Russia says Wallenberg case is still open

Russian counterintelligence agency chief archivist says his organization is continuing to search for Holocaust hero Raoul Wallenberg, who vanished while in Soviet captivity in the 1940s • Denies accusations that his agency is hiding related documents.

צילום: AP // Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg, who would have turned 100 this year, rescued tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Nazis.

MOSCOW — The chief archivist of Russia's counterintelligence agency said Monday the organization would continue searching for clues about the mystery of Holocaust hero Raoul Wallenberg, who vanished while in Soviet captivity in the 1940s.

Lt. Gen. Vasily Khristoforov said his agency, the Federal Security Service, had no reason to withhold any information about the Swedish diplomat from the public eye. He rejected critics' allegations that his service, the main KGB successor, could be hiding documents related to Wallenberg's fate.

"Believe me, had such information been known to us, the Russian archivists would have been the first to publish and show it," Khristoforov told The Associated Press. "When some people say that we are defending the pride of the uniform ... it's ridiculous. This is another state and a different special service."

Khristoforov insisted that he and his colleagues would have no inclination to whitewash the record of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin's much-feared secret police, the NKVD.

"I doubt that any of the Federal Security Service officers today would associate himself with the NKVD and would try to defend the uniform of the NKVD," he said. "That's why this argument doesn't stand criticism."

Khristoforov was taking part in an international conference that included researchers from Sweden, Hungary, Israel and Russia. Some of the speakers strongly urged Khristoforov's agency to give independent researchers investigating the Wallenberg mystery free access to their archives.

"I think full access is really needed," said Ingrid Carlberg, a Swedish author who recently published a book about Wallenberg. "They can't possibly know what kind of puzzles I have that could be matched with pieces of information in those archives. If we put them all together, we will have a clearer picture."

Wallenberg is credited with having saved thousands of Jews in Budapest by distributing Swedish travel documents or moving them to safe houses. He was arrested in Budapest by the Soviet Red Army in 1945. The Soviets initially denied Wallenberg was in their custody, then said in 1957 that he had died of a heart attack in prison on July 17, 1947.

The Russian government has never formally retracted the initial Soviet version, but some officials acknowledged that Wallenberg likely had been killed. In 2000, Alexander Yakovlev, the one-time chairman of a presidential panel investigating the fate of repression victims, said he had been told by a former KGB chief that Wallenberg had been killed in Lubyanka prison. That year, Russia also conceded that Soviet authorities had wrongfully persecuted Wallenberg and posthumously rehabilitated him as a victim of political repression.

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