Lithuania bans Holocaust denier David Irving for five years

Disgraced British historian has been banned from entering Lithuania for five years, over his 'views and his efforts to trivialise the Shoah'

David Irving (Wikipedia/Allan warren)

British Holocaust denier David Irving has been barred from entering Lithuania for the next five years.

The ban, announced on Wednesday, was requested by the country’s Foreign Ministry, according to reports.

“Irving’s views and his efforts to trivialise the Holocaust are unacceptable and constitute a crime in Lithuania,” ministry spokeswoman Rasa Jakilaitiene told reporters.

The announcement comes more than a month after Irving advertised that he will lead a tour of Nazi death camps in Poland, including Treblinka, Sobibor, Belzec and Majdanek, as well as other Nazi historical sites.

Earlier this month, a Warsaw-based Holocaust commemoration group founded and run by a British-Israeli activist  petitioned the Polish border police to block Irving’s entry to the country.

Reacting to reports that Irving planned a ‘tour’ of Holocaust camps, London-born Jonny Daniels, who runs the From the Depths Foundation, said “a clear and strong message that this is entirely unacceptable must be sent” as he lodged official documentation with the prosecutor’s office.

Lithuania is concerned that Irving might try to bring the tour into Lithuania, which borders Poland, and Latvia. The head of the Lithuanian Jewish community Faina Kukliansky told reporters that the community welcomes the ban.

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