Deportation

Deportation (депортация) is specific kind of genocide, characterised in that the repressed group of population is not killed immediately, but forced to leave their homes and to move to another land; usually difficult to survive there.

The concept of collective crime and other ideas of fascism are used as a pretext to justify deportation.

One of motives of the deportation may be plundering of properties of the deported people, redistribute the property, sell it, etc.

Also, the goal of deportation can be population of the concentration camps with fresh slaves, in order to use them at heavy, dangerous and harmful industry, for example, production of the nuclear weapon. It seems, that the most of Russian slaves employed to make the Soviet nuclear bomb, died of acute radiation syndrome; in this sense, the number of victims of the nuclear weapon in the USSR greatly exceeds number of victims of all military use of nuclear weapon un the human history, at least until century 21.

Often, deportation follows the military invasion and occupation of some land by the aggressive state. In particular, since the Russian invasion into Ukraine and Annexation of Crimea, the Crimean tatars expect that the new deportation may begin any moment. The suppression of the meeting of memory of the deportation of 1944 is reported.

USSR
Deportation appears to be one of instruments of the Soviet fascists during the USSR.

1944.02.23, deportation of population of Chechnia and Ingushetia used to kill significant part of population of those republics.

1944.05.01–1944.04.30, deportation of Crimean Tatars happens; of order of 40% of population of Crimean Tatars are estimated to be killed at the deportation.

Keywords
Aggression, Annexation of Crimea, Bolshevism, Genocide, KGB, Meganedia, deportation, Russian invasion into Ukraine, Terror