Poland's
last communist ruler Jaruzelski dies at 90 Reuters
He was not on the list
By Christian
Lowe and Anna Sterczynska
WARSAW
(Reuters) - Poland was split on Monday over where to bury General Wojciech
Jaruzelski, the Communist leader who for years helped the Kremlin suppress
dissent behind the Iron Curtain before finally allowing democratic rule.
Supporters
of Jaruzelski, who died on Sunday aged 90, said he should be buried with full
military honours befitting a former president who outsmarted his masters in the
Soviet Union to deliver Poland to freedom without major bloodshed.
His
opponents say he was a stooge of the Kremlin, that under his rule dozens of
Poles were killed, and that he does not deserve a plot in the elite military
ceremony in Warsaw where his family have asked that he be buried.
The debate
shows how Polish society, 25 years on from the collapse of the Berlin Wall, is
still wrestling with the questions of how to fend off an assertive Russia - an
issue sharpened this year by the Kremlin's annexation of parts of neighboring
Ukraine.
Jaruzelski
imposed martial law in 1981 to suppress the Solidarity trade union movement,
led by the shipyard electrician Lech Walesa who would later become president.
Hundreds of people were jailed, and dozens were killed.
Jaruzelski
argued his actions had prevented the Kremlin from sending in tanks to Poland,
as it had earlier in Hungary and Czechoslovakia. By 1989, he convened talks
that led to the first partially free elections in Poland, and stepped down.
Jaruzelski's
daughter, Monika, said on Monday she wanted her father buried in the Lane of
Honour at the Powazki military cemetery in central Warsaw, where Polish
generals are buried, often with an honour guard and military orchestra.
As a career
soldier, Jaruzelski "would have wanted to lie at rest among those who were
closest to him", his daughter told Poland's state news agency. Leszek
Miller, a former Communist Party colleague of Jaruzelski who after the fall of
the Berlin Wall served as prime minister, went further, sending a letter to the
president requesting a national day of mourning. "I call for
solemnity," said Miller, now the head of a leftist opposition party.
"BLOOD
ON HIS HANDS"
But other
Poles demanded Jaruzelski be buried with a minimum of pomp. A Facebook group
called "Stop the burial of Comrade Jaruzelski at Powazki", had attracted
2,500 followers by early Monday afternoon.
"The
nation does not have amnesia, and remembers the blood of Poles, and not only
Poles, that Jaruzelski has on his hands," Maciej Nerkowski, one of those
who followed the Facebook page, told Reuters.
Professor
Antoni Dudek, who sits on the board of the Institute of National Remembrance, a
state body which researches rights abuses committed under Communist rule, said
Poland's national identity was at stake.
"If a
state funeral is organized for General Jaruzelski, with all the honours, this
will mean the Polish state also honours everything he symbolized, from being a
vassal of the Soviet Union to using violence," Dudek told Reuters. The
decision on what sort of funeral Jaruzelski is accorded will ultimately be made
by President Bronislaw Komorowski.
Komorowski
made his name in the 1970s and 1980s as a dissident, organizing anti-Communist
protests and publishing an underground journal. Under Jaruzelski's rule, he was
arrested several times.
But in a recognition
that Jaruzelski's legacy was not black and white, in 2010 Komorowski invited
the general, by then using a walking stick, to attend a meeting of the National
Security Council to share his views on how to deal with Russia.
A
spokeswoman for the president's office said no decision on Jaruzelski's burial
would be announced before Tuesday.
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