Thursday, May 21, 2015

Ukraine Honors Nationalist Groups That Committed Ethnic Cleansing And/Or Allied With The Nazis During The Second World War

A statue of Lenin in Slavyansk, eastern Ukraine. Symbols of Ukraine's Soviet past have become collateral victims of the struggle over the country's future. © Sergei Supinsky, AFP

The Guardian: Ukraine bans Soviet symbols and criminalises sympathy for communism

New laws also honour controversialist nationalist groups that committed ethnic cleansing or allied with the Nazis for part of second world war

Two new laws that ban communist symbols while honouring nationalist groups that collaborated with the Nazis have come into effect in Ukraine, raising concerns that Kiev could be stifling free speech and further fragmenting the war-torn country in the rush to break ties with its Soviet past.

The first law “on the condemnation of the communist and Nazi totalitarian regimes” forbids both Soviet and Nazi symbols, making something as trivial as selling a USSR souvenir, or singing the Soviet national hymn or the Internationale, punishable by up to five years in prison for an individual and up to 10 years in prison for members of an organization.

WNU Editor: For most Ukrainians .... they have far more pressing matters than reading up on news reports that Soviet symbols have been banned and that sympathy for Communism is now criminalized. But honoring nationalist groups that committed ethnic cleansing and/or allied with the Nazis during the second world war .... that is having an impact outside of the country. Kudos to the The Guardian for at least reporting on it .... this is another one of those stories that most Western media outlets have choose to ignore or underplay.

2 comments:

Daniel said...

I'd say that the new, European Ukraine looks stunningly like a poorer, smaller, more violent Russia with some polar reversals when it comes to historical memory, but in truth many European countries have stupid laws like this. Either way they are certainly going to be used to harass any malcontents, the way similar laws are used in Russia. While it is true that they have bigger problems right now, I do think such laws make their long term prospects even worse. Not a cheery thought.

Vlad said...

WNU, honoring Stalin like it's done in Russia and occupied Donetsk is far more better??? Which groups committed ethnic cleansing? Are you reading history printed in Kremlin? More, far more Russians were allied with Hitler in WW2 then any other soviet republic. Get your facts straight...