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VoA: Ukraine To Investigate Crimean Tatar Deportation

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  • VoA: Ukraine To Investigate Crimean Tatar Deportation

    UKRAINE TO INVESTIGATE CRIMEAN TATAR DEPORTATION
    By Peter Fedynsky

    Voice of America
    May 18 2009

    The State Security Service of Ukraine is establishing 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 will also 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, 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.

    Stalin-era deportation kills tens of thousands of Tatars, Soviets
    deny charges

    Deportation of as many as 200,000 Crimean Tatar men, women and children
    began on May 18, 1944. They were accused of Nazi collaboration, placed
    in train cattle cars and sent to Central Asia. Tens of thousands
    perished along the way, and others died of malnutrition or disease
    soon after arriving. In 1967, the Soviet government said the charges
    were false.

    The investigation will cover the deportation era and the years
    that preceded it. The Ukrainian State Security Service has also
    declassified Soviet documents related to the execution of Crimean Tatar
    intelligentsia members. Nalyvaichenko says the forced deportation of
    innocent Armenians, Bulgarians, Germans and others from Crimea will
    also be investigated.

    Mustafa Dzhemilev, Crimean Tatar leader Crimean Tatar leader Mustafa
    Dzhemilev told VOA he welcomes the Ukrainian decision, but notes the
    purpose of the investigation is not to capture or punish anyone.

    Dzhemilev says those directly responsible for the deportation are no
    longer alive. But he says it is important to see the full picture of
    the crime, and for society to know it was in fact a crime, because
    that will help in the overall recovery of society.

    Leader says Crimean Tatars should have education in their native
    language

    Crimean Tatars were allowed to return to their homeland in the
    late 1980s and about a quarter-million have done so. There are now
    about 300,000 Tatars in Crimea, about 12 percent of the peninsula's
    population.

    But Mustafa Dzhemilev says no laws have been passed to reinstate the
    social and legal rights of Crimean Tatars. He also warns the culture
    and language of his people can disappear within decades if nothing
    is done to revive education in the native language.

    Tens of thousands participated in a rally Monday in Simferopol marking
    the 65th anniversary of the Crimean Tatar deportation.
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