The
European commission has rejected calls from eastern Europe to introduce
a so-called double genocide law that would criminalise the denial
of crimes perpetrated by communist regimes, in the same way many
EU countries ban the denial of the Holocaust.
Last week six countries wrote to Viviane Reding, the European justice commissioner,
calling for the "public condoning, denial and gross trivialisation of totalitarian crimes" to be punished.
Foreign ministers from Lithuania, Latvia, Bulgaria,
Hungary, Romania and the Czech Republic said communist crimes "should be treated according to the same standards" as those of Nazi regimes, notably in those countries with Holocaust denial laws.
But the EU executive will say in a report due tomorrow
that opinion is too divided on the matter and that there is no legal
basis allowing Brussels to act.
"There is no consensus on it. The different
member states have wildly differing approaches," EU justice spokesman Matthew Newman told the Guardian. He said the commission
takes the issue "very seriously", but: "At this stage, the conditions to make a legislative proposal have not been met.
The commission will continue to keep this matter under review."
The east European countries point to the EU's ability
to make laws relating to "particularly serious" cross-border crimes and a separate EU decision permitting the crafting of rules
targeting racism and xenophobia.
But the commission says neither legal instrument mentions
totalitarianism and rejects the idea of double genocide. "The bottom line is, obviously, what they did was horrendous, but communist regimes
did not target ethnic minorities," said Newman.
According to Lithuania, whose foreign minister leads
the campaign to create a new law, the EU's understanding of genocide
should be extended to include crimes against groups defined by "social status or political convictions".
Andrius Grikienis, a spokesman for Lithuania's mission
to the EU, said: "During the first years of Soviet occupation, Lithuania lost more than 780,000
of its residents. 444,000 fled Lithuania or were repatriated, 275,697
were deported to the gulag or exile, 21,556 resistance fighters and
their supporters were killed and 25,000 died on the front."
By comparison, he said: "More
than 200,000 citizens of Jewish origin were killed by Nazis and their
collaborators."
The commission is also uneasy about wading into a
highly controversial area. A number of western EU countries oppose
the proposal, suggesting that it is a thinly-veiled attempt at rehabilitation
of domestic collaborators while antisemitism remains a live issue
on the streets and in the media in the east.
On 25 November, the ambassadors to the Lithuanian
capital, Vilnius, of seven EU states including the UK sent a letter
to the country's president complaining about a newspaper article
by an interior ministry historian, Petras Stankeras, that described
the Holocaust as a "legend".
In the letter, they complained about how a court in
May had ruled that the swastika is a "traditional Lithuanian symbol" while "spurious attempts are made to equate the uniquely evil genocide of the Jews with
Soviet crimes against Lithuania, which, though great in magnitude,
cannot be regarded as equivalent in either their intention or result".
Efraim Zuroff, the Nazi-hunter and director of the
Simon Wiesenthal Centre's Israel office, describes the effort by
the six eastern states as a "false symmetry".
"We have no problem with a day of commemoration
for communist crimes, and indeed, something should be done, but the
Holocaust was a unique tragedy in history," he said.
"For all the terrible crimes of the USSR,
you can't compare the people who built Auschwitz with the people
who liberated it. Nazi Germany would probably not have been defeated
if it weren't for Russia."
guardian.co.uk
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