Foreign Minister of Sweden Carl Bildt, left, Government Minister of Israel Yossi Peled, center, and Hungarian Foreign Minister Janos Martonyi, right, stand together while opening an exhibition remembering Raul Wallenberg in Budapest, Hungary, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. The centennial exhibition, 'Man Amidst Inhumanity' remembers the legendary Swedish diplomat Raul Wallenberg, the rescuer of tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews during WWII. (AP Photo/Bela Szandelszky)
Foreign Minister of Sweden Carl Bildt, left, Government Minister of Israel Yossi Peled, center, and Hungarian Foreign Minister Janos Martonyi, right, stand together while opening an exhibition remembering Raul Wallenberg in Budapest, Hungary, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. The centennial exhibition, 'Man Amidst Inhumanity' remembers the legendary Swedish diplomat Raul Wallenberg, the rescuer of tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews during WWII. (AP Photo/Bela Szandelszky)
Foreign Minister of Sweden Carl Bildt delivers his speech while opening the an exhibition remembering Raul Wallenberg in Budapest, Hungary, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. The centennial exhibition, 'Man Amidst Inhumanity' remembers the legendary Swedish diplomat Raul Wallenberg, the rescuer of tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews during WWII. (AP Photo/Bela Szandelszky)
Foreign Minister of Sweden Carl Bildt delivers his speech while opening the an exhibition remembering Raul Wallenberg in Budapest, Hungary, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. The centennial exhibition, 'Man Amidst Inhumanity' remembers the legendary Swedish diplomat Raul Wallenberg, the rescuer of tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews during WWII. (AP Photo/Bela Szandelszky)
FILE - An undated black and white photo showing World War II hero Raoul Wallenberg. A newly found Swedish document shows how the Soviet secret police intervened in the early 1990's to stop an investigation into World War II hero Raoul Wallenberg's fate, two U.S.-based researchers said Monday, Jan. 16, 2012. The Swedish diplomat, who would have turned 100 this year, is credited with rescuing tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Nazis. He disappeared after being arrested by the Soviet Red Army in 1945. The Russians have said he was executed on July 17, 1947, but unverified witness accounts and newly uncovered evidence suggest he may have lived beyond that date. (AP Photo/Scanpix Sweden, File) SWEDEN OUT
STOCKHOLM (AP) ? Sweden will open a new probe into what happened to World War II hero Raoul Wallenberg after he was captured by the Soviets in 1945.
Foreign Minister Carl Bildt has asked experts to look into whether any new material has emerged that could shed new light on what happened to the Swedish diplomat, Bildt spokeswoman Anna Charlotta Johansson said Wednesday.
Wallenberg is credited with rescuing tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Nazis. He disappeared after being arrested in Hungary by the Soviet Red Army in 1945. On Tuesday, Hungary, Sweden and Israel launched the Raoul Wallenberg Year to honor his efforts.
The new Swedish probe will be led by Hans Magnusson, who was involved in a similar effort together with Russian experts in the 1990s. According to Bildt, the Russian experts then said Wallenberg died, "or more likely was killed," on 17 June 1947 in Soviet custody, but unverified witness accounts and newly uncovered evidence suggest he may have lived beyond that date.
The Soviets said he died of a heart attack in prison and Russia has never officially retracted that version. The Swedes haven't contested the Russian version, but have maintained there was insufficient evidence to draw any firm conclusions about Wallenberg's ultimate fate.
On Monday, two U.S. researchers told The Associated Press that a newly found Swedish document shows how the KGB intervened in the early 1990s to stop the previous investigation.
Russian scholar Vadim Birstein, one of the researchers working for the first Wallenberg commission, said they had just found some previously unknown documents when the archive was closed to them in the spring of 1991.
The former head of the Soviet "Special Archive," Anatoly Prokopenko, told the AP that following a brief period of openness before and after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, Russian authorities have grown increasingly reluctant to allow public access to the archives.
Magnusson said he will start off by reviewing what information has emerged about Wallenberg since his last probe and see if there is anything new that can be done.
He didn't express big hopes that the Russians would ease the restrictions on access to the archives but said Swedish authorities will continue their contact with Russia's Federal Security Service, or FSB, the successor to the Soviet-era KGB.
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