Spain condemns the “Great Famine” in Ukraine caused by Stalin, which claimed 5 million lives

Spain, Andorra, Chile, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Uruguay and 49 other countries condemned it at the United Nations on the 90th anniversary of the events Great famine caused by communist dictator Josef Stalin in Ukraine between 1932 and 1933.

“The declaration initiated by Ukraine at the United Nations commemorating the 90th anniversary of the Holodomor of 1932 and 1933 was signed by 55 Member States and the delegation of the European Union,” he wrote on his social network account X. Dmitro Kuleba, in your X account on the social network.

The statement condemns the policy of land collectivization and food confiscation that starved millions of peasants in Ukraine in the first half of the 1930s and commits to promoting the memory of Holodomor, the term used to describe a massacre what many call genocide in Ukraine.

Ukraine has intensified its diplomatic work in recent years to make the Holodomor known to the world and keep the memory of the victims alive.

The terrible famine that punished the Soviet Union between 1931 and 1934 It claimed five million victims, 80% of whom were Ukrainians. According to Anne Applebaum in “Red Famine,” 12.6 percent of the population will be exterminated in “Holodomor” in Ukraine (3.9 million dead out of 31 million), while in regions like Kiev the figure is 20 percent. And the missing approximately 600,000 births must be taken into account in the calculation. “Holodomor” is derived from the Ukrainian words “hólo” (famine) and “mor” (destruction) because, as the author shows, it is neither a political mistake, nor a merciless drought, nor a deadly plague but rather Stalin’s policy of liquidating Ukrainian nationalism.

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Not only did the Kremlin’s directives decimate Ukraine through food deprivation, but its political police also destroyed the intelligentsia: journalists, writers, professors – especially historians and philologists -, priests, artists and, of course, the politicians and bureaucrats associated with the short Ukrainian Republic of 1917/18.

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