Poland did not invite a delegation from Russia to attend last weeks ceremony commemorating the liberation of the Nazi death camp Auschwitz.
Russian President Vladimir Putin called the decision to bar Russia from the event a “shameful” and “strange” gesture, especially given the presence of the Ukrainian delegation at the gathering, he said.
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RT reports: The 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz was observed on International Holocaust Remembrance Day on January 27. This marks the day in 1945 when Soviet troops liberated the Nazi death camp in occupied Poland.
The ceremony was attended by 56 Auschwitz survivors, along with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky, French President Emmanuel Macron, the UK’s King Charles, and other leaders. Russia was not invited, despite being the direct successor to the Soviet Union, reportedly due to the Ukraine conflict and Poland’s opposition to Russia’s military operation.
“This is such a strange, shameful thing to do,” Putin said in an interview with Russia 1 journalist Pavel Zarubin on Sunday, adding that events such as the Auschwitz commemoration should be free of politics.
“They can treat Russia’s politics today any way they like. They can treat the head of the Russian state, me, any way they like. No one is asking for any invitation. But if they thought about it, they could have acted much more subtly,” Putin went on to say. Warsaw should have invited the surviving Soviet soldiers who took part in the liberation of the camp or their descendants to the ceremony, especially given the fact that Ukrainian representatives took part, he stated.
“To invite people who have chosen Bandera as their national hero… is very strange,” Putin said, referring to Stepan Bandera, a leader of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) during WWII. The UPA allied with the invading Nazi German army and massacred Poles, Jews, Russians, and Ukrainians that they accused of collaborating with the Soviet army. Former Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko declared Bandera and other UPA members national heroes in 2010, which was later reaffirmed by the current regime in Kiev. Ukrainian nationalists hold annual torchlit marches to mark Bandera’s birthday, calling him the ‘father of the nation’.
Putin noted that Bandera was among those “guilty of the Holocaust” and “the extermination of hundreds of thousands of Jews, Russians, and Poles.”
“The leadership of Ukraine, however, elevated Bandera to the rank of a national hero, a symbol of Ukrainian statehood. Well, these are the current realities in Europe,” he said.