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Poland wants to go to court over Katyn massacre

More than 80 years after the massacre of more than 21,000 Poles near Katyn by the Soviet secret police, Polish President Andrzej Duda wants to seek justice before international justice. “Genocide does not expire. Therefore, I will request that this case reach international courts,” Duda said in a speech today. He will take appropriate action “in the near future.” Duda did not say which court Poland wants to appeal to.

In his speech, Dudley also referred to alleged Russian war crimes in Ukraine. “Forgotten and unpunished war crimes and crimes against humanity fuel a sense of impunity among perpetrators,” he said. “It’s like giving the green light to your successors and supporters.” This is reflected today in “Russia’s brutal aggression against independent and democratic Ukraine”.

After the Red Army invaded Poland in September 1939, more than 21,000 Poles – mostly officers, but also intellectuals and church representatives – were arrested and taken to Russian prison camps. In April and May 1940, they were shot by the Russian secret police on the orders of the Moscow Interior Ministry and buried in mass graves in the Katyn Forest near the city of Smolensk.