Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06VILNIUS698
2006-07-27 11:15:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Vilnius
Cable title:  

RUSSIA DENIES VISAS TO LITHUANIAN STUDENTS WISHING TO HONOR

Tags:  PREL PHUM LH RU 
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VZCZCXYZ0009
PP RUEHWEB

DE RUEHVL #0698 2081115
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 271115Z JUL 06
FM AMEMBASSY VILNIUS
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 0423
INFO RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW PRIORITY 2428
UNCLAS VILNIUS 000698 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS
SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958:N/A
TAGS: PREL PHUM LH RU
SUBJECT: RUSSIA DENIES VISAS TO LITHUANIAN STUDENTS WISHING TO HONOR
DEPORTEE GRAVES IN SIBERIA


-------
SUMMARY
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UNCLAS VILNIUS 000698

SIPDIS

SIPDIS
SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958:N/A
TAGS: PREL PHUM LH RU
SUBJECT: RUSSIA DENIES VISAS TO LITHUANIAN STUDENTS WISHING TO HONOR
DEPORTEE GRAVES IN SIBERIA


--------------
SUMMARY
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1. (SBU) The Russian Embassy in Vilnius denied visas on July 21 to
members of a local youth organization that planned to visit the
Siberian graves of Soviet-era Lithuanian deportees. The Council of
Lithuanian Youth Organizations (LiJOT) planned the expedition to the
Krasnoyarsk region, where Soviets sent 165 Lithuanians to serve as
laborers in 1948. LiJOT has written a letter to Lithuania's
president, parliament, and government asking for assistance. The
Foreign Ministry voiced its objection to the visa refusals and
stated that Russia should expect a reciprocal response. End
summary.

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VISA DENIAL REFLECTS A DIFFERENT APPROACH TO HISTORY
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2. (SBU) The Council of Lithuanian Youth Organizations (LiJOT),
which represents the interests of national youth organizations and
promotes community involvement and political awareness, planned a
trip to the Krasnoyarsk region in Siberia. Of an estimated 150,000
Lithuanians sent to work camps and prisons during Soviet occupation,
the Soviets forced 165 of those into service as forestry workers in
Krasnoyarsk in 1948. Approximately 50 Lithuanians are buried in a
cemetery in the region. According to the trip's itinerary, the
participants would learn about the living conditions of those exiled
during the Soviet occupation and have the opportunity to decorate
the graves of Lithuanian exiles who perished there. Additionally,
the visit would provide Lithuanian youth leaders with a first-hand
experience to describe to fellow students back home. To raise
public awareness of the tour, former Lithuanian Ambassador to the
United States, Vygaudas Usackas, and his son signed up to take part.



3. (SBU) LiJOT told us the Russian Embassy did not provide a reason
for the visa refusals. LiJOT said that the Russians viewed the
commemoration of victims of Soviet rule as a politically sensitive
subject, and the organization's president believes this is the sole
reason for the visa denials. LiJOT succeeded in organizing a similar
trip to Irkutsk, Russia, in June 2006. Members of that group went
to a Lithuanian cemetery and met with local descendants of
Lithuanian exiles. However, LiJOT's president expects his group
will not receive visas for further expeditions planned for August.
In anticipation of this move, the organization has written letters
to Lithuania's president, parliament, and government, asking for
help in obtaining visas for future expeditions to other places of
exile in the Komya, Tomsk, Perm, and Tumen regions of Russia.

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REFUSAL IRKS FOREIGN MINISTRY
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4. (SBU) Lithuania's Foreign Ministry has formally protested
Russia's decision. A ministry official publicly stated that the
Lithuanian response to the incident will be based on parity in visa
issuance. The deputy chair of the Parliamentary Foreign Affairs
Committee, Audronius Azubalis, criticized Russia's conduct in the
matter and said that, in refusing to issue visas to a group of
Lithuanian youth going to Siberia to visit the graves of Lithuanian
exiles, Russia resembles Belarus.

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COMMENT
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5. (SBU) Russia's continued refusal to recognize the forced
annexation of Lithuania by the Soviet Union and its efforts to block
public recognition of Lithuanian deportations only serve to embitter
local attitudes toward Russia. With energy security woes, Russia's
sheltering of disgraced politician Viktor Uspaskich, and airspace
violations currently defining Lithuanian public views of Russia,
these visa denials will only reinforce the common (if not unanimous)
view here that Russia is a hostile state.

KELLY