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Kengir uprising

Kengir uprising
Date 16 May 1954 – 26 June 1954
Location Kengir, Kazakh SSR
Result Uprising suppressed
Belligerents
Soviet Union Soviet Army
Soviet Union MVD
Soviet Union Gulag authorities
IFRC flag used in Kengir Uprising.png Kengir resistance
Commanders and leaders
Soviet Union Sergei Yegorov
Soviet Union Ivan Dolgikh
IFRC flag used in Kengir Uprising.png Kapiton Kuznetsov
Strength
1,700 5,200
Casualties and losses
40 wounded1 500–700 killed/wounded2
37 killed1
106 wounded1
1 Official Soviet figure
2 Prisoner-provided figure

The Kengir uprising was a prisoner uprising that took place in the Soviet prison labor camp Kengir in May and June 1954. Its duration and intensity distinguished it from other Gulag uprisings in the same period (see Vorkuta uprising).

After the murder of some of their fellow prisoners by guards, Kengir inmates launched a rebellion and proceeded to seize the entire camp compound, holding it for weeks and creating a period of freedom for themselves unique in the history of the Gulag. Following a rare alliance between the criminals and political prisoners, the prisoners succeeded in forcing the guards and camp administration to flee the camp and effectively quarantine it from the outside. The prisoners thereafter set up intricate defenses to prevent the incursion of the authorities into their newly won territory. This situation lasted for an unprecedented length of time and gave rise to a panoply of colorful and novel activity, including the democratic formation of a provisional government by the prisoners, prisoner marriages, the creation of indigenous religious ceremonies, a brief flowering of art and culture, and the waging of a large, relatively complex propaganda campaign against the erstwhile authorities.

After 40 days of freedom within the camp walls, intermittent negotiation, and mutual preparation for violent conflict, the uprising was suppressed by Soviet armed forces with tanks and guns on the morning of 26 June. According to former prisoners, five hundred to seven hundred people were killed or wounded in the suppression, although official figures claim only a few dozen had been killed. The story of the uprising was first committed to history in The Gulag Archipelago, a nonfiction work by former-prisoner and Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.


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Wikipedia

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