The
EU's rejection last week of the demand by foreign ministers from
Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania and Romania
to "treat Communist crimes according to the same standards" as those of Nazi regimes has been welcomed by Simon Wiesenthal Israel Director
Efraim Zuroff.
Mr Zuroff said that this attempt to push the "so-called double genocide law… reeks of antisemitism".
The campaign was launched in 2008 by a group of 40
Eastern European leaders and intellectuals, among them Vaclav Havel
and Emanuelis Zingeris. The latter, said Mr Zuroff, "has done more to harm Jewish interests in Lithuania than any other person. The
aim is to institute a false equivalence between Communism and Nazism."
Led by the Lithuanian foreign minister, the group
urged Viviane Reding, the European Justice Commissioner, to support
the law. They were told that the EU does not have legal grounds for
this. The EU justice commissioner's spokesman, Matthew Newman, said
that laws regarding cross-border crimes - including those related
to race-hate and xenophobia - do not mention totalitarianism and
that the commission rejects the idea of double genocide. "The bottom line is, obviously, what they did was horrendous, but Communist regimes
did not target ethnic minorities," he said.
For the time being, the EU has thwarted this attempt
to relativise the Holocaust, destroy its unique status and turn it
into just another tragedy, according to Zuroff.
"This is an intent to turn everything topsy-turvy," said
Zuroff. "If Communism equals Nazism, then Communism is genocide, which it is not. If Communism
is genocide, then Jews committed genocide because among the Communists,
some of them were Jews. If Jews committed genocide, then obviously
it does undermine the arguments of Jews against the peoples in Eastern
Europe, who helped the Nazis mass-murder the Jews. In other words,
this is designed to deflect the criticism of Nazi collaboration in
Eastern Europe which was far more lethal than Nazi collaboration
anywhere else."
dnevnik.rs
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