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an increasing number of speeches in recent months advocating national, racial,
religious or political hatred, along with instances of racist and xenophobic violence.
64. Additionally, war propaganda was pervasive in Ukraine, giving rise to
attempts to identify “enemies” and “traitors”. Ultranationalist far-right groups had
fostered “anti-communist hysteria”, leading to acts of vandalism, aggression and
threats against leaders, members and sympathizers of communis t groups.
65. The organization stressed that two issues required particular attention. The
first was an attempt to ban the Communist Party of Ukraine by means of a suit filed
in July 2014 by the Minister of Justice. Hearings were held in August and
September, but the trial had been suspended indefinitely because one of the judges
involved in the case had had his computer and other documents seized by law
enforcement officials in a raid of his office. Concurrently, over 300 criminal
proceedings have been initiated against Communist Party members.
66. The second issue concerned a package of four bills adopted on 9 April 2015 by
parliament. Known as the “Decommunization Laws”, the bills had been signed on
15 May and had gone into effect. They allegedly outlined an official version of
twentieth-century Ukrainian history and made any challenge to the official version a
criminal offence. The laws also banned the dissemination of communist ideology
and the use of its symbols and provided for an extensive decommunization of the
public space, including name changes for towns, streets and schools associated with
the communist past. Additionally, the laws officially recognized members of the
ultra-right political group, the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists, as “fighters
for the country’s independence”.
67. For these reasons, the International Association of Democratic Lawyers called
upon the Government of Ukraine to fulfil its human rights obligations and put a stop
to the current antidemocratic and belligerent trend in Ukraine.
E.
Latvian Human Rights Committee
68. The Latvian Human Rights Committee addressed the events and actions taken
during the years 2014-2015. The organization’s first main concern was the
glorification of the Latvian Legion of Waffen SS, the main Latvian unit that fought
alongside the Nazis in the Pskov region of the Soviet Union in 1944. Although the
parliament of Latvia could not officially celebrate 16 March as “Legion Day”,
owing to controversy, the day was nevertheless celebrated by many individuals who
marched in the streets; there were typically between 1,000 and 1,500 marchers.
While the current Head of Government and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs had tried
to distance themselves from the marches by referring to freedom of express ion,
politicians spoke of the marches in terms of “pride” and “remembering heroes”.
69. The second concern involved a musical staged in the cities of Riga and Liepaja
dedicated to Herberts Cukurs, an aviator who had participated in the Holocaust as a
member of the Arajs Commando. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Latvia and the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Israel had both condemned the musical. Despite these
official positions, individuals, including the actor who played the leading role of
Cukurs, claim that Cukurs was a victim of rumours and “a big fairy tale” and that
there was no evidence of his having participated in the Holocaust.
15-13793
15/21