- Source: 1951 anti-Chechen pogrom in Kazakhstan
The anti-Chechen pogrom in Kazakhstan took place in spring and summer, 1951, in Kazakhstan (part of the Soviet Union at the time), upon ethnic tensions between mainly ethnic Russians and deported Chechens. A blood libel rumor, according to which the Chechens allegedly use "Christian blood in their rituals" may also have contributed to the escalation of events. The riots occurred in 3 cities - Leninogorsk, Ust-Kamenogorsk and Zyryanovsk.
The main riots took place on April 10, 1951, in the Chechen-city neighbourhood of Leninogorsk. The riots, led by groups of amnestied criminals upon the Chechen civilians led to the deaths of 40-41 people, mainly of North Caucasian origins. Arrests were late made by Soviet authorities on initiators and 50 people from among the criminals were persecuted by courts, though no riot leaders were identified.
See also
Aardakh
Ethnic violence
Racism in Russia
1958 Grozny riots
Blood libel
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Genosida dalam sejarah
- 1951 anti-Chechen pogrom in Kazakhstan
- Ethnic conflicts in Kazakhstan
- Outline of Kazakh military history
- Deportation of the Chechens and Ingush
- List of massacres in the Soviet Union
- Antisemitism
- Anti-Catholicism
- List of ethnic riots
- Genocides in history (World War I through World War II)
- Index of Soviet Union–related articles