Slovakian President Andrej Kiska said that he will spend May 8 going across the country to light candles at the grave sites of Soviet soldiers who died during the country's liberation in WWII.
Around 100,000 fighters, primarily Soviet Red Army soldiers, were killed liberating Slovakia from Nazi Germany. Although Kiska is not visiting Moscow for the May 9 Victory Day parade, he previously said that he still intends to honor soldiers who were killed liberating Slovakia.
"The most important thing is who we should make a bow to for our liberation from Nazism. For me there is no ambiguity here, we much give our respects to the people who put down their lives here," Kiska told a Slovakian newspaper.
Kiska said that while he cannot physically go to every cemetery where fallen Soviet soldiers are buried within the span of a day, he asks his friends, as well as all Slovakians to visit them and light candles in the memory of the soldiers.