Tony Halpin in Tallinn
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Estonia’s Prime Minister paid his respects for the first time today before a monument to the Red Army that had occupied his country for half a century.
But the gesture by Andrus Ansip did little to heal bitter divisions over the Bronze Soldier, which have triggered Estonia’s worst rioting since independence in 1991 and plunged relations with Russia into crisis.
Mr Ansip bowed his head as flowers were laid at the foot of the Bronze Soldier at a military cemetery in the capital Tallinn. It was the first time that Estonia had honoured the Red Army officially as it sought to re-cast the meaning of the statue during a day of events to commemorate victims of World War II.
Russia’s ambassador, Nikolai Uspensky, refused to join other diplomats at the cermemony. He said that Russia would honour its war dead tomorrow, which is traditionally marked in Moscow as Victory Day.
Most Estonians regard the Bronze Soldier as a symbol of 50 years of occupation by the Soviet Union. But Estonia’s Russian minority, who make up a quarter of its 1.3 million people, consider it a memorial to the millions who died to defeat Nazi Germany.
They reacted violently 9 days ago when the government moved the statue to the cemetery from a square in central Tallinn where it had stood since 1947.
Mr Ansip and Defence Minister Jaak Aaviksoo also attended ceremonies at a Holocaust memorial outside Tallinn and at a cemetery commemorating soldiers who had died in Estonia fighting for the Nazis and the Soviet Union.
The government said that the ceremonies were intended to honour the victims of the war and those who had died helping to defeat fascism in Europe. But in a sign of the continued tensions, President Toomas Hendrick Ilves and Mr Ansip issued a statement urging Estonians to maintain “dignity towards oneself and others”.
“The anniversary of the end of World War II makes us all think about a victory over a certain totalitarian regime,” they said. “For many, the end of World War II means the victory of freedom over tyranny, and for many it means that one violent regime was replaced by another.” The Kremlin flatly rejects any view of the Red Army as an occupier, insisting that the Soviet Union liberated Europe from fascism at a cost of 26 million lives. Russia revised the number of Soviet soldiers killed in the Second World War to 8.86 million yesterday, up 200,000 on its previous estimate in 1993.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused the European Union and NATO this week of conniving in attempts to rewrite history. Estonia’s Foreign Minister said in an interview with The Times, however, that its conflict with Russia was an important test for the two organisations.
Urmas Paet accused the Kremlin of seeking confrontation with Europe and of orchestrating last month’s violence in Estonia, saying that it was still not reconciled to the loss of its former Soviet satellites.
“Russia is trying to test where the limits are and how far they can really go to provoke a reaction from the EU and NATO,” Mr Paet said.
“Russia wants to see a weak EU and to do business with separate member states. So they would like to see tensions and misunderstandings within the EU over new members like Estonia.” Estonia sent a note to the Russian embassy yesterday confirming that the remains of 12 bodies found at the statue’s former location were probably Soviet soldiers. It asked for help in tracing relatives of soldiers believed to lie there so that DNA tests could be conducted to identify them before a reburial next month.
Police maintained a heavy presence in Tallinn to prevent any further violence. Estonia’s Russian community remains resentful.
Nikolai Karayev, a journalist for the Russian-language newspaper Day by Day, said: “When the authorities removed the statue it was a sign that they don’t respect our rights to sacred things any more. They insulted us and many feel angry.
“Everyone was shocked by the riots and now we have a situation where the Estonians are afraid of us and the Russians are angry at them. But mostly Russians feel betrayed by the authorities.”
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Moving this statue into a war memorial cemetary seems the rightful place for such a thing. Estonians have not been disrespectful toward Russians whatsoever. Why should this statue which is a painful reminder of Soviet occupation and horrors experienced by native Estonians be in the center of its capital city. It should have been moved a long time ago. Let us remember history folks, for those who have forgotten or are confused. One may cry out that the soviet soldiers liberated Europe from the Nazis, yet Stalin and Hitler had a secret agreement to divide up Europe between them, this is known as the Molotov-Ribbentrop act. Western Europe was to be taken by Hitler while Eastern Europe was to be taken by Stalin. The Soviets only began fighting the Nazis when Hitler went back on his word and decided to take Estonia as well. Estonia finally has Independance once again, let them enjoy it and put the past where it belongs, in a cemetary!
T, Toronto, Canada
estonia destroys monuments to the soldiers who were fighting with the Nazis. Those young boys and girls were killed long before that so called occupation. Now they erect new monuments glorifying estonian SS divisions - those who were murdering Judith, Belarusian, Ukrainian, Russian and their own Estonians families. Now they rebuilt one synagogue... How many were destroyed? How long did it take to build just one? That's democracy - EU you worth such cynical member!
Bernard, Perth Australia
Bernard, Perth , Australia/ WA
Lihula monument has been dismantled since long already, btw...
Külli, Tartu,
Even though I disagree with Oleg's spitting, I hardly think the Lihula monument could be called a small commemorative stone, Raivo. It was a monument with a picture of a Nazi on it and it was a stupid thing to do. And I say this as an Estonian who's grandfather was conscripted into the German army. I'm ashamed of the Lihula monument but it is beyond insulting to call all Estonians Nazis. Grow up, people.
Krõõt, Tallinn,
Etonians who died fighting the Red Army were fighting along-side the Nazis (while Nazis were there) and when the Nazis were kicked out of Soviet Estonia, Estonians who were not so "lucky" to bail out to Reich with the Germans, fought (well, "fought" is too big of a word to use, rather attempted to "resist") the Red Army out of pure doom and desperation, for the hangman's noose (for treason and collaboration with the enemy) was indeed well-deserved by them. That's why putting "a small commemorative stoneto the cemetery in a small town Lihula to Estonians who died fighting the Red Army" would have been just a spit on the graves of the people, like the ones burried at the "relocated" Bronze Soldier, who have given up their lives ridding the world of the Nazi scum (German, Estonian, etc.). And by the way, didn't International Tribunal at Nurenberg declare SS a criminal organization?! All more reason to erect a monument in Pyarnu to Esonian SS, right? Honoring the WRONG dead...Sick!Shrug...
Oleg, Honolulu, HI, USA
This topic is completely misinterpreted. The Prime Minister of Estonia, paying respect to the monument for the victims of World War II, is not an attempt to appease Russia. The monument in question, the statue of bronze soldier, has never been called a monument for Red Army. It was originally called the "monument to the liberators of Tallinn". This is why the leaders of Estonia never before paid respect to that monument, as it clearly symbolized the occupation of Estonia. Now, by moving the statue to the military cemetery in the center of Tallinn, a walking distance from its previous location, its location in the cemetery associates it with the commemoration of the victims of World War II, against which the authorities of Estonia never were, no matter whether they were the soldiers of the Red Army, or anyone else. At that, Estonians were not allowed to put a small commemoration stone to the cemetery in a small town Lihula to Estonians who died fighting the Red Army.
Raivo, Tallinn,
The Estonians have shown remarkable restraint as well as compasion to the Russian minority in this matter. They have relocated the double meaning symbolism to a more appropriate environment which should allow the ethnic and Russian speaking Estonians to continue on with their lives without the constant friction caused by this statue in the middle of Estonia's capital. Only the very naive are unaware,or refuse to acknowledge, Soviet Union's brutal occupation of Estonia for almost 50 years. These are the Estonian internal issues. What is extremely troubling is the rhetoric and and acts violating Geneva convention eminating out of Moscow. In the final analysys, Estonia has the legal as well as moral right to do whatever it wishes with it's statuary. They are a free country represented by duly elected government by majority vote. This whole affair would be much better served by Moscow behaving as a resposible State and allowing the Estonians to work through this problem, unencumbered.
Viljo Tart, Punta Gorda, Florida, U.S.A.