia, Russian and
    Armenian soldiers laid flowers next to an eternal flame memorial
    honouring war dead.

    Although most citizens of the former Soviet Union consider the war
    against Germany to have been a just one, some non-Russian nationalists
    consider Soviet liberation of their regions during the latter phases
    of the conflict the beginning of years of Russian occupation.

    An estimated 8.7 million Soviet soldiers and 18-20 million Soviet
    civilians died as a result of Germany's 1941 invasion of the Soviet
    Union. The conflict is still known as the 'Great Patriotic War'
    in most former Soviet republics.




    From: A. Papazian
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