Faced with a 2004 deadline, Latvia's government must decide what to do with thousands of secret police files left over from Soviet rule of the Baltic country
Published:
12 July 2003 y., Saturday
Since regaining independence in the 1991 Soviet collapse, the country of 2.4 million has grappled with its Communist past and what to do with thousands of KGB documents that are a record of decades of secret police activity.
Some want the 4,000 KGB files opened for public view, citing their historical importance, while others want them destroyed, fearful of the secrets they contain. The KGB took the bulk of the files with them when they pulled out of Latvia in 1991. Those that remain are just a fraction of the total.
If the deadline passes without a decision, the files will remain locked up -- closed to all but prosecutors investigating specific crimes and to individuals who want to see their own files. The files could no longer be used to run background checks on public figures or job applicants.
"Let's put the information on the table and get rid of the speculation," ex-Latvian Prime Minister Guntars Krasts told The Associated Press. "We can't live with keeping it in the dark and some people speculating over who is and isn't in there."
While giving the public access could clear those who are rumored to have worked for the KGB during Soviet rule, it could also mean others might be wrongly tainted.
Former Latvian President Guntis Ulmanis said the files should be destroyed, arguing that the KGB was known to forge documents in a bid to smear public figures.
The files have typically been used to run background checks on people seeking public office or a job in law enforcement. Any use of the documents was done through the state-run Center for the Documentation of the Consequences of Totalitarianism.
If someone is found to have had connections to the KGB, they can't be hired.
Indulis Zalite, who oversees the storage of the files and one of the few with unfettered access to them, said destroying them would be a mistake, but so would opening them up, too.
Šaltinis:
newsday.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Equal opportunities for men and women, equal pay for equal work, freedom from unfair discrimination: these are fundamental European values.
more »
SPAM Museum in Austin, Minnesota, a.k.a. Spamtown USA gives you a sense of the cult SPAM ham.
more »
Even though the Indonesian government has tried to stop The Martyrs' Trilogy publication, some copies of are personal writings by each of the three executed Bali bombers are being sold quietly in small book shops and stalls.
more »
If you think the EU institutions have made a mistake or failed to follow their own rules, you can ask the European ombudsman to investigate on your behalf.
more »
7Seas Technologies Limited the creators of the political games came up with the idea to raise political awareness ahead of the elections.
more »
The charitable trust which owns the whole of Linkenholt in the southern county of Hampshire wants to sell up the archetypal English village and use its money elsewhere.
more »
In the butcher's festival in a village in eastern Hungary, the best butchers in the land gather to compete in speedy cutting, slicing and meat processing.
more »
The world's most famous reality TV star Jade Goody is dying of cancer.
more »
It looks like a relic from the second world war but 'The Bunker' is in fact a brand new museum.
more »
The financial crisis may force EU countries to adjust pension systems.
more »