Poles pay homage 75 years since Warsaw Uprising

Poland's capital ground to a halt on Thursday as air-raid sirens wailed to mark 75 years since Polish insurgents launched the doomed Warsaw Uprising against Nazi German forces occupying their city. Traffic halted and pedestrians stood in silent homage at 1500 GMT in memory of the nearly 200,000 mostly civilian victims of the 63-day insurrection launched on August 1, 1944 in a doomed bid to secure Poland's post-war independence. Germany's foreign minister Heiko Maas, who was in Warsaw for the anniversary, asked Poles for forgiveness and expressed shame over the human suffering and the Nazis' near-total destruction of the Polish capital. "I came here because I want to honour the dead and because I want to ask the families of the dead and injured, and the Polish people, for forgiveness," Heiko Maas said at memorial ceremonies earlier in the day. "I'm ashamed of what was done to your country by Germans and in the name of Germany," he said. Polish far-right groups controversially organised the main rally in the city centre marking the anniversary in recent years, stoking outcry at their attempt to co-opt it. But on Thursday, youngsters sporting stickers "against fascism" and pro-democracy activists holding a banner saying "Warsaw free from fascism" featured prominently. The presence of the opposing sides at the memorial reflects the growing polarisation in Poland. - Nazis, Soviets - The uprising by Polish Home Army (AK) partisans is sometimes confused with the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in which Jewish partisans imprisoned by the Nazis in an area of the Polish capital launched their own doomed insurgency. In 1944, around 50,000 AK partisans, mostly men and women in their late teens and early twenties, scouts and even children, took up arms against the Nazi Germans occupying the capital, as the Soviet Red Army was poised to invade it from the east. Vastly better equipped, the Nazis slaughtered insurgents and civilians, many in aerial bombardments. Sixty-three days of savage battles turned the capital into a smouldering heap of rubble. What little was left standing was then razed on the orders of Adolf Hitler as the Nazis fled Soviet troops stationed on the east bank of the Vistula river, where they had waited patiently for the Germans to crush the Polish resistance. The uprising was aimed at securing Poland's post-war independence. The strategy was to eject German forces from Warsaw in order for Polish insurgents to gain control as the Soviet Red Army swept in with help from the east. The battle is widely regarded as the most tragic in Poland's bloody and turbulent history, prompting sharp criticism among some Poles who saw it as a suicide mission. People lit flares as they observed a minute of silence to mark the 75th anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising against the Nazi occupiers during World War II German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas at the monument commemorating victims of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising