In the assembly hall of the Brest State Technical University, as part of events dedicated to the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Belarus from the Nazi invaders, the film “72 Hours” was shown.
Russian military drama of 2015, the plot of which was based on the real story of the Lyudinovo underground Komsomol group, which operated during the war in the German-occupied city of Lyudinovo, Kaluga region.
In November 1956, at the Paveletsky station in Moscow, Dmitry Ivanov, who in 1943 betrayed the underground fighters to the Germans, was arrested and later convicted and sentenced to death.
The names of the characters and the name of the city in the film have been changed; the film is not a documentary, but a feature.
The main goal is to show students that war crimes have no statute of limitations and the criminal case about the genocide of the Belarusian people during the Great Patriotic War is a clear confirmation of this.