In December 2024, in the village Borovian-Jogła a complex of memorials commemorating soldiers was devastated in the Novgorod region National Army dead in russian camps. A full of 3 memorial sites were destroyed, respective kilometers apart. The camp complex with the center in Borowiczy was 1 of the main places of deportation of the AK soldiers and the Peasants Battalions from 1944 to 46. Over six 1000 Poles exported from the country by the NKVD passed through them.
In October 2024 from the cemetery close St. Petersburg, the victims of Stalinist repression, called The Levashian Hollow, a symbolic mock-up was dismantled on the site of a previously removed secret Polish cross-shaped monument. The Rusnews portal published a recording on which a female portraying herself as a cemetery individual announces that she is carrying out an order to remove the “self-set monument”. The mock-up was a symbolic installation to remind you of the cross removed in 2023.
In October 2023 at the cemetery we Vladimir on the Clan The commemorative plaque was removed without trace Jan Stanisław Jankowski, 1 of the leaders of the Underground Poland, sentenced by the russian authorities in the process of sixteen. Jankowski was in prison in Vladimir and died there under unexplained circumstances in March 1953, 2 weeks before the end of his sentence.
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He was buried in a collective grave in a close cemetery, and this is where the memorial wall was located with a commemorative plaque. There was besides a plaque commemorating the mist. Szeptycki Clement – the Greek Catholic priest's rite, honored posthumously in 1995 by the institute of Jad with your medal Righteous among the planet Nations. In addition, there were plaques on the memorial wall commemorating political activists of Lithuania and Japan. The full facility has been removed.
Russia removes Polish memorial sites
At the end of September 2023, the government in Siberia Yakutsk they removed a monument dedicated to exiled and repressed Poles who made a major contribution to the improvement of Russian science; after exile they were engaged in researching the culture there. They were: Wacław Sieroszewski, Edward Piekarski, Jan Czerski and Aleksander Czekenowski. Another of the dismantled plaques was dedicated to the victims of exiles in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries and victims of political repression in the 20th century.
Also in September 2023 under Work in the Republic of Komi The monument of Poles – the victims of the camps there – was removed. The monument, founded in 1997 by the Association of Łagiernik AK and the Russian Memorial Association, was located at the entrance to the erstwhile Workutinskaya mine. Among the prisoners working in the labour mines were soldiers of the Polish Army taken prisoner and Poles deported from east Poland. In various years, the number of Poles in camps in the Workucki region ranged from 526 to 2960.
In July 2023 the cross commemorating Poles murdered there – victims of Stalin’s chasms, with inscription disappeared from the cemetery in Lewaszowski. “We forgive and ask forgiveness”. It was unveiled and dedicated in the early 1990s on the initiative of the local Polish and Memorial organizations. The local authorities provided conflicting information on the reasons for removing a multitone granite cross – it was to be damaged by vandals or as a consequence of the fall of a tree.
In June 2023 from the graves of Polish exiles in the towns Kostousovo and Oziernoje the tablets and crosses have been removed in the Warsaw Oblast in Ural. In Mischa in the Republic of Burya the cross was destroyed and the plaque was removed from the memorial commemorating Poles-participants of the Zabaykal uprising of 1866.
Destroying memorials. On Polish holiday
In May 2023 in Pivovaries close Irkutsk, a known burial site of victims of political repression of many nationalities and religions, was removed a symbolic gravestone – a monument in the form of a gravestone – dedicated to Polish victims of repression. The Lithuanian monument – a wooden cross a fewer metres – was removed. The pretext to remove the monuments was the reorganization of avenues in this area. A circumstantial institution has been admitted to the removal of the monument; usually the dismantling by “unknown perpetrators” takes place secretly.
In April 2023 in Permian country, at the site of the erstwhile village of the exiles of Galaszor, a monument was destroyed, founded in 2016 by the Lithuanian organization. It was commemorated by Lithuanians and Poles buried in the local cemetery. The monument stood on the sidelines and it is not even known erstwhile it was destroyed.
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November 11, 2022, on the Polish independency Day, in The region of Tomsk in Siberia 3 memories associated with Poles were damaged at the same time. Unknown perpetrators broke the plaque and the cross from the memorial in Tomsk commemorating Poles who fell victim to Stalinist repression in 1930-56. On the same day the plaque was removed from the building of the erstwhile Polish Children's home (from 1942 to 44 children of Poles deported to Siberia were sent to it). In the village of Białystok (ros. Bielostok), founded in the 19th century by Polish settlers, the cross and plaques commemorating the villagers arrested and shot during the alleged Polish NKVD operation were removed.
The cross and plaque were besides destroyed in the village Obstetric in the Tomsk Oblast, besides founded by Polish settlers. The monument commemorated 33 residents arrested and executed during the “Polish operation”.
As reported by the Russian BBC editorial office in September 2023, memorials commemorating foreigners began to be removed on a large scale in Russia at the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine. The commemorations of not only victims of repression, but besides monuments of abroad soldiers specified as Finnish and Italian were dismantled.

== sync, corrected by elderman ==