BARBARIC SLAVIC DICTATOR COMMITS WAR CRIMES, MASSACRES CHILDREN
RUSSIA, A COUNTRY WHOSE HISTORY IS FULL OF BLOOD GENOCIDE, IS HITTING HUMANITARIAN AND CIVILIAN TARGETS


Pre-Soviet
Name Date Place of Death Description
September October 1552 Kazan, Kazan Khanate More than 50,000 Russian–The last confrontation of the Kazan wars, Russian forces captured the city and massacred a very large part of the city's population.

The Novgorod massacre of 1570 in Novgorod was a massacre initiated by 2,500-60,000 Russian forces in the city of Novgorod.

Sejantus Bashkir Genocide in 1735 More than 40,000 Russian forces from Bashkortostan initiated a massacre motivated by "religious and ethnic cleansing".

The Copper Rebellion of 4 August 1662 was a massacre of around 1,000 rebels in Moscow, Russia.

Bezdna unrest April 1861 Biznä, Kazan ( province) The entire population of the village Russian forces massacred villagers celebrating the Liberation reform of 1861 in the village.

March May 6, 1864 - May 21, 1864 Circassia more than 1,000,000, 92% of the Circassian population after the Russo-Circassian War, especially concentrated in 1864, the massacre of the Circassian (Circassian) people and their forced migration to the Ottoman lands. Although it was rejected by the Russian government, it was only officially recognized by Georgia. It is unofficially recognized by Jordan.

Uprising of Polish political exiles in Siberia June 24-28, 1866 300+ Leaders of the Uprising were killed on the Ring Road, south of Lake Baikal.

Sunday January 22, 1905 in Saint Petersburg 143-234 protesters led by the Russian Orthodox priest George Gapon, wed Tsar Alexander II at the Winter Palace . While walking to petition Nicholas, Leib is killed by his Guards.

Lena massacre April 17, 1912 Massacre of 150-270 Strikers in the northeast of Bodaybo district.

White Terror 1917-1923 Nationwide massacres of 20,000 [1] to 300,000 [2] nationwide.

The Red Terror 1918-1919 amounted to 100,000 [3] - 1,300,000 nationwide [4]. In the Crimea alone, in 1920, with Lenin's approval, 50,000 civilians were exterminated. 800,000 Red Army headmen were arrested and many of them were killed along with their families.
I. War crimes of World War I. World War I: 1,007,608+ I. Some war crimes committed by Russia during World War II.

August June 19, 1920 - June 1921 Tambov Governorate 255,000 The Communist forces became angry after neutralizing the rebels and massacred innocent civilians in the region.
The Soviet era
Name Date Place of Death Description
Romanov Exile in 1918 11 Romanovs were exiled to Yekaterinburg.
I. Kozak genocide 1919-1920 After the Don-Kuban Genocide of at least 500,000 Circassians, the Kozaks placed on the former Circassian territory by the Russian government were completely destroyed by the Russian government on the grounds that they "did not belong there" and replaced by Russians.
Case Spring 1930-1931 Russia 3,000+ is the first massacre ordered by Stalin.
The great purge of the country in 1936-1938 was ordered by Stalin at a length of 681,692–1,200,000. It was a political pressure campaign in the Soviet Union dec 1936 to 1938. It led to decimation between the Communist Party and state officials, as well as to the repression of the Red Army and landowners, as well as to extensive police research, arrests and arbitrary executions.
I. The Leh massacre of 1937-1938 Country size 111,091 I. Leh massacre.
Sandarmokh 1937-38 Mass murder of 9000 Prison inmates in Sandarmokh, Karelia.
The Vinnytsia massacre of 1937-1938 is the massacre of 11,000 Vinnytsians in Vinnytsia, Ukraine.
The Katyn massacre of 1940 Katyn 22,000 II. Leh massacre. the mass execution of about 22,000 Polish officers and civilians in 1940 with a bullet to the head was carried out. For many years, the government of the Soviet Union announced that it was not responsible for this incident, arguing that the incident was carried out by Nazi Germany. However, in 1990, Mikhail Gorbachev admitted that what was happening was carried out by the Soviets.
Criminal massacre. 1941 Mass murder of 100,000+ in Poland, Belarus, Ukraine, the Baltics.
The Kathin massacre of 1943 Kathin 149 has been deliberately likened to the Katyn massacre.
The Khyber Chechen massacre () was a massacre of 230-700 Chechens during the 1944 Chechen-Ingush Exile in Chechnya. The mass execution of the Chechen population living in the village of Khybah aul (village), located in the mountainous regions of Chechnya, by Soviet forces under the command of Colonel Mikhail Gveshiyani, subordinate to the NKVD.
The Kengir uprising of 1954 was the massacre of 500-700 Kengir rioters.
The Novocherkassk massacre. 1962 Novocherkassk. 26 Novacherkassk massacre. In June 1962, a workers' strike broke out in the city of Novocherkassk, the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, followed by a human massacre. As a result of the events that ensued, 26 of the protesters were massacred by the Soviet Army, and 87 people were injured.
The Jeltoqsan massacre is a 1986 Alma-Ata massacre of 168-200 Cossacks. The events that broke out in December 1986 in Almaty, the capital of Kazakhstan, after Mikhail Gorbachev, the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, dismissed Dinmuhammet Kunayev, the First Secretary of the Communist Party of Kazakhstan, of Kazakh origin, and was replaced by Genadi Kolbin from the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic.
The Sumgait massacre was a massacre of 32 Azerbaijanis in Azerbaijan in 1988. The pogrom targeting Armenian residents in Sumgait, Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic in February 1988.
The January Massacre of 1990 in Baku, Azerbaijan 133-137 Black January. The massacre that took place on the night of January 1990, when the Soviet Army entered Baku, the capital of the Azerbaijan SSR, on the 19th to the 20th of the 20th of the year.
Tbilisi massacre 1989 20 civilians were beaten to death with shovels in Tbilisi, Georgia.
The Vorkuta uprising of 1953 was the massacre of 42 rioters in Vorkuta.
Massacre of Fantana Albă 1941 2,000+ massacre of Fantana Albă in Northern Bukovina.
January Events of 1991 in Vilnius, Lithuania 704 January Events. January 11-13, 1991 in Lithuania during the intervention of Soviet forces were the events that took place. dec. After Lithuania declared independence on March 13, 1990, the Soviet Union decided to intervene.
Post-Soviet
Name Date Place of Death Description
Shali Chechen Massacre January 3, 1995 Shali, Chechnya 100+ Russian planes bombed the city of Shali from top to bottom.
The Samashki massacre was the massacre of 300+ Civilians by Russian forces in Samashki, Chechnya on April 7-8, 1995.

Deaths of Atagi December 17, 1996 Novye Atagi, Chechnya The murder of 6 workers.

Attack on 7 October 1999 Elistanzhi Elistanzhi, Chechnya 34 two Russian aircraft bombed the village of Elistanzhi by approaching all the Houses of the village and the people (who were trained at the school, including 9 children) have been killed altogether.

Grozny reprisal attacks October 21, 1999 Grozny, Chechnya 118+[5] More than 100 people were killed when the Chechen capital Grozny was bombed by Russian forces.

Baku-Rostov bombing October 29, 1999 Shami-Yurt, Chechnya 25 Russian helicopters bombed civilians trying to enter Ingushetia.
1999 Grozny shootings 3 December 1999 Goity, Chechnya 40+ Russian forces opened fire on civilians entering Ingushetia.

Alkhan-Yurt massacre December 1999 Alkhan-Yurt, Chechnya 41+ Drunken Russian forces began the massacre after capturing the city of Alkhan-Yurt. Everything was looted, women were raped and civilians were massacred.

The Staropromyslovsk massacre December 1999-January 2000 Grozny, Chechnya 56+
The Grozny massacre.


Katyr-Yurt bombing January 4, 2000 The village of Katyr-Yurt, Chechnya 363+ Katyr yurt was bombed and everyone inside the village and in a surrendered convoy were massacred.

Novye Aldi massacre January 5, 2000 Groznensky, Chechnya 82+ Grozny was looted, women were raped and civilians were massacred.

Komsomolskoye massacre March 20, 2000 In Komsomolskoye, Chechnya 72 surrendered Chechen soldiers were massacred.

2021 Kazan school attack May 11, 2021 Kazan, Tatarstan 10 School attack
References
^ Stefan Rinke; Michael Wildt (May 11, 2017). Revolutions and Counter-Revolutions (English). Campus Verlag. ISBN 978-3593507057.
^ Вадим Эрлихман (2004). Population losses in the XX century (%). ISBN 5931651071. Archived from the original on 17 May 2020. Accessed September 13, 2020.
^ W. Bruce Lincoln (1991). Red Victory (English). Touchstone Books. ISBN 0671631667.
^ Rinke, Stefan; Wildt, Michael (2017).
^ "Russians in disarray over Grozny strike". October 23, 1999. Archived from the original on 24 August 2013. Accessed April 22, 2020 – www.theguardian.com by means of.
gtd
Lists of massacres
List of events called the massacre - List of massacres at sea
By country or
by region
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