The Citizen (KZN)

Russia deserves thanks – Putin

PARADE: PRESIDENT SAYS WORLD OWES DEBT OF GRATITUDE

- Moscow

Soviet soldiers ‘freed European countries from invaders’.

Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday said the world owed the Soviet Union a debt of gratitude for its contributi­on to the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.

The Russian leader made the comments at the beginning of a massive military parade through Red Square in Moscow to mark the 75th anniversar­y of the Soviet Union’s victory in World War II.

“It is impossible even to imagine what the world would be if the Red Army hadn’t come to defend it,” Putin said in an address to thousands of troops gathered to participat­e in the annual Victory Day parade.

Soviet soldiers “freed European countries from invaders, put an end to the terrible tragedy of the Holocaust, saved the German people from Nazism, from its deadly ideology”, Putin said.

“Our duty is to keep this in mind,” he said during the televised address, urging Russians to remember that the main burden of the fight against Nazism had fallen on the Soviet Union.

Putin was forced to postpone the country’s traditiona­l May 9 Victory Day celebratio­ns due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, but it was the first mass event reschedule­d by the Kremlin after it eased lockdown measures.

This year’s parade, marking 75 years since the Soviet Union’s defeat of Nazi Germany, featured some 14 000 troops from 13 countries, as well as vintage equipment and the latest military hardware showing off Russia’s fighting capabiliti­es.

In his two decades in office, Putin has harnessed the legacy of the Soviet Union’s victory in World War II to boost patriotic sentiment and support for his government.

Ahead of the parade, he slammed the West for “insulting Russia” by playing down the USSR’s role in winning the war.

The rate of new infections in Russia has fallen in recent weeks and cities including Moscow have lifted antivirus lockdowns. But critics accuse Putin of rushing ahead with public events to pursue his own political ends.

Officials say the date was chosen to coincide with the anniversar­y of the first post-war parade on Red Square, which saw Soviet troops throw down Nazi standards in front of the Lenin mausoleum on 24 June, 1945.

Dozens of regions have decided not to go ahead with their own commemorat­ive parades. – AFP

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