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Joint Baltic Committee of Sydney
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Joint Baltic Committee of Sydney (or Baltic Committee NSW) is a joint committee of representatives form local communities of three Baltic states: Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. It organizes concert to commemorate mass deportations during Soviet Union times. 14th June 1941 was the first date of deportations. The communities of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia are taking turns to organize concert and chair committee. However, the concert is always hosted at Latvian house in Sydney.. Invites to politicians contains short description of past events and current status of Baltic states: "Every year, around 14th June, Baltic communities all over the world commemorate mass deportations from their homelands by occupying forces of the Soviet Union to the Soviet gulag, during and after WWII. In Sydney, Australians of Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian descent, from many areas near and far, gather at the Latvian centre in Strathfield to commemorate the genocide which befell their people. They invite Members of Parliament, civic and community leaders, and friends, to join them on this, the Baltic communities’ day of mourning and remembrance. This year is the 78th anniversary of the first forced mass deportations of Baltic people by Soviet forces. During the years of Soviet Communist occupation of the Baltic States of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania (1940-1991), some 200,000 people, including the elderly and children, were deported to remote Arctic regions of the Soviet Union. The deportations were without trial and without appeal. This Baltic genocide resulted from the infamous Molotov-Ribbentrop (Soviet-Nazi) Pact of 1939. Regaining their independence in August 1991, the Baltic countries are now members of the UN, the NATO alliance and the European Union. 2019 marks over 100 years since the declarations of independence from Russia by the three Baltic States in 1918. As well as commemorating the deportations, the occasion serves to remind us all that evil regimes still exist. Indeed, Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014 poses grave concerns that Russia may seek to re-occupy the Baltic States on the pretext of “protecting” the Russian-speaking populations in the respective regions." Choir from all three Baltic countries usually perform at the concert.<ref name"Sydney Latvian Society"/><ref name"Sydney Estonian Society"/>
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