Nikolay Tess

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Nikolay Tess (Latvian: Nikolajs Tess, (Russian: Николай Тэсс) was one of few functionaries in charge of political repressions in the former Soviet Union that were convicted for this activity.

Nikolajs Tess, a former operative (Russian: оперативный уполномоченный) of Ministry for State Security, a citizen of Russia, was the 10th Soviet official (and second Russian citizen) charged in Latvia under the Criminal Law Article 68.1, crimes against humanity, in relation to mass deportations from Latvia in 1941-1949. Tess was charged for his role in deportations of March 25, 1949.

According to the indictment made in March 2001, "Tess compiled and signed an order to deport 42 families, 138 people, to forced settlement in remote parts of the Soviet Union. There were 14 children among the deported."

He was found guilty on December 16, 2003 and sentenced to 2 years of suspended imprisonment after a lengthy process delayed by ill health and appeals to Latvian Constitutional Court and European Court of Human Rights.

Tess did not consider himself guilty, claiming that he was acting in the capacity for only 2.5 months and he was mainly in charge of verifying the match of the lists prepared by local administration against the Ministry lists.

Russia has criticized Latvia for trials of former Soviet officials and Soviet partisans accusing of violation of international standards (e.g., Russian Foreign Ministry note of July 12, 2002).

Tess died in a Riga hospital on December 7, 2006, at the age of 86.

[edit] See also

  • Mikhail Farbtukh, another Soviet Official convicted in Latvia, who on May 17, 2000 had been sentenced to five years in prison for genocide and was freed in March 2002 by the Riga Regional Court on health grounds, see http://vip.latnet.lv/LPRA/smith.htm
  • Vasily Kononov, (spelt as Vasilij in LAtvian documents), a former Soviet partisan accused of ordering the killing of civilians in a village in 1944.
  • Nikolay Larionov, see (in Latvian) http://vip.latnet.lv/LPRA/larionovs.htm (died on November 9, 2005 after filing an appeal)
  • Alfons Noviks, see http://vip.latnet.lv/LPRA/smith.htm
  • Solomon Murin, committed suicide in his home in October 1997 after being charged
  • Ilya Mashonkin

[edit] External links