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NOT RECOGNISED

MOSCOW SENTENCES

POLISH APPEAL TO BE MADE TO ALLIED LEADERS

(By Telegraph—Press Association—Copyright.) Rec. 11 a.m. LONDON, June 22.

The Polish Prime Minister, M. Arciszewski, declared that the Polish Government in London could not recognise the legality of the Moscow trial .and the condemnation of the Polish underground, organisation. An appeal would' be made to' President Truman and Mr. Churchill, but the form of the appeal «ould not be disclosed.

"The charges against the sixteen members of the underground movement were too fantastic to be refuted in detail now," he said, "but this will be done in due course. The most monstrous of these charges was the allegation of connivance with the Germans. Neither the Polish Government in London nor its executive in Poland ever issued anti-Soviet instructionsOn the contrary, ever since Germany attacked Russia the Polish Government has regarded the Soviet as an ally in the common struggle and has given all possible assistance. Those who were tried in Moscow have never been anti-Soviet."

He declared that the trial was an attempt to discredit the legal Polish Government by slanderous allegations. The London Government regarded General Okulicki as a loyal Polish citizen, but the methods hitherto employed at Russian trials had proved that the depositions could not be compared with statements made in a free court.

M. Arciszewski said that all communications between the Polish Government in London and Poland went through the British censorship. The former commander of the Polish Home Army, General Bor, said that the organisation had tried at first to co-operate, but the attitude of the Soviet military authorities had forced the Poles to change. He denied that they had. ever co-operated with the Germans, and claimed that it was the Polish Home Army which first gave information about Germany's plans for the VI and V 2 weapons.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19450623.2.37

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXXIX, Issue 147, 23 June 1945, Page 7

Word Count
305

NOT RECOGNISED Evening Post, Volume CXXXIX, Issue 147, 23 June 1945, Page 7

NOT RECOGNISED Evening Post, Volume CXXXIX, Issue 147, 23 June 1945, Page 7