Russia declassifies files on Stalin victims

RUSSIA: Files on millions of victims of Stalinist repression, including those who perished in the Soviet Union's infamous gulags…

RUSSIA:Files on millions of victims of Stalinist repression, including those who perished in the Soviet Union's infamous gulags, have been declassified, Russia's federal security service announced yesterday.

The documents, dating from 1920 to 1950, are expected to shed new light on some of the most notorious excesses of the post-revolutionary and Stalinist eras, including Stalin's forced collectivisation of agriculture in the early 1930s, in which up to ten million people died.

The archives, which include about two million documents, also cover the political purges of the late 1930s, which saw hundreds of thousands of party members executed as counter-revolutionaries, or shipped off to gulags.

Historians and human rights activists reacted cautiously to the news, pointing out that only relatives of those "purged" would be able to study the documents.

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Arseny Roginsky, a spokesman for the Russian human rights organisation Memorial, said: "We welcome this but it's not sensational. This process of opening up the archives started under Boris Yeltsin in 1992. The problem is that it is up to the federal security service [ the FSB, successor to the KGB] to decide what gets released and what stays secret. Most of these documents concern people subsequently rehabilitated.

"There is no independent historical committee allowed to evaluate this material. The Soviet Union's wartime relations with other states are completely off limits. And the biggest problem is that there is no catalogue: finding stuff is very difficult."

The FSB confirmed yesterday that the archives would be made available only to relatives of those who were "purged".

Vasily Khristoforov, head of the FSB's archives and registers department, said family members could apply. He said the documents would be made available in a public reading room and that 1,500 requests were approved last year, under a policy of liberalising access to previously secret documents.

Most government archives were classified as state secrets during the Soviet era. A 1992 presidential decree declassified materials on Soviet-era repression. - (Guardian service)