The law of registration

Published: 3 February 2000 y., Thursday
If former agents fail to register, the Lithuanian authorities have threatened to make public their previous activities. The law of registration, acknowledgement, confession and protection of individuals who secretly collaborated with the special services of the former USSR_ was passed by the Seym (Lithuanian parliament) in November and a special commission of officials from the Department of State Security, the Center of Genocide and Resistance and representatives of the Prosecutor-General_s office has been created. The law states that anyone who collaborated with the KGB must, in the course of 6 months (i.e. before August 1st), phone the Department of State Security and to arrange an appointment with members of the abovementioned commission in order to recount his/her activities. According to a member of the Interdepartmental Lustration Commission Rimantas Martinkenas, the commission is interested primarily in information, documents and objects concerning KGB activities. All the collected information will be classified and the Department of State Security will, upon request, protect the confessors from attempts to force them to collaborate or from any other violence by special services. If the former collaborators do not come forward within the time limit or deliberately give false information about themselves, other persons or the activities of special services, then details of their collaboration will be made public. These people would then be subject to a Lithuanian law, which forbids such individuals from becoming state employees or working in the education system. Martinkenas says that at the time of its abolishment, there were about four thousand people in Lithuania who were in some way connected with the KGB. For the whole post-war Soviet period, the figure amounted to about 30,000 individuals from all social groups.
Šaltinis: Gazeta.ru
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Cooking Bus to tackle obesity levels

In England it's thought nearly one in six children are overweight - something the government is trying hard to change. more »

Living off the land and freebies

Self-styled "freeconomist" Mark Boyle is on a mission to survive for one year by trading his skills, living off the land, and finding freebies. more »

MEPs want better AIDS strategy

You may see lots of people wearing red ribbons today. more »

Former astronaut MEP backs Europe's stellar ambitions

Former astronaut turned MEP Umberto Guidoni of the leftist GUE/NGL group believes that the European Union should have a major role in space exploration. more »

Mother wants internet baby back

A Dutch couple are caught up in the middle of a baby scandal. They bought the baby over the internet from its Belgian mother, now the mother wants her baby back. more »

Japanese man makes airport home

For the past 12-weeks the Japanese tourist has been living in Terminal One at Mexico City International Airport. more »

Growing old on the job

Growing numbers of older Europeans are choosing to work longer, reversing the previous trend toward early retirement – a development that could ease Europe’s aging population problem. more »

Birds threatened by land grab

The Saemangeum land reclamation project would use a 33-km (20.5 mile) sea dyke to reclaim an area of 400 square kms (155 sq miles), turning coastal tidelands that are key feeding areas for globally threatened birds into land for factories, golf courses and water treatment plants. more »

Whales die in mass stranding

Sixty – four pilot whales stranded on the north coast of Tasmania. more »

Rome calls in the bird-busters

For decades starlings have descended on the Italian city of Rome making it their winter home. more »