Collapse of Berlin Wall 'true freedom'

EU: The EU said yesterday the fall of the Berlin Wall, rather than that of Nazi Germany, was the "end of dictatorship" in Europe…

EU: The EU said yesterday the fall of the Berlin Wall, rather than that of Nazi Germany, was the "end of dictatorship" in Europe, risking upsetting Russia as it prepares to celebrate the end of the second World War.

"We honour the many innocent victims of past conflicts, and those who paid the highest price in defence of freedom and democracy," the EU Commission said in a declaration marking the 60th anniversary of the end of the war.

"We remember as well the many millions for whom the end of the second World War was not the end of dictatorship, and for whom true freedom was only to come with the fall of the Berlin Wall."

World leaders will converge on Moscow on May 9th for anniversary celebrations, and three days of high diplomacy.

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The EU has been forced into a delicate balancing act over how to mark the anniversary since it enlarged to 25 countries last May.

Three new member-states, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, were integral members of the Soviet Union, while several other new members are former communist countries in eastern Europe which Moscow effectively controlled after the war.

The Baltic republics in particular see Monday, May 9th, which Russia celebrates as Victory Day, as marking the beginning of Soviet occupation rather than as liberation. The presidents of Estonia and Lithuania will boycott the celebrations in Moscow.

The European Commission's vice-president, Guenter Verheugen, recently called on Russia to recognise the Soviet presence in the Baltic republics as an occupation, to Moscow's dismay.

"Verheugen's statement was inappropriate and inopportune in the run-up to an outstanding historic date," Sergei Yastrzhembsky, Russia's presidential representative for EU relations, was quoted as saying by Interfax news agency.

The EU and Russia hold a summit in Moscow the day after the Victory Day celebration, making the EU comments on dictatorship even more sensitive as both hope to sign a deal redefining their relationship.

US president George W Bush will weigh into the argument when he meets Russian president Vladimir Putin in Moscow after a brief visit to Latvia, where he will see all three Baltic presidents in a pointed gesture of solidarity.

He told reporters before leaving for Europe that there was "great angst" in the Baltic states because "people don't view this as a liberating moment".

"Of course I'll remind him of that," he told Lithuanian state television when asked if he would remind Mr Putin that the end of the war brought Soviet occupation to the Baltics.  Reuters