Soviet Union 1991

Text Chapter 350 Decree No. 31 (1)

First update

In 1995, Siberia entered the coldest winter in history. Deep snow and never-ending blizzards seemed to isolate the Communist Youth League border town isolated in the Arctic Circle from the world. This city, which houses a large number of Chechen refugees, is a city, to be precise, it is more like a refugee concentration camp. There are no basic community supplies, shops, hospitals and schools have not been set up. The edge of the entire city is even surrounded by barbed wire and high-voltage power grids, surrounded by BMP infantry fighting vehicles and soldiers with live ammunition patrolling.

It was called a "concentration camp" by Chechen refugees, but the leaders responsible for militarizing the city preferred the Stalinist name, a labor camp. The people here have been marked by Chechnya's tendency to extremize beliefs, and most of the terrorists came from this group of people. Therefore, Moscow issued Executive Order No. 31, which stipulated that labor and ideological transformation must be carried out in isolation in this city to avoid harming the Soviet people.

Women who had covered their faces with black headscarves were forced to take off their headscarves and had to reveal their faces in public. At first, some Caucasian men were unwilling to accept this kind of behavior from the military, and openly beat women who took off their headscarves. However, the implementation of Executive Order No. 31 was also strict, and they beat the women selflessly with sticks. While he was beating the woman, a soldier from the Ministry of Internal Affairs in a gray coat walked over in a hurry and pulled him away from the woman.

Before the other party could explain anything, a soldier hit the butt of his gun hard on the back of his head. The Chechen man suddenly knelt on the ground, while another soldier pointed at his head and ordered the other party not to move.

"Is he your husband or a relative of yours?" the soldier asked the beaten woman.

After receiving a negative answer from the other party, the patrolling soldier turned his head and nodded to his companion, who without hesitation shot the pleading man in the head. The crowd of onlookers who looked happy at first fled the scene one after another after seeing this scene. These soldiers, whose beliefs and styles were different from theirs, showed no mercy at all. They faithfully implemented Executive Order No. 31 issued by Moscow. Anyone who disobeys the decree can be shot on the spot.

After the crisp gunfire, there was a corpse as cold as ice and snow on the snow. One of the soldiers called the medical staff to rush to the scene to help the poor beaten woman go to the medical room. Then two soldiers carried the body to the hospital. Go in the direction of the incinerator. This kind of thing happened almost every day when these Chechen people first settled down. Sometimes they were too busy to deal with the corpses shot that day. They were all thrown directly into the ice and snow, allowing nature to digest the corpses.

After the first few days of killing, everyone calmed down. At first they didn't pay attention to the posted notices, but now they know that if they don't follow the other person's way, they may not be able to leave here alive.

Some people began to pay attention to the notice they had left in the corner, even though every rule listed above required them to violate their own teachings.

"1. A certain amount of pork must be consumed in three meals a day. This must be carried out and cannot be refused. 2. A glass of vodka is provided regularly every day. This must be carried out and cannot be refused. 3. No prayers or scriptures can be collected in the residence. Once any violation is found, Cases will be severely punished, in each case. After Zhou's labor is over, they must learn the rules and regulations of communism, learn modern scientific and cultural knowledge, and are not allowed to spread extreme beliefs and principles. Once discovered, women are not allowed to wear black headscarves and must fully expose their faces. Anyone who blocks this behavior. Everyone will be severely punished, seven..."

All acts that violate doctrine must be implemented. This is the Government Order No. 31 issued by the central government. The reason why they were moved to this Arctic Circle border town far away from the Caucasus was to better allow them to accept the transformation of socialist ideas.

From now on. This group of people have to adapt to a lifestyle that is incompatible with their previous lives. Not only do they have to violate the doctrines they abide by, they also have to betray their own religious beliefs. Some people who remain true to their faith can't stand this lifestyle, especially when it comes to sausages and canned pork. The despair deep in their hearts can be imagined.

Some people tried to express their outrage with hunger strikes, refusing to eat pork-based food provided by the Ministry of Interior. Of course, the soldiers of the Ministry of Internal Affairs are also very willing to meet the demands of these people. Although there is no infrastructure, this city that once imprisoned political criminals does have a large number of dark dungeons. Since the Great Purge, it has been abandoned and has not been used again.

There was no air conditioning, no food, and even water was refused. The Ministry of Internal Affairs used practical actions to support the other party's hunger strike cause without hesitation. The crowd who were gritting their teeth at first could no longer bear the hunger and cold. They frantically licked the damp bricks on the walls and wailed all night long, begging the soldiers to let them out.

However, their calls never received a response, because the soldiers locked the door of the cell and left this dead place, leaving only the desperate screams of the lonely prisoners.

After a week passed, only one or two were still alive. They watched helplessly as their companions fell in despair, their hands reaching outside through the railings.

The second week passed, and the dungeon was dead silent. There were no more groans from the survivors. They stared at the closed door with desperate eyes before they died, and turned into corpses eaten by dark rats.

In the third week, the dungeon door was finally opened. In order to prevent the spread of the plague, everyone who entered the dungeon wore a gas mask. They carried the religious people who were imprisoned and starved to death from the confinement prison. Throw them into a large truck and transport them to the grave where the bodies were buried.

In the propaganda brochure of the next day, the Ministry of Internal Affairs showed them the fate of these guys who refused to cooperate, and warned them that they would use cheating methods to crush your last pitiful will to resist.

It’s not that no one tried to resist these. When the demonstrations of peaceful believers didn’t work, extreme thugs began to snatch the army’s guns and resist the Ministry of Internal Affairs. However, the soldiers of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, who had the advantage of equipment and numbers, always easily suppressed the resistance movement until no one dared to resist the will and orders of the Soviets.

Those who lost hope in life cut their wrists with glass or chose to escape from this hellish concentration camp for them. But when they just climbed over the barbed wire, the soldiers shot at them and killed them directly in the snow. Even if there were some lucky ones who escaped the soldiers' bullets, they could not escape the vast and uninhabited cold wasteland. Often these people were frozen to death in the snow with blurred vision before they walked a few kilometers in the blizzard.

It was a very cruel and bloody fact that the survivors had to accept this communist life and began to eat sausages and canned pork that they believed was not holy. Even if the body instinctively rejected it, they had to force themselves to swallow it because the bayonet was against their necks.

Although they were unwilling to accept it, the Soviet Union's mandatory orders were changing the lives of these people. There were no scriptures and no prayers. They began to accept the red education in the library. At least as long as they did not violate the requirements of Decree No. 31, their lives were much better than the days of hunger during the Chechen War. No need to worry about shelling every night, or extremists taking their families away as human bombs to sacrifice to the Lord. Although all practices are against education, it is much better to survive than to starve to death.

The Soviet Union, without the halo of political sainthood, changed all this with a rough style. There was a passenger plane taking off from Moscow to the border town of Komsomol in Siberia, carrying a man with ruthless means, who was ready to execute a special order in this city that was like a labor punishment camp. (To be continued.)

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