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Latvia’s Waffen-SS veterans march honoring
Nazi collaborators during
WWII.
European anti-facist & human rights organisations believe such rallies glorify
Nazism.
Latvian veterans of Waffen-SS units and their supporters have celebrated
Legion Day, an unofficial holiday honoring Nazi collaborators during WWII, with marches through downtown
Riga, Latvia’s capital.
This year the march attracted hundreds of participants.
Those taking part in the procession, some dressed in old Latvian military outfits, were carrying the national flags of Latvia,
Estonia and
Lithuania, reports
RIA Novosti.
The
Latvian government officially opposes the event, but does not prohibit it on the grounds of free speech.
Latvia’s anti-fascist activists staged a small protest, as they do every year when Latvian Waffen-SS veterans march in the capital
Riga.
Latvians who served in Waffen-SS not only fought against the
Soviet Army, but also were a part of the atrocities committed against
European Jews.
Of the 70,
000 Jews that lived in Latvia when the
Nazi Germany entered its territory, it's estimated that 67,000 died in the
Holocaust.
Russia says the
Nazi veterans’ march is a violation of international law. Anti-fascist and
Jewish human rights organizations, such as the
Simon Wiesenthal Center, believe such rallies glorify Nazism.
“Some of the people prior to joining the [Latvian Waffen-SS] Legion served in Latvian security forces, which played an active role in mass murder of the
Latvian Jews,” Dr.
Efraim Zuroff, head of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, told RT. “
People who fought for victory over Nazi Germany should be considered heroes.”
The head of the Simon Wiesenthal Center called attention to the fact that thousands of Jews from
Eastern Europe were brought to Latvia and exterminated in concentration camps by the
German Nazis and their Latvian collaborators.
Ahead of the event, Latvia’s
State Border Service was reported to be operating on a robust security regime, officially to prevent radicals from abroad from taking part in the Nazi procession.
Yet instead of barring people praising neo-Nazi ideology from entering the country, Latvian border protection refused to grant entry to representatives of three German anti-fascist organizations, co-chair of the Latvian
Anti-Fascist Committee Joseph Koren said Tuesday.
Altogether, six delegates from the
Association of
Victims of
the Nazi Regime, an organization of resistance veterans and
Germany’s
Anti-Nazi League were turned away at
Riga Airport and banned from entering Latvia.
The border guards explained their actions by an order coming from the
Office of
Citizenship and
Migration Affairs of Latvia.
Two days ahead of the Nazi celebration, lawyers of the Russia’s
Rossiya Segodnya news agency (the parent organization of RT) were denied entry to Latvia. The lawyers were to attend a court hearing following the decision of the Latvian authorities to deny official registration for
Sputnik news agency (another part of Rossiya Segodnya) in Latvia last August.
The
Latvian Legion of the Waffen-SS consisted of almost
150,000 Latvians and was split into two divisions.
The legion was created in 1943 on the orders of
Adolf Hitler. On March 16,
1944, the legion was deployed against the
Soviet Red Army near the town of
Pskov. It was among the last of the
Nazi forces to surrender in
1945.
The Waffen-SS march has been held annually on March 16 since
1998.
- published: 17 Mar 2016
- views: 167