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The Swedish extradition of Baltic soldiers, in Sweden known as Extradition of the Balts (Swedish: Baltutlämningen), is a controversial political event in Sweden that took place in 1945-1946, when Sweden extradited some 150 Baltic soldiers who had been drafted by the Axis against the Soviet Union in World War II.
On 2 June 1945, the Soviet Union demanded that Sweden extradite all Axis soldiers. The government protocol from 15 June was kept secret until it became public on 19 November. It was supported by most of parliament and the Swedish Communist Party wanted to go further, by extraditing all civilian refugees from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
The majority of the Baltic soldiers extradited were Latvians who had escaped from the Courland Pocket. When the refugees reached Sweden, those in uniform were detained in detention camps. The extradition to the Soviets took place on 25 January 1946 in the port of Trelleborg for transportation on the steamer Beloostrov. A memorial, "stranded refugee ship" (1999-2000) by Christer Bording, has been erected in Trelleborg. [1] [2]
Sweden also extradited about 3,000 German soldiers, according to laws on prisoners of war. The Balts were however more controversial since the Soviet authorities viewed them as Soviet citizens (the Soviet Union had occupied the independent Baltic states in 1940) and therefore regarded the Balts as traitors, and the internees feared death sentences. Several of the Balts attempted suicide and 2 Latvian officers committed suicide.
There was no legal ground for the extradition. According to the Hague Conventions, after end of a war a neutral power is not required to extradite warfighters to anyone. Furthermore, prisoners must be free to return home, however, only if they wish to do so.
In 1970, Johan Bergenstråhle made a film, Baltutlämningen (English title: A Baltic Tragedy), about the subject. The film is based on Per Olov Enquist’s Legionärerna: En roman om baltutlämningen (1968) (English title: The Legionnaires: A Documentary Novel) which had won the Nordic Council's Literature Prize and Enquist collaborated on the script.
On 20 June 1994, 40 of the 44 surviving extradited (35 Latvians, 4 Estonians, and 1 Lithuanian) accepted an invitation to visit Sweden. They were received by King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden at the Royal Palace in Stockholm. The Swedish Minister of Foreign Affairs Margaretha af Ugglas said that the Swedish government agrees with the criticism of the decision and regrets the injustice. (See Svenska Dagbladet 21 and 22 June 1994, and Dagens Nyheter 21 and 22 June 1994).
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