“Our first task for 2023 is to try to find information about the remaining 2 thousand Soviet soldiers who died on the territory of Stalag XVIII-D.

Now we have information on 3,000 people,” Janez Uychich, director of the research center, told TASS.

He expressed the hope that in the first half of 2023 it would be possible to organize an exhibition telling about the Stalag XVIII-D concentration camp in Moscow, in the building of the State Duma, and in St. Petersburg.

“We are also planning to hold a similar event next autumn at the European Parliament in Brussels.

Over the next two years, we expect that we will be able to become a kind of focal point for museums that are looking for information about Soviet prisoners of war, ”said Uychich.

At the end of October, after a major overhaul, a military burial was opened in the Hungarian city of Gyor, on the memorial plates of which the names of Soviet soldiers and officers who died in Hungary during the Great Patriotic War are inscribed.