Communist Party of Lithuania: Difference between revisions
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During the Soviet era, the LCP was a constituent part of the CPSU (until 1952 it was called the CPSU). | During the Soviet era, the LCP was a constituent part of the CPSU (until 1952 it was called the CPSU). | ||
The LCP in 1940 The LCP was the decisive force behind Lithuania's accession to the Soviet Union. The LCP led the deportations to Siberia. 1941 June 4 Serov, the first deputy commissioner of the [[NKVD]] of the Soviet Union, signed the "Instruction on the Procedure of Removal of the Anti-Soviet Element from Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia". Village elders and members of the Communist Party contributed most to the lists. The lists of deportees in Lithuania were approved by Justas Paleckis and Antanas | The LCP in 1940 The LCP was the decisive force behind Lithuania's accession to the Soviet Union. The LCP led the deportations to Siberia. 1941 June 4 Serov, the first deputy commissioner of the [[NKVD]] of the Soviet Union, signed the "Instruction on the Procedure of Removal of the Anti-Soviet Element from Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia". Village elders and members of the Communist Party contributed most to the lists. The lists of deportees in Lithuania were approved by Justas Ignovich Paleckis and Antanas Juozovich Snieckus. | ||
A. Snieckus 1956 November 16 petitioned the Communist Party of the Soviet Union to ban the settlers in Lithuania and neighboring areas from being "convicted of counter-revolutionary crimes" people "returned to Lithuania arbitrarily". As the [[KGB (Soviet Union)|KGB]] of the Lithuanian SSR followed all returning witnesses of the Soviet terror and extermination system, the secretary of the CC of the LCP B. Sharkov proposed to increase the number of security agents. They had to guarantee that no former prisoner or exile would pass through the border of prohibitions and restrictions, and that those who were already settled (and settled) in Lithuania would be offered unacceptable living conditions. 1957 January 14 By the decision of the MIA of the Soviet Union, Kaunas was named a city with a special passport regime, which prohibits prisoners for "counter-revolutionary crime" and "for banditry." 1957 This Regulation shall enter into force on 21 January. J. Paleckis signed an order prohibiting former leaders of the Lithuanian government, political parties, undergrounds and partisans who had served their sentence from returning to Lithuania. Those who would nevertheless return were given a new sentence of 5 years in exile . This decree stopped the return of Lithuanians, so the Lithuanian community of ex-prisoners started to grow in Latvia, Grodno and Königsberg. | A. J. Snieckus 1956 November 16 petitioned the Communist Party of the Soviet Union to ban the settlers in Lithuania and neighboring areas from being "convicted of counter-revolutionary crimes" people "returned to Lithuania arbitrarily". As the [[KGB (Soviet Union)|KGB]] of the Lithuanian SSR followed all returning witnesses of the Soviet terror and extermination system, the secretary of the CC of the LCP B. Sharkov proposed to increase the number of security agents. They had to guarantee that no former prisoner or exile would pass through the border of prohibitions and restrictions, and that those who were already settled (and settled) in Lithuania would be offered unacceptable living conditions. 1957 January 14 By the decision of the MIA of the Soviet Union, Kaunas was named a city with a special passport regime, which prohibits prisoners for "counter-revolutionary crime" and "for banditry." 1957 This Regulation shall enter into force on 21 January. J. I. Paleckis signed an order prohibiting former leaders of the Lithuanian government, political parties, undergrounds and partisans who had served their sentence from returning to Lithuania. Those who would nevertheless return were given a new sentence of 5 years in exile . This decree stopped the return of Lithuanians, so the Lithuanian community of ex-prisoners started to grow in Latvia, Grodno and Königsberg. | ||
During the post-war period, the LCP organized the formation of destroyer battalions (popularly known as the stribs) to fight the Lithuanian partisan movement.1945 The LCP had 3536 members; - 27,753 members, 1970 - 116,603, 1986. - 197,274. | During the post-war period, the LCP organized the formation of destroyer battalions (popularly known as the stribs) to fight the Lithuanian partisan movement.1945 The LCP had 3536 members; - 27,753 members, 1970 - 116,603, 1986. - 197,274. |