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  1. During the afternoon of 18 May, the barges unloaded their passengers on Nazino Island, an island about 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) long and 600 metres (660 yd) wide. There was no roster of the disembarking deportees, but on arrival 322 women and 4,556 men were counted, plus 27 bodies of those who died during the trip from Tomsk.

  2. Se denomina como Tragedia de Názino a la deportación en masa de 6 700 a 6 800 personas, 1 2 3 de las cuales murieron 4.000 en la isla de Názino (del ruso: остров Назино) en la Unión Soviética en 1933. Esta pequeña y apartada isla de Siberia occidental está situada a unos 800 km al norte de Tomsk, en el raión ...

  3. 1 de abr. de 2024 · Nazino Island, also known as Cannibal Island, was a Soviet gulag where prisoners were starved, tortured, and forced to eat each other in the 1930s. Learn about the history, the conditions, and the survivors of this dark chapter of Stalin's regime.

  4. Esto provocó que masas de campesinos, habiendo experimentado todas las penurias de la política económica soviética (la lucha contra los campesinos ricos y la propiedad privada, la creación de...

  5. 9 de ene. de 2020 · Nazinsky: Stalin’s Cannibal Island. In the middle of the Ob River in Siberia lies a forgotten island. Never officially named, it’s known after the nearest village: the hamlet of Nazino.

  6. 5 de jul. de 2018 · In 1933, thousands of prisoners were sent to Nazinsky Island, a swampy strip in the Ob River, to build a "special settlement" and cultivate land. Faced with starvation, disease, and violence, many resorted to cannibalism and only 300 survived.

  7. Nazino was a Siberian island where Stalin deported 6,000 political prisoners in 1933. Faced with starvation, disease and violence, many resorted to cannibalism and died.