World War II veteran attend the ceremony to mark the
60th anniversary of the last great battle before the fall of Berlin.
(AFP)
German Defense Minister Peter Struck Saturday honored Soviet Union soldiers
who died during World War II in the German town of Baruth.
Speaking at the ceremony to mark the 60th anniversary of the last great
battle before the fall of Berlin, Struck said the Red Army and the western
Allies liberatd Germany from the Nazis, according to a report of the German news
agency DPA.
Struck and Russian Ambassador Vladimir Kotenev led a solemn cremony at the
Baruth Soviet War Cemetery, where 1,200 dead lie.
About 60,000 Germans and 30,000 Soviets died in the fierce battle of Halbe in
a pine forest, just 40 kilometers southeast from Berlin. The battle took place
just a few days ahead of Hitler's suicide.
Struck indicated that Russians and Germans had changed from being against
each other to partners 60 years after the war ended.
Also speaking at the ceremony, Kotenev praised Germany for confronting its
past, adding that this had been the means to reconciliation.
Referring to neo-Nazis who sometimes gather to lionize the fallen Germans at
Halbe, Struck said there was still racism and nationalism, which had to be
decisively opposed.