, the building of
Government of Estonia,
Toompea, commemorating government members killed by communist terror On 27 July 1950, diplomats-in-exile of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania appealed to the
United States to support a
United Nations investigation of "genocidal
mass deportations" they said were being carried out in their countries by the Soviet Union.
Soviet acknowledgment of Stalin's deportations Stalin's deportation of peoples was criticized in the closed section of
Nikita Khrushchev's 1956 Report to the
20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union as "monstrous acts" and "rude violations of the basic Leninist principles of the nationality policy of the Soviet state." On 14 November 1989, the Supreme Soviet of the USSR accepted declaration "On the Recognition as Unlawful and Criminal The Repressive Acts Against Peoples Who Were Subjected to Forced Resettlement, and On Guaranteeing Their Rights", in which it condemned Stalin's deportation of peoples as the terrific felony, guaranteed that such violations of human rights won't be repeated and promised to restore the rights of repressed Soviet peoples.
Estonian trials and convictions In 1995, after the re-establishment of Estonian independence,
Riigikogu, the parliament of independent Estonia, declared the deportations officially a
crime against humanity, and several organizers of the 1949 deportations, former officers of MGB, were convicted under Article 61-1 § 1 of the Criminal Code. The
BBC noted in April 2009 that Estonia's claims of
genocide are not widely accepted. • Johannes Klaassepp (1921–2010), Vladimir Loginov (1924–2001) and Vasily Beskov were sentenced to eight years' probation in 1999. • On 30 July 1999, Mikhail Neverovsky (born 1920) was sentenced to four years in prison. • On 10 October 2003, August Kolk (born 1924) and Pyotr Kisly (born 1921) were sentenced to eight years in prison with three years of probation. The cases were taken to the
European Court of Human Rights, the defendants alleging the sentencing was contrary to the prohibition of retroactive application of criminal laws, but the application was declared as "obviously baseless". • On 30 October 2002, Yury Karpov received an eight-year suspended sentence. • On 7 November 2006, Vladimir Kask was sentenced to eight years in prison with three years of probation. •
Arnold Meri was put on trial but died in April 2009 before the end of the trial. Moscow has criticized the Baltic prosecutions, calling them revenge, not justice, and complained about the criminals' age. In March 2009, the
Memorial society concluded that the deportations were a crime against humanity, but stopped short of declaring them genocide or war crimes. In the opinion of Memorial, interpretation of events in 1949 as genocide is not based upon international law and is unfounded. ==Investigative committee==