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Hommage aux victimes de la répression politique et de la famine au Kazakhstan

Chaque année, le 31 mai, le Kazakhstan rend hommage aux millions de personnes qui ont péri lors de la famine et de la répression politique de l'époque soviétique.

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LIRE L’ARTICLE : http://fr.euronews.com/2026/06/03/hommage-aux-victimes-de-la-repression-politique-et-de-la-famine-au-kazakhstan

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00:29Sous-titrage Société Radio-Canada
00:30Their policy of collective farms forced nomadic Kazakhs to give up their lifestyle and surrender their livestock.
00:46The Red Army slaughtered the other half of cattle, unable to feed it.
00:51Forty million turned to five.
00:53For a nation whose primary source of food was cattle, this meant a gruesome hungry death.
00:58As a result, out of six million Kazakhs, approximately two million died of starvation
01:03and 600,000 more relocated to China, Iran and Afghanistan, hoping to avoid a similar fate.
01:11Kazakh intelligentsia criticized the government for excessive policies that led to famine and mass deaths.
01:17For this outright rebellion, they were arrested, exiled and executed.
01:22This is Karlaq, one of the largest labor camps in the USSR, located in the middle of the Kazakh steppe.
01:29Its vast territory was once compared to the size of France.
01:32From 1931 till 1959, about a million people passed through the camp.
01:37For others, the outcome was even more immediate.
01:40They were executed.
01:41Among them was Rahat Amanbaev's grandfather, Amanbaev Kaspakbaev.
01:57According to the documents, which Rahat was able to get only after the collapse of the Soviet Union,
02:02Amanbaev was accused of being a fascist, atroskiist and helping suspected dissidents.
02:31After spending their eight years enduring hardship and abuse, she took her kids from their uncle
02:37and moved away to avoid discrimination and harassment.
02:44One of the prominent figures who faced such a fate was Seken Sifulin, a Kazakh poet,
02:49a promoter of the Kazakh language and once the head of the Kazakh government.
02:54He was championing Kazakh identity and attributes, for which he was accused of being a nationalist and an anti-Soviet.
03:01The irony was that he was a revolutionary and a Bolshevik.
03:05It was on November 24th, and the two of them came to the house.
03:11The two of them came to the house and they said,
03:15You are Seken Sifulin?
03:16Yes, we will show you the paper.
03:19And Seken Sifulin immediately dried up, and then it dried up.
03:24Sifulin's little son died on a train, when he and his mother were deported.
03:29His father and older brother were also executed.
03:31His younger brother survived by a miracle.
03:34From 1937 till 1957, the Sifulin family lived under the label of the enemy of the people.
03:54No university wanted to admit an enemy of the people.
03:57When she finally got admitted to the Zoological Institute, someone denounced her, and she had to finish her education in
04:03secret.
04:04Her father, Seken's little brother, couldn't hold a job for 20 years.
04:08Each time someone found out he was an enemy of the people, and he was fired.
04:14When Stalin died in 1953, many people were amnestied and rehabilitated.
04:28Both Sifulin and Kaspakpaev were rehabilitated in 1957.
04:33In 1993, independent Kazakhstan adopted a law on rehabilitation of victims of political repressions,
04:39restoring their good names and compensating the families.
04:43Kazakhstan is continuing to examine archival documents of the Soviet era.
04:47Just three years ago, a special commission rehabilitated 300,000 people.
04:52The country makes every effort to commemorate those who fell victim to the Red Terror.
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