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27 Nov, 2024 11:04

Ukraine backs down on WWII Nazi massacre exhumations

Kiev no longer objects to Poland’s research regarding the victims of nationalist fighters
Ukraine backs down on WWII Nazi massacre exhumations

Kiev will no longer block Polish requests to exhume the remains of ethnic Poles massacred by Ukrainian Nazi collaborators during World War II in what is now Western Ukraine, the two nations announced on Tuesday.

The commitment has been included in a joint statement signed by Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski and his Ukrainian counterpart, Andrey Sibiga, during a meeting in Warsaw. The issue has been a constant irritant in bilateral relations since Kiev imposed a moratorium on such research in 2017.

Between 1943 and 1945, militants from the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) murdered at least 60,000 ethnic Poles in the regions of Volhynia and Eastern Galicia. Some estimates put the death toll as high as 120,000, and the Polish government considers the massacre a genocide.

Modern Ukraine has celebrated the perpetrators as “freedom fighters” and “national heroes.” The UPA allied with invading Nazi Germans – a partnership which fuels the popularity of Nazism among nationalists to this day.

In addition to Poles, the UPA slaughtered Jews, Russians, and Ukrainians they accused of being Soviet collaborators.

Polish officials had described the ban on the exhumation and reburial of the victims as “shocking,” after the restriction was issued by the Institute of National Remembrance, a hotbed of modern Ukrainian nationalism.

Pavel Klimkin, who served as the Ukrainian foreign minister in 2017, has added fuel to the fire with his rebuke of the criticism. If Poles oppose the lionization of people such as nationalist leader Stepan Bandera in Ukraine, they should give the same treatment to Polish statesman Jozef Pilsudski, who suppressed a Ukrainian insurgency in Galicia, Klimkin wrote in the Polish newspaper Rzeczpospolita.

Similar flare-ups have occurred throughout the years, with the latest incident taking place in August, when then-Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba was confronted about the moratorium during a visit to Poland. He responded by bringing up mass deportations of ethnic Ukrainians from Poland after World War II. Prime Minister Donald Tusk threatened to block Ukraine’s bid to join the EU in retaliation.

Operation Vistula in Poland in 1947 was one of several forced relocations in post-war Europe. Warsaw, which was allied with Moscow at the time, justified the removal of some 140,000 people by a need to undermine the base of support for remaining UPA militants operating on its soil.

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