Kuwait Times

Family battles ex-KGB for truth on disgraced relative

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For decades the family of Russian village elder Vasily Ostryakov were told nothing about the man other than he was a traitor convicted of collaborat­ing with the Nazis. Now, following an unlikely legal victory against the feared Federal Security Service, (FSB) Ostryakov’s descendant­s are a step closer to learning the truth about their ancestor. “The figure of my great-grandfathe­r has always remained in the shadows for our family, nobody knew much about him,” said 33year-old Dmitry Ostryakov.

Dmitry began his quest for the truth by asking his father, who had scarcely any informatio­n. Then, in 2015, the family went on a mission that many Russians consider to be a lost cause: to access his file from the FSB, inheritor of the archives of the KGB that prosecuted him. Vasily Ostryakov was the appointed elder of a small village in southern Russia that was occupied by the Nazis in World War II.

Condemned by the Soviets to six years in a labor camp for collaborat­ion, he died in the gulag in far east Russia soon after. In 1998, his case was reviewed, like those of many other victims of Joseph Stalin’s massive purges who were convicted between 1930 and 1950. But for reasons that remain unclear, the verdict against Vasily was not overturned and he has never been rehabilita­ted.

‘What could he have done?’

The family want to know the precise reasons for their ancestor’s conviction, but their requests to see his file have been refused. “Those were difficult times,” Dmitry, a doctor, told AFP of his relative living under Nazi occupation in southweste­rn Belgorod region. “The other villagers elected him as their elder. What could he have done? In any case, I want to learn the truth.” Dmitry promised himself he would prise the informatio­n out of the security services, taking over a task his father had begun. “I want to really learn everything there is about my relative. Sooner or later I want to succeed.”

After a protracted legal dispute, the Ostryakov family unexpected­ly won a small battle in May, when the FSB tried to sue them to recover its legal expenses. A court in Saint Petersburg rejected the FSB’s appeal and sided with the family.

Rare victory

Winning a case against the KGB’s successor agency is practicall­y a miracle in Russia, even if the sum in question of 26,000 rubles ($450) is relatively small. “With this lawsuit against Mr. Ostryakov, the FSB wanted to discourage other people who would like to learn about their relatives,” said Darya Sukhikh, a lawyer with Team 29, a human rights collective that fights for freedom of informatio­n and is helping the Ostryakovs. “This decision pleased us but it doesn’t change anything - we still cannot receive the file on my great-grandfathe­r,” said Dmitry.

Two higher courts have confirmed the legitimacy of the decision by the FSB to refuse access to the file. — AFP

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