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Clarification or Instrumentalisation?


Newspapers are discussing the right way of dealing with the files of former communist secret services, unmasking prominent informers and calling for political consequences.


euro|topics-Dossiers on the subject of former communist secret services

Main focus of Wednesday, 23. May 2007

Ryszard Kapuscinski's secret-service past

The attempts to confront the communist past in Poland have sparked a new scandal. A Polish weekly has revealed that the internationally renowned Polish reporter ... » more


Main focus of Tuesday, 15. May 2007

The lustration dispute in Poland

On Friday, 11 May 2007, the Polish constitutional court declared the controversial lustration law, under which large sections of Polish society would be forced to ... » more


Main focus of Thursday, 26. April 2007

Bronislaw Geremek defies the Polish government

The European Member of Parliament Bronislaw Geremek may have his European mandate taken away from him because he has refused to obey the 'lustration' law. ... » more


Main focus of Thursday, 15. March 2007

Examining Poland's past

Today, a new law requiring journalists, university lecturers, teachers, lawyers and politicians to reveal any past collaboration with communist era secret services enters force in ... » more


Main focus of Friday, 12. January 2007

Poland confronts its past

Up to now, Poland has confronted its communist past only hesitantly. But the withdrawal of Warsaw Archbishop Stanislaw Wielgus from his post has fanned the ... » more


Main focus of Monday, 8. January 2007

The Church and the communist secret service

Poland is going through a dramatic crisis with its Catholic Church: » more



General

Dnevnik - Bulgaria | Friday, 1. June 2007

The renaissance of the KGB ideology

In Romania former members of the Securitate play an active role in everyday politics and in Bulgaria, former secret police members are running for election ... » more


The Irish Times - Ireland | Friday, 13. April 2007

Sociologist Zygmunt Bauman' s hidden stalinist past

"Last month, the biggest German daily, the 'Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung', published an article in which Bogdan Musial, a Polish historian, revealed renowned Polish-British sociologist Zygmunt ... » more


L'Hebdo - Switzerland | Thursday, 22. March 2007

Jacques Pilet on the polish lustration law

The Swiss columnist Jacques Pilet reviews the Polish law on lustration which came in to effect on the 15th March which will mean hundreds of thousands of Polish people having to reveal that they collaborated with the communist secret services. "No other East European country has gone this far and with good reason: » more


România Liberă - Romania | Tuesday, 20. March 2007

Confronting the past in Eastern Europe

Political expert Cristian Pirvulescu comments on the "lustration law" - a Polish law that requires members of certain groups of the population to reveal former collaboration with the communist secret services - in the context of the efforts of other countries of the former Eastern Bloc to review their communist past. The law entered force a week ago. "Anti-communism is definitely on the political agenda in the countries of Eastern Europe, albeit to differing degrees. In those countries where governments have been formed on the basis of coalitions with former communist parties (Hungary and Bulgaria) the passion for 'lustration' is relatively weak, whereas in other countries you have the opposite situation (Poland and the Czech Republic). In Romania, enthusiasm for confronting the past has ebbed since the country joined the EU and the political crisis has finished it off: » more



Poland

Gazeta Wyborcza - Poland | Tuesday, 12. June 2007

Walesa's Stasi files on the Internet

On Sunday the former Polish President and labour leader Lech Walesa published 500 pages of his secret service files on his homepage. For two years ... » more


Gazeta Wyborcza - Poland | Saturday, 12. May 2007

Polish lustration law ruled unconstitutional

Last Friday Poland's constitutional court repealed most of what is known as the lustration law, which is aimed at uncovering cooperation with the former communist ... » more


Dziennik Gazeta Prawna - Poland | Friday, 11. May 2007

Poland attacks the constitutional court

The dispute is escalating over Poland's lustration law, according to which 700,000 Poles have to turn in a declaration regarding their possible secret service work. On Thursday, one day before the Constitutional Court was to deliver its verdict on the law, the government recalled two constitutional judges, saying they had worked for the secret service. Editor in chief Robert Krasowski is furious about this "war of lustration": » more


Le Monde - France | Friday, 27. April 2007

Geremek explains why he is refusing to respect the Polish lustration law

"On several occasions I have had to sign declarations stating that I never collaborated with the [communist] secret services", explains the Member of European Parliament ... » more


Rzeczpospolita - Poland | Wednesday, 21. March 2007

Poland defends itself against criticism of its lustration law from abroad

The newspaper cites the reaction of the European press to the 'lustration law', the new Polish law requiring certain sectors of the population to reveal any cooperation with communist secret services. Reactions have been almost universally negative. Rafal Ziemkiewicz comments sarcastically: » more


El Periódico de Catalunya - Spain | Friday, 16. March 2007

Should the EU treat Poland as it did Austria in 2000 ?

The daily considers that the lustration process launched in Poland on March 15th is a "witch hunt" with authorities asking hundreds of thousands of Poles ... » more


Polityka Online - Poland | Wednesday, 28. February 2007

A book on the Polish Church's involvement with the secret services

Poland has been eagerly awaiting the publication of Father Tadeusz Isakowicz-Zaleski's 600-page book "The Priests in the Face of the Secret Service". Yesterday the book finally went on sale. It documents how four clergymen who later became bishops cooperated with the Polish secret police, but also how two who are now cardinals refused to collaborate despite reprisals. According to Adam Szostkiewicz, the book is of major importance: » more


Dziennik Gazeta Prawna - Poland | Friday, 19. January 2007

Polish writers caught up in the secret service

Poland is currently absorbed in debate about the spying activities of the former communist secret service, SB. In her 2005 book "Oblawa" (the hunt), author ... » more


Dziennik Gazeta Prawna - Poland | Friday, 5. January 2007

Spying charges against the new Archbishop of Warsaw

On Sunday, Stanislaw Wielgus is to take over the position of Archbishop of Warsaw from Józef Cardinal Glemp. This week, numerous media outlets have published the old secret service files on Wielgus that are housed at the Institute of National Remembrance (IPN). It turns out that for years, Wielgus spied on his fellow clergy as an informant for the communist secret service. Wielgus, until now Bishop of Plock, has denied the charges. The newspaper's editor in chief Robert Krasowski comments: » more


Rzeczpospolita - Poland | Friday, 30. June 2006

The handling of Stasi files in Poland

A week ago the non-party Polish Finance Minister Zyta Gilowska resigned. She had been accused of having worked for the communist secret police, an accusation she had always denied. Following her resignation, the court leading the inquiries dropped the case because according to Polish law only politicians holding office are subject to investigation under the Lustration Law. The case has triggered a heated discussion about how to deal with the country's secret service past. Former Foreign Minister Wladyslaw Bartoszewski comments: » more


Gazeta Wyborcza - Poland | Tuesday, 27. June 2006

The investigation of journalists

The right-wing nationalist Polish government plans to introduce a law under which journalists are to be subjected to investigations aimed at establishing whether they had ... » more


Gazeta Wyborcza - Poland | Saturday, 25. February 2006

Confronting the Stasi past

The former activities of Catholic priests as spies have become the focal point of Poland's confrontation with its Stasi past. In an interview led by Michal Olszewski and Malgorzata Skowronska, Bishop Tadeusz Pieronek says the wrong priorities are being set: » more


Heti Válasz - Hungary | Thursday, 12. January 2006

Confronting the Stasi Past

Poland will perhaps become the first country in Eastern Europe in which the change in system is resolutely carried through to its final consequences," columnist ... » more


Tribune de Genève - Switzerland | Tuesday, 9. January 2007

Georges Mink on the 'decommunisation' of Poland

George Mink, a professor at the Polish branch of the College of Europe (Natolin), explains in an interview conducted by Jean-François Verdonnet how Poland ... » more


Gazeta Wyborcza - Poland | Monday, 24. July 2006

The new 'Lustration Law' in Poland

In future many more people in Poland will have to prove that they did not collaborate with the secret services under communist rule. The Polish ... » more


Rzeczpospolita - Poland | Friday, 20. October 2006

Jan Zaryn on the Polish Church's confrontation with the past

The issue of how the Catholic Church should deal with its past during the communist era and the spying activities of some of its priests ... » more


Rzeczpospolita - Poland | Friday, 30. December 2005

Reorientation at the Institute of National Remembrance

Acoording to Andrzej Kaczynski, the Polish Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) will propbably set itself new goals now that Janusz Kurtyka has taken over as ... » more



Germany

Die Zeit - Germany | Thursday, 8. November 2007

Brigitte Fehrle on remembering Germany's unification

Eighteen years after the fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989, the German Bundestag is to vote on the construction of a monument ... » more


Die Presse - Austria | Friday, 15. December 2006

Stasi spies working for the Stasi revision authority

"The very authority that has been given the task of shedding light on the past of the GDR's secret service is riddled with former Stasi ... » more


Süddeutsche Zeitung - Germany | Thursday, 3. August 2006

No new revelations in the "Rosenholz" files

The "Rosenholz files," compiled by the Stasi, were brought to the US after the Wall came down in 1989 and were handed over to the Germany's Stasi documentation authority in 2003. A research group began to decode them and parts of the files are now being released. Hans Leyendecker comments: » more


Frankfurter Rundschau - Germany | Thursday, 20. July 2006

Berlin's DDR-Alltagskultur museum

In Berlin, the privately-financed Museum zur DDR-Alltagskultur, a museum about every day life in the former GDR, has opened. Harry Nutt reviews the museum in ... » more


Süddeutsche Zeitung - Germany | Monday, 6. February 2006

The Stasi and doping in sport

Thomas Kistner examines why German sport is repeatedly caught up in doping scandals and Stasi file affairs. "The history of the German Democratic Republic has ... » more



Hungary

Élet és Irodalom - Hungary | Friday, 27. April 2007

Secret police scandal involving conservative politician János Martonyi

Hungary has a new secret police scandal. Last Friday journalist Péter Kende revealed in a weekly newspaper that former Hungarian Foreign Minister János Martonyi delivered reports to the Hungarian secret police in the 1960s, and that secret police files confirmed this. According to the files, Martonyi wrote among other things reports on the Hungarian emigrant scene in Germany and France. Martonyi is a member of the right-wing conservative Fidesz party, which is constantly criticising the ruling Socialists for their past ties to the secret police. Kende comments: » more


Neue Zürcher Zeitung - Switzerland | Tuesday, 20. February 2007

Disappearing secret service files in Hungary

In Hungary only the secret service itself is allowed access to the secret files which originated during communist times. Ulrich Schmidt describes this as a ... » more


Magyar Hírlap - Hungary | Tuesday, 30. January 2007

Hungary plans to give public full access to Stasi files

Political parties in Hungary yesterday began talks about a new law which would guarantee the public unrestricted access to Stasi files, while at the same time protecting the rights of victims of the organisation's spying activities. According to Balázs Stépán, the current law is "pathological" and "full of compromises" and therefore in urgent need of reform: » more


Magyar Hírlap - Hungary | Tuesday, 22. August 2006

Former secret service functionaries in public office

György Petö, mayor of Budapest's Obuda district, has made a public statement that he worked for the former Hungarian Ministry of State Security's counterintelligence department ... » more


Magyar Hírlap - Hungary | Thursday, 17. August 2006

Europe discusses Grass's admission

Julianna R. Szekely draws parallels between the debate about Günter Grass and the scandal when Istvan Szabo's past as a Stasi informant was revealed, and she defends both artists: » more


Élet és Irodalom - Hungary | Friday, 26. May 2006

Laszlo Verga on Hungary's Stasi past

Hungarian historian Laszlo Varga calls for the Hungarian government to follow Germany's example and give the public access to Hungary's Stasi files: » more


Élet és Irodalom - Hungary | Friday, 19. May 2006

The Stasi past of scientists and scholars

People who have been exposed as former Stasi spies usually justify their actions by claiming they were forced to collaborate. Holding up renowned scientists and ... » more


Élet és Irodalom - Hungary | Friday, 3. March 2006

The Catholic Church and the past of its members

A few weeks ago historian Krisztian Ungvary exposed Bishop Laszlo Paskai as a former informer for the political police and triggered a violent debate. He summarises: » more


Neue Zürcher Zeitung - Switzerland | Friday, 10. February 2006

Confronting the Stasi past

The spying activities of well-know public figures are coming to light almost on a daily basis in Hungary, writes Susi Koltai. Those implicated include Cardinal ... » more


Népszabadság - Hungary | Saturday, 4. February 2006

Szabo's new film

The young writer Eszter Babarczy went to see Istvan Szabo's new film "Rokonok" ("Relations"). It was the opening film at the Hungarian Film Week in ... » more


Heti Válasz - Hungary | Friday, 3. February 2006

Filmmaker Peter Rudolf on confronting the Communist Past

Following the revelations about Istvan Szabo's Stasi past, the Es Magazin has now exposed two further prominent public figures as former Stasi informants: » more


Népszabadság - Hungary | Thursday, 2. February 2006

Confronting the Past

Hungary seems to have difficulties confronting its past, notes historian Róbert Braun. He goes on to draw certain parallels between how the István Szabó case and the Holocaust have been dealt with. "Without intending to equate these two totalitarian systems, one can nonetheless safely say that both forms of dictatorship represented a serious blow to moral values. This is why it's so crucial to take on the challenge of confronting our memories, both of the Holocaust and of socialism. For me, the passiveness of many reactions to the revelations about István Szabós is more worrying than his life as such. The silence, too, is bad, because silence is the attempt to flee justice. In our recollections of the past we should be aware of fundamental moral differences: » more


Népszabadság - Hungary | Tuesday, 31. January 2006

Istvan Szabo's Stasi Past

On Sunday, Hungarian film director Istvan Szabo revised his explanation for his activity as an informer. He said he allowed himself to be recruited by ... » more


Népszabadság - Hungary | Monday, 30. January 2006

Szabó's Stasi Past

"It would be better if we never found out who the spies were. But even the doctor can't conceal the diagnosis, no matter how painful, ... » more


Népszabadság - Hungary | Friday, 27. January 2006

Istvan Szabo on Stasi Accusations

Film director István Szabó ("Mephisto") worked in an unofficial capacity for the Hungarian State Security Service from 1957 to 1963. As a student at the ... » more


Der Standard - Austria | Monday, 23. January 2006

Coming to Terms with the Stasi Past

András Heltai-Hopp, now deputy chief editor of "Pester Llloyd" and one of several former Hungarian foreign correspondents accused by journalist Paul Lendvai of having spied ... » more


Magyar Hírlap - Hungary | Tuesday, 17. January 2006

Secret Police Scandal

TV journalist and Eastern Europe expert Paul Lendvai, who has lived in Vienna since 1957, has publicly accused several former Vienna correspondents for Hungarian newspapers ... » more



Czech Republic

Respekt - Czech Republic | Tuesday, 15. January 2008

Czechs agonize over probing the history of totalitarianism

57 Social Democratic and Communist members of parliament have submitted a constitutional challenge to the creation of an authority for research into the totalitarian regime. Their reason: » more


Lidové noviny - Czech Republic | Wednesday, 30. May 2007

The Stasi past of two ex-ministers

Two ministers who held office during Czechoslovakia's post-communist period, former Minister of the Interior Richard Sacher and former Defence Minister Miroslav Vacek, have been exposed ... » more


Pražský deník - Czech Republic | Monday, 26. February 2007

Problems confronting the past in the Czech Republic

Recent revelations about the secret service past of former Prime Minister Josef Tosovsky and popular singer Jaroslav Nohavica have revived the subject of collaboration with the secret services in the Czech Republic. The Czech Minister of the Interior, Ivan Langer, now wants all files to be made public and the names of former informants to be published on the Internet. Dalibor Dostal comments: » more


Respekt - Czech Republic | Wednesday, 7. February 2007

The Czech clergy's former ties with the communist secret service

The Archbishop of Prague Cardinal Miloslav Vlk wants an investigation into whether Czech members of the clergy collaborated with the communist secret police the StB. A panel of historians set up by Vlk and the Czech Ministry of Domestic affairs has been commissioned to carry out the necessary research. Vlk was prompted to take action by the scandal surrounding revelations about the spying activities of his counterpart in Warsaw, Stanislaw Wielgus. Commentator Petr Tresnak approves of Vlk's measures: » more


Talaljuk ki Közep-Europat? - Hungary | Sunday, 13. August 2006

The flaws of the Czech 'lustration law'

Judit Hamberger of the Laszlo Teleki Institute in Hungary points to how Czech Social Democrats and communists try to get round the so-called Lustration Law, which excludes former communist functionaries and secret service collaborators from holding public office. "In their government programme the Social Democrats, in government since 1998, say nothing about wanting to make a break with the communist past. On the contrary: » more


Mladá fronta Dnes - Czech Republic | Wednesday, 21. December 2005

Secret Service Missions in Poland

In 1981, several hundred agents of the former Czech secret police, the StB, volunteered to go to Poland on a secret mission to counteract the forces of democracy unleashed by the independent trade union, Solidarnosc. "With this mission, the regime in Prague hoped to prevent the spread of ideas about freedom from Poland to Czechoslovakia", the newspaper reports. "Historian Petr Blazek, who discovered the documents which include lists of names of the StB agents recounts: » more



Slovakia

Pravda - Slovakia | Thursday, 15. February 2007

The Slovakian Catholic Church's involvement with the Stasi

In Slovakia new files have come to light according to which Jan Sokol, Archbishop of Trnava and Bratislava, maintained close ties with the former communist secret police in Czechoslovakia. Among other things, he allegedly passed on confidential information about a Slovak priest living in exile in the Vatican to the secret police in 1988. Commentator Marius Kopcsay is blunt in his criticism: » more


Hospodářské noviny - Czech Republic | Thursday, 22. June 2006

Dealing with the past in the Czech Republic and Slovakia

Like several of its neighbouring countries, the Czech Republic now plans to set up a special public authority to deal with the crimes of communism. ... » more



Romania

România Liberă - Romania | Monday, 4. February 2008

How to shed light on the Securitate

On Sunday, several hundred people protested in Bucharest against the decision of the constitutional court declaring the existing rules for dealing with the Securitate files unconstitutional. To date, the decisions about which files would be made public were taken by an eleven-member governing council of CNSAS, the government agency responsible for dealing with the files, manned according to the parties' proportional representation in parliament. Andreea Pora comments. "In future, the issue will no longer be to shed light on the work of the Securitate, this question seems to be forgotten. Rather, it is above all about the struggle for the CNSAS archive. ... The government's sincerity regarding this project can be proven in just one way: » more


Evenimentul Zilei - Romania | Friday, 1. February 2008

And end to Romania's confrontation with secret service crimes?

Romania's National Council for the Study of the Securitate Archives (CNSAS) is on its deathbed. The constitutional court decided yesterday that the law that has regulated the council's work over the past eight years is partly unconstitutional. Ioana Lupea observes: » more


Evenimentul Zilei - Romania | Thursday, 3. January 2008

Limit the confrontation with Romania's past secret service?

Romania's oppositional Social Democrats (PSD) want to greatly limit the independence of the authority that is examining the files of Romania's former secret service Securitate (CNSAS). Accordingly, the authority would only have a say in whether files were published but would no longer be able to disclose the names of Securitate collaborators. Iona Lupea explains: » more


Cotidianul - Romania | Friday, 25. May 2007

A lustration law for Romania?

The Romanian head of state, Traian Basescu, plans to propose the introduction of a lustration law at a meeting with the parliamentary parties next Monday. Under the law, which is modelled on Poland's lustration law, the past of Romania's public figures would be checked for evidence of collaboration with the communist dictatorship. According to Mirela Corlatan such a law will meet with tough resistance: » more



Finland

Hufvudstadsbladet - Finland | Tuesday, 14. August 2007

Finland's debate about Stasi files

In Sweden and Finland, secret service files and lists of names have triggered a debate about Swedish and Finnish citizens who worked as informants for ... » more



Sweden

Svenska Dagbladet - Sweden | Tuesday, 14. August 2007

The list of names of Swedish Stasi informants

The Swedish secret police Säpo has confirmed the existence of files on around 50 Swedish Stasi informants. However, the names of the informants are not to be made public. Lisa Bjurwald asks: » more



Spain

Rzeczpospolita - Poland | Saturday, 24. March 2007

The dispute over Polish fighters in the Spanish Civil War

Tensions have arisen between Poland and Spain after the Spanish Senate called on the Spanish government to lobby for the two dozen or so Poles who fought against Franco during the Spanish Civil War and are still alive today. The senators argue that the former combatants will be affected by Poland's lustration law, which requires Polish citizens to reveal former collaboration with the communist secret services, and could face pension cuts as a result. Igor Janke comments: » more

 

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