November 20, 2015

Verkhovna Rada recognizes deportation of Crimean Tatars in 1944 as genocide

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KYIV – The mass deportation of Crimean Tatars from their homeland in 1944 was genocide. That is according to a resolution of the Ukrainian Parliament, which was supported on November 12 by 245 national deputies present in the session hall.

A Day of Remembrance for the victims of genocide of the Crimean Tatar people will be held annually on May 18.

The resolution was adopted with an amendment suggested by Deputy Mykola Kniazhytsky.

The final text of the resolution also says that “the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine states that the systemic pressure on the Crimean Tatar people, the repression of Ukrainian citizens on a national basis, the organization of ethnically and politically motivated prosecutions of the Crimean Tatars on the temporarily occupied territory of Ukraine by the public authorities of the Russian Federation, starting from the date of temporary occupation, are a conscious policy of ethnocide of the Crimean Tatar people.”

In May 1944 about 200,000 Crimean Tatars, including women, children and the elderly, were taken from their homes during the night and loaded onto freight trains headed to Central Asia. Nearly half of those deported died from starvation or disease on the way to their final destination.

Crimean Tatars were allowed to return to Crimea following the collapse of the Soviet Union. But following Russia’s annexation of the peninsula last year, the group fears being repressed once again – this time by the Kremlin-appointed authorities in the region.

Based on reporting by UNIAN.