INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
genocide by Soviet leader Josef Stalin's regime, and it has long been a source of hostility between Russia and Ukraine.Moscow contests
this designation, placing the events in the broader context of famines that also devastated regions of Central Asia and Russia.The foreign
ministry in Moscow said members of the German parliament had "decided to defiantly support this political and ideological myth fostered by
the Ukrainian authorities at the instigation of ultranationalist, Nazi and Russophobic forces."The ministry said in a statement the
resolution was a new Western attempt to "demonize Russia" and pit ethnic Ukrainians against Russians.Moscow also accused Germans of "trying
to rewrite their history and forget the repentance for the horrors they committed during World War II" and of seeking to "diminish their
guilt."The German parliament "should be ashamed of such immoral decisions that revive the fascist ideology of racial hatred and
discrimination," the ministry said
"warning" to Russia as Ukraine faces a potential hunger crisis this winter due to Moscow's military campaign.Kyiv has praised Berlin's
move.President Volodymyr Zelensky called the resolution a "decision for justice, for truth.""And this is a very important signal to many
other countries of the world that Russian revanchism will not succeed in rewriting history," Zelensky said in his daily address to the
nation late on Wednesday.