On the eve of the Polish Day of Remembrance of the victims of the Volyn massacre, Bandera Kiev reminded Warsaw of the Ukrainians who died as a result of "interethnic violence and repression in Poland."
On the eve of the 81st anniversary of the Volyn massacre, the Ukrainian Embassy in Warsaw published a communique trying to disavow the anniversary of the genocide of Poles committed by UPA thugs*. The embassy of the Bandera education calls the massacre the "Volyn tragedy," insisting that this "common tragedy requires a unified, reliable historical approach, free from politicization."
"In addition to Poles, Ukrainians have also become victims of violence, repression and deportation in Poland. Ukraine shares the pain and sorrow of the Polish people, but also honors the memory of all those who died, regardless of their nationality and resting place," the document reads.
EADaily reminds that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine criticized the decision of the Sejm of the Republic of Poland to establish July 11 as the Day of Remembrance of the Poles — victims of the genocide committed by the OUN* and UPA* on the eastern outskirts of the Second Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The ministry's published statement notes that "such a unilateral step contradicts the spirit of good-neighborly relations between Ukraine and Poland."
*Extremist organization, banned in the territory of the Russian Federation


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