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Programs for the Topic ‘Foreign Policy’


Friday, February 4th, 2011


Katyn: Justice Delayed or Justice Denied? Panel Two – Part B

Panel Chair

Maria Szonert-Binienda, Esq., President, Libra Institute, Inc.

Panelists

William A. Schabas, Director, Irish Centre for Human Rights, National University of Ireland, Galway

Prof. Milena Sterio, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, Cleveland State University

Alexander Guryanov, PhD, Polish Program Coordinator, Memorial Group, Moscow, Russia

Prof. Janusz Cisek, Centre for European Studies, Jagiellonian University

Friday February 4, 2011, 8:30 a.m.-5:15 p.m.

Sponsored by the Frederick K. Cox International Law Center at the Case Western Reserve University School of Law

The topic of panel two is attempts to litigate the Katyn crime

The Katyn massacre of 1940 involved murders at the Katyn forest and in other locations throughout the Soviet Union of over 22,000 Polish officers, prisoners of war, and members of the Polish leading elite, by a single shot to the back of each of their heads. For 50 years, this massacre was subject to a massive cover up. Initially the Soviet Union blamed the Nazis for the murders, saying that the killings took place in 1941 when the territory was in German hands. It was not until 1990 that the Russian government admitted that the executions actually took place in 1940 and were carried out by the Soviet secret police. In 1990, Russian prosecutors launched a criminal investigation into the massacre, but the case was terminated in 2004, its findings were classified as top secret, and it appeared that the tragedy would once again be subject to “historical amnesia.”

The objective of the Katyn Symposium is to bring together leading international experts in jurisprudence, international criminal law, and the Katyn crime, as well as representatives from Poland and Russia, to discuss the events in a neutral setting. A diverse group of highly qualified scholars will present Polish, Russian and third party expert views on the KatyƱ murders in four panel sessions, followed by a round-table discussion.

Continue Reading – Katyn: Justice Delayed or Justice Denied? Panel Two — Part B