Lithuania marks 28 yrs of restored independence, 100th anniversary of partisan leader

  • 2018-03-11
  • LETA/TBT Staff

VILNIUS - Lithuania marks on Sunday the 28th anniversary of restoration of independence and the 100th birth anniversary of the anti-Soviet resistance commander Adolfas Ramanauskas-Vanagas.

The Seimas will hold a solemn sitting to mark the historic separation from the Soviet Union and to honor the memory of Ramanauskas-Vanagas.

Those expected to attend the sitting include Inara Murniece, speaker of Latvia's Saeima, Marek Kuchcinski, speaker of Poland's Sejm, Eiki Nestor, president of Estonia's Riigikogu, and Gudjon S. Brjansson, deputy speaker of Iceland's Althingi, as well as the partisan commander's daughter Auksute Ramanauskaite-Skokauskiene.

The flags of the three Baltic states will be hoisted in a ceremony in Independence Square in front of the parliament building in Vilnius at noon, followed by a march of the Guard of Honor of the Lithuanian Armed Forces and the Lithuanian Armed Forces Orchestra along Gedimino Avenue up to Cathedral Square.

Nationalists plan to hold their traditional march in Vilnius in the afternoon.

The Supreme Council of Lithuania on Mar. 11, 1990 adopted the Act of the Re-Establishment of the State of Lithuania in a vote of 124 with six abstentions, thus making Lithuania the first Soviet republic to separate from Moscow.

The Seimas has designated 2018 as the year of Ramanauskas-Vanagas.

Ramanauskas-Vanagas, the commander of the South Lithuania region, was among the partisan leaders who signed the Union of Lithuanian Freedom Fighters' Declaration in 1949.

The organized armed resistance against the Soviet occupation ended in the spring of 1953. Ramanauskas-Vanagas was arrested by the Soviets in 1956. He was tortured and executed a year later.